Phil Baker Movies

Phil Baker was a comic personality and performer whose stardom, sad to say, was confined to a specific generation: in the 1920s and '30s he was a veritable fixture in the theater world as the comedic sparkplug of numerous revues, and in the latter decade he made the leap to radio with considerable success. By the 1930s and '40s, he bid fair to become a film star, but the right scripts and vehicles weren't there and he remained best known for his radio work. Baker was born in Philadelphia in 1896, to a middle-class family with no particular contacts in the entertainment world. He was musically inclined, however, a talent that manifested itself when he received an accordion as a bar mitzvah gift and learned to play it on his own. Before he was far into his teens, he was working as an office boy to future Universal Pictures founder Carl Laemmle at the Imp Film Company, and he was soon bitten by the performing bug in a way that simply wasn't going to be sated by playing the accordion at school or at parties.

Baker ran away from home and ended up in Boston, where he financed his first night by winning an amateur talent competition and taking away the princely sum of 50 cents. There followed more amateur nights as he headed to Fall River, and then on to New York, where he became a part of a violin-and-accordion duo with Ed Janis that was as popular for their comic schtick as for their music. From there, he leaped into a partnership with Ben Bernie, and "Bernie & Baker" topped the vaudeville circuit before they split up the act. Baker joined the legitimate stage when Ziegfeld brought him into his Midnight Frolics, and he was later cast in the Greenwich Village Follies and other revue-type shows, where his quick wit soon began supplanting his music as the main focus of his act, and by the time he was cast in the Music Box Revue he was a star performer. A visit to England proved disastrous as his opening night audience sat silently through his jokes (though they did join in the music-making), but on his return he picked up exactly where he left off, and he was soon a part of such top entertainment vehicles as the stage revue Artists & Models. Baker also composed songs, including the hits "Park Avenue Strut" and "Pretty Little Baby." Apart from his overall success, Baker also always claimed that he originated the use of the "stooge" in modern comedy. As the story went, he was in the middle of performing one night when he found himself being heckled by a man in the fourth row; the man turned out to be an out-of-work comic, and the audience found their spontaneous give-and-take so funny that Baker hired the man to repeat his outburst as part of the act in subsequent shows, which greatly elevated Baker's already considerable popularity. Among those who passed through the spot as Baker's second banana was Sid Silvers, who went on to stardom in his own right on-stage.

Baker had the desire to be taken seriously as an actor, and this proved his undoing financially. He mounted expensive productions of such serious works as Idiot's Delight as star vehicles for himself, and a lot of money in unsuccessful touring productions. Onscreen, he found occasional work pretty much as himself, or characters very close to his stage persona, in movies such as The Goldwyn Follies. Somehow, though, he never caught on in the way that other vaudeville and burlesque comic performers, such as Olsen & Johnson or Abbott & Costello did during the early '40s. It was in radio, however -- which was bigger and more influential than the movies for much of the 1930s -- that he became a media star. Debuting with his own show in 1933, Baker was busy on the airwaves for more than a decade. And in 1942, he became the host of a ground-breaking radio show called Take It or Leave It, often credited as the first modern quiz show in American popular culture. Baker served as quiz-master with a gently jocular tone for the lighthearted proceedings, which involved small amounts of money and lots of good-natured comic banter -- the top prize was for the "64-dollar question," a phrase that became part of the slang of the day and for many years after. He was also known for being especially kind to servicemen who were contestants, on one occasion handing a nervous navy enlisted man the script and telling him to handle the questions, which Baker answered before turning over the prize money to him. Old enough to have served in World War I, Baker was heavily involved with the Second World War as a civilian, supporting War Bond drives and other, similar activities.

In Busby Berkeley's The Gang's All Here (1943) -- probably his best movie -- Baker got to support all of those causes dear to him as well as playing lots of funny scenes. Baker's later attempts at dramatic theater work proved no more successful than Idiot's Delight had been, and at the end of the 1940s he retired from the stage. He starred in a film called Take It or Leave It late in the decade, based on his hit radio show, and also tried to make the jump to television. His small-screen appearances, however, were relatively unmemorable, and few younger viewers coming along after World War II had any idea of who he was. His marriage to Irmgaard Erik precipitated a move to Copenhagen, and it was there that he passed away in late 1963, after more than a decade out of the limelight. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1934  
 
In this musical, a radio-announcer is fired after giving a false interview. For consolation he begins to drink heavily. It is his girlfriend who helps him sober up when she provides him with a major scoop--a missing airplane. He enthusiastically sets out after it and eventually finds it. As a publicity stunt, he skydives to the downed plane while broadcasting live. Songs include: Talking To Myself," "I Ain't Gonna Sin No More," "Gift Of Gab," "Somebody Looks Good," "Don't Let This Waltz Mean Goodbye," "Walkin' On Air," "What A Wonderful Day," "Tomorrow--Who Cares?" and "Blue Sky Avenue." ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Edmund LoweGloria Stuart, (more)
1938  
 
Start Cheering is Columbia Pictures' idea of a college musical: Practically everyone in the cast is past the age of 30. Charles Starrett plays a movie star who wearies of Hollywood and decides to get a college education. He enrolls incognito in a small university, much to the discomfort of his managers Walter Connolly and Jimmy Durante. Durante heads for college himself, hoping to sabotage Starrett's plans and bring him back before the cameras. While Jimmy Durante is saddled with inferior material, the film gives full head to such guest stars as bandleader Louis Prima, vaudevillian Chaz Chase (who had a cigar-eating act), radio's Professor Quiz (Dr. Craig E. Earle), and Columbia's short-subject headliners The Three Stooges (with Curly!) ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jimmy DuranteJoan Perry, (more)
1944  
 
A game show provides the backdrop for this drama that centers on an earnest young husband who desperately needs $1,000 to pay for his wife's obstetrician. To get it fast, he brings his wife and best friend to a radio station where the game is broadcast. He is chosen for the show. Unfortunately, the prize is only $64. The good-hearted host sympathizes with the poor contestant's plight and so ups the prize considerably. The category in which the young man excels is the "Scenes from Famous Movies" category. Scenes from 27 Fox movies are then presented. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Phil BakerPhil Silvers, (more)
1943  
 
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Sgt. Andy Mason Jr. (James Ellison) is on the eve of shipping out from New York with his unit -- he's the son of Andrew Mason Sr. (Eugene Pallette), a wealthy, blustery Wall Street financier. While paying respects to his father and the latter's business partner, dithering fuss-budget Peyton Potter (Edward Everett Horton), at the Club New Yorker, he spots chorus girl Eadie Allen (Alice Faye) and turns on the charm and all of the allure that the ne'er-do-well son of a Wall Street millionaire can muster. That, however, doesn't impress Eadie, who ignores his invitation so she can do her patriotic bit helping servicemen at the Stage Door Canteen (or, as it's called here, the "Broadway Canteen"). Realizing how down to earth and genuine she is -- exactly the kind of girl who doesn't care about his money or social position -- Andy shows a bit of the boyish innocence he has hidden beneath the arrogance that comes from his background of wealth and privilege, and also some humility, hiding that background and his real name. Before the night and their "date" on the Staten Island Ferry are over, they're genuinely in love with each other, but that presents a problem -- since age 12, Andy has been unofficially "engaged" to Potter's daughter Vivian (Sheila Ryan), who expects to marry him, and he can't quite bring himself to hurt Vivian by telling her that he's met someone else.

Flash forward a few months, and Andy is on his way home on leave, a hero in the Pacific, and his father is so proud that he has to do something special to honor him, trying to rent out the Club New Yorker for a party but discovering that it's closed for rehearsals of a new production. Suddenly, his fatherly devotion, patriotism, and Wall Street experience all click together -- he brings the entire performing company, plus Benny Goodman's band, up to his and Potter's adjoining estates in Westchester to stage their act for his upscale neighbors and friends as part of the biggest War Bond rally ever seen (minimum admission a new 5,000-dollar War Bond), and in the process giving his son the biggest party he's ever seen. This leads to more comic turns for Horton's Potter, as a man who would make coffee nervous -- especially around show people -- but delights his ex-dancer wife (Charlotte Greenwood). That's also how Eadie and Vivian end up at the Potter mansion together, comparing notes on their remarkably similar respective fiancés. When the show's star, Dorita (Carmen Miranda), lets the cat out of the bag, it looks like Andy may lose Eadie, who can't bear to lose Andy but also won't even try to take him away from Vivian, who loves him too, but has loved him a lot longer. But while they sort out their romance, the show must go on, and go on it does. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Alice FayeCarmen Miranda, (more)
1938  
 
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A longtime admirer of Broadway impresario Flo Ziegfeld, Hollywood producer Sam Goldwyn hoped to emulate the success of The Ziegfeld Follies by producing an annual movie-musical revue. Goldwyn's dream began and ended with 1938's Goldwyn Follies, a film centering on Goldwyn-like movie producer Oliver Martin (Adolphe Menjou). It seems that Martin's films haven't been turning a profit lately, and he wants to find out why by eliciting the advice of the average filmgoer. He makes the acquaintance of pretty Hazel Dawes (Andrea Leeds), who tells Martin that the movies suffer from unbelievable storylines, cliched dialogue and wooden acting. Impressed, Martin hires Hazel as "Miss Humanity," allowing her to judge the merits of his latest production and even to select the cast members. Among Hazel's discoveries are singing hash-slinger Danny Beecher (Kenny Baker), opera diva Leona Jerome (Helen Jepson), and prima ballerina Olga Samara (Vera Zorina). Also hoping to appear in Martin's upcoming epic are ventriloquist Edgar Bergan and his wisecracking dummy Charlie McCarthy, and a trio of zany animal trainers who look, sound and act like the Ritz Brothers. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Adolphe MenjouThe Ritz Brothers [Al, Jimmy, Harry], (more)

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