Joe Cook (actor)
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Joe Cook | |
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Spouse | Helen Reynolds |
Joe Cook (born Joseph Lopez; March 29, 1890 – May 15, 1959) was an American vaudeville performer. A household name in the 1920s and 1930s, Cook was one of America's most popular entertainers, and he headlined at New York's famed Palace Theatre. After appearing on Broadway he broke into radio.
Early life
Born Joseph Lopez in Evansville, Indiana, in 1890, he and his elder brother Leo were orphaned and adopted by a distant relative, Mrs. Anna Cook, at the age of three and six, respectively. He lived in the back of the grocery store of his adoptive parents at the corner of Fourth and Oak in Evansville.[1]
Career
Cook joined a circus in 1906, which propelled him to vaudeville, Broadway, and Hollywood.[2] His brother Leo and he were billed as "Joe Cook and Brother" were they were in vaudeville together, from about 1909 to 1916.
Joe Cook's physical talents were remarkable. He was an incredible juggler, could walk a tightrope, ride a
Following a very successful fifteen years in vaudeville (three of them in blackface,[3]), Cook most often teamed up with stooge and future restaurateur, Dave Chasen, who became a late 1920s/early 1930s Broadway musical comedy star. He appeared, most memorably, in such shows as Rain or Shine, Fine and Dandy - the first hit completely scored by a woman (Kay Swift),[4] and Hold Your Horses. Corey Ford, the co-author of the last-named musical, wrote of Cook's Broadway debut: "When I first saw Joe Cook in 1923, he was co-starring in Earl Carroll's Vanities with Peggy Hopkins Joyce, whom he used to refer to as 'that somewhat different virgin'. I sat on the balcony and marveled at the bland deadpan expression, the slightly curved mouth, the easy flow of nonsense patter as he walked a tightrope or juggled Indian clubs while explaining to the audience why he would not imitate four Hawaiians."[5] Cook's "Four Hawaiians" routine was his most famous;[6] Joe would explain that he was actually imitating only two Hawaiians. He "could imitate four Hawaiians but did not wish to do so because that would put all the performers who could only imitate two Hawaiians out of work". Cook would appear on stage with a ukulele in hand and begin:
"I will give an imitation of four Hawaiians. This is one [whistles]; this is another [plays ukulele], and this is the third [marks time with his foot]. I could imitate four Hawaiians just as easily, but I will tell you the reason why I don't do it. You see, I bought a horse for $50 and it turned out to be a running horse. I was offered $15,000 for him, and I took it. I built a house for the $15,000, and when it was finished, a neighbor offered me $100,000 for it. He said my house stood right where he wanted to dig a well. So I took the $100,000 to accommodate him. I invested $100,000 on peanuts, and that year, there was a peanut famine, so I sold the peanuts for $350,000. Now, why should a man with $350,000 bother to imitate four Hawaiians?"
Never a fan of Hollywood, Cook made only two full-length movies and a handful of short subjects, which is a major reason he is not widely remembered today. In 1930, he starred in the film version of
The 1930s also saw Cook's successful transition into the new medium of radio, as the host of two variety series and a frequent guest on many others.
Cook, from 1924 to 1941, made his residence at
Later life and death
Cook was diagnosed with
References
- ^ "Neighbor Joe Cook One of Merriest of Comedians," Poughkeepsie Journal, p. 10, Sunday, February 5, 1950
- ^ "Evansville native Joe Cook made the big time". Evansville Courier & Press. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
- ^ Pollock, Arthur (June 15, 1924). "Joe Cook- Most Versatile Actor in America
Brooklyn Eagle". bklyn.newspapers.com. Retrieved May 7, 2015. - ^ Ohl, p. 82.
- ^ Ford, p. 134.
- ^ Cook, pp. 1–64.
- ^ History Archived 2011-01-28 at the Wayback Machine, Borough of Hopatcong. Accessed February 1, 2011. "The center for much of this activity was Joe Cook's Sleepless Hollow in Hopatcong's Davis Cove. Cook was a popular Vaudevillian, comedian, and musical theater star who lived at the Lake from 1924 to 1941."
- ^ Stewart, p. 183.
Sources
- Ford, Corey (1967). The Time of Laughter. New York: ISBN 978-0273314660.
- Ohl, Vicki (2004). Fine and Dandy: The Life and Work of Kay Swift. New Haven, Connecticut: ISBN 978-0300102611.
- Stewart, Donald Ogden (1975). By A Stroke Of Luck !. London: Paddington Press. ISBN 978-0846700630.
- Lake Hopatcong News