On this date in 1903, actor/ comedienne Bob Hope is born.
One of the leading talents on the vaudeville scene by the 1930s, the London-born,
American-raised Hope met his future wife (of nearly seven decades), the
nightclub singer Dolores Reade, while he was performing on Broadway in the
musical Roberta. They married in 1934, and four years later Hope
launched his own radio program, The Bob Hope Show, which would run for
the next 18 years. One of the country’s most popular comics, Hope had a
successful film career largely thanks to the series of seven “Road” movies he
made with Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour, including Road to Singapore (1940),
Road to Morocco (1942), Road to Utopia (1946) and Road to Rio (1947).
In 1941, after America’s entrance into World War II, Hope began performing for
U.S. troops abroad; he would play shows for more than a million American
servicemen by 1953. Some 65 million people watched him perform for troops in
Vietnam on Christmas Eve in 1966, in his largest broadcast. Hope also became a
legend for his countless TV specials, which he would perform over the course of
some five decades. He hosted the Academy Awards ceremony a total of 18 times,
more than any other Oscar host. Dubbed “Mr. Entertainment” and the “King of
Comedy,” Hope died on July 27, 2003, less than two months after his 100th
birthday celebration.
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