krledu wrote:I have listen to quite a few shows and I have read the Jack Benny biographies. One thing, that was said about the Jack Benny Program that there nobody ad-libbed with Jack Benny. Though as I have been listening, I have picked out quite a few things I'm sure are ad-libbed. I can't be so sure with having a script to follow, but sometimes you can just tell. I understand that nothing deviating away from the script was allowed because of time limits and censorship but was that actually, solid rule? I actually like it when blunders happened because it made the cast laugh and made the show funnier. Anybody have any thoughts on this?
I've noticed that most of the ad-libbing and kidding around took place in the earlier "Jell-O" programs. By the time "The Lucky Strike Program" came along in the mid-1940's, Jack's show had been firmly established as one of the....if not THE....top network programs. As a result, the show and cast seem much more "polished" and not deviating from the script all that much, unless there was an obvious blooper.
The 1930's (and even very early 1940's) Benny episodes have a loose, free-wheeling, almost silly feel to them, but by the mid-1940's the tone seems to be, "OK gang, there's a lot of money riding on this show and we can't goof around too much"....at least that's how it seems to me.
Hank the All-Nite DJ wrote:...1-6-1952. Dennis is supposed to have a crush on Mary and he's swooning over her. "Gee, gosh....to think that you'll soon be my wife and Babe will be my brother-in-law!" Jack goes, "That's nowheres [sic] on this page! I can't...It's better than what we had written there, I know that!"
Return to The Jack Benny Program
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests