-
Stoopnagle and Budd were a po****r
radio comedy team of the 1930s, who are
sometimes cited as
forerunners of the Bob and Ray
style of
radio comedy. Along...
-
comedy routines performed by
Colonel Stoopnagle on the
radio show
Stoopnagle and Budd in the 1930s. ("Colonel
Stoopnagle" was the
stage name of F.
Chase Taylor...
- the main
actor of the 1930s
radio program Stoopnagle and Budd, in
which his character,
Colonel Stoopnagle, used spoonerisms. In 1945, he
published a...
- His Mouse,: 211 Mr.
District Attorney,: 233 Quizzer's Baseball,: 279
Stoopnagle and Budd,: 315-316 Walk a Mile,: 348
Lucky Strike Hit Parade, and the...
- The
Cuckoo Hour on NBC in 1930,
along with the 1931
network debut of
Stoopnagle and Budd on CBS. Most of the
Hollywood comedians who did not
become dramatic...
- air in 1951.
Gardner invited humorist F.
Chase Taylor, radio's "Col.
Stoopnagle," to
write scripts and make
appearances on the show
during its Puerto...
-
other memorable parodies were
presented by such
satirists as
Spike Jones,
Stoopnagle and Budd, Stan
Freberg and Bob and Ray.
British comedy reached American...
-
animal characters Willard Bowsky William Sturm July 21, 1933
Stoopnocracy Stoopnagle and Budd, one-shot
animal characters Seymour Kneitel William Henning August...
-
Corwin Selected Radio Plays of
Norman Corwin R (Feb. 1945) 542 R-8
Colonel Stoopnagle You Wouldn't Know Me from Adam R (Feb. 1945) 543 R-9
Jacland Marmur Sea...
- Rose Marie". She
appeared in "Sing Babies, Sing" (1933).
Radio comedians Stoopnagle and Budd
appeared in the zany
Stoopnocracy that also
featured 12-year-old...