Sneha Girap (Editor)

Joe Penner

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Jozsef Pinter

Children
  
none

Cause of death
  
Heart Attack

Name
  
Joe Penner

Role
  
Comedian

Years active
  
1931-1940


Joe Penner About Wanna Buy a Duck and Joe Penner Get It Got It

Born
  
November 11, 1904 (
1904-11-11
)
Nagybecskerek, (Zrenjanin), Austria-Hungary (now Serbia)

Resting place
  
Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale)Great Mausoleum, Fuchsia Terrace, crypt C, on stairwell landing

Died
  
January 10, 1941, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Spouse
  
Eleanor May Vogt (m. 1928–1941)

Parents
  
John Pinter, Sofia Keraly Pinter

Movies
  
The Day the Bookies, Go Chase Yourself, New Faces of 1937, The Life of the Party, The Boys from Syracuse

Similar People
  
Leslie Goodwins, A Edward Sutherland, William A Seiter, Edward F Cline, Roy Webb

Occupation
  
radio & movie comedian

Joe penner and betty grable in the day the bookies wept


Joe Penner (November 11, 1904 – January 10, 1941) was an American 1930s-era vaudeville, radio and film comedian.

Contents

Joe Penner Joe Penner Photo Album

Joe penner and dick lane in the day the bookies wept


Radio

Joe Penner Thelma Todd Joe Penner

Penner developed his catch phrases in burlesque. In 1932 he toured in a vaudeville revue with Eddie Tamblyn, father of Russ. He was launched on his successful radio career by Rudy Vallée, appearances which led to his own Sunday evening half-hour, The Baker's Broadcast, which began on the Blue Network October 8, 1933. Penner was a zany comic, noted for his famed catchphrase, "Wanna buy a duck?", and his low hyuck-hyuck laugh. Penner's other memorable catchphrase, often triggered by someone else's double entendre remark, was, "You naaaasss-ty man!"
He was voted radio's top comedian in 1934, but a 1935 dispute with the ad agency over the show's format resulted in Penner quitting The Baker's Broadcast on June 30, 1935. Vox Pop began as a summer replacement series for Penner in 1935. A year later, he returned with The Joe Penner Show, which began airing October 4, 1936 on CBS, sponsored by Cocomalt, with Harry Conn as his new head writer.

Films

Joe Penner wwwnndbcompeople582000078348joepenner1siz

His films include College Rhythm (1934), New Faces of 1937 (1937), "Mr Doodle Kicks Off" (1938),The Day the Bookies Wept (1939) and Millionaire Playboy (1940). He was caricatured by Tex Avery and Friz Freleng in the musical cartoon, "My Green Fedora", "Can You Take It?" a "Popeye the Sailor" cartoon (Max Fleischer for Paramount), and several pictures starring the bumbling stooge Egghead. He also made a cameo in the Disney cartoon "Mother Goose Goes Hollywood" in which he says, "Wanna buy a duck?", and then shows Donald Duck on a plate.

After covering the 1932–34 rise of Jack Pearl, Elizabeth McLeod summed up Penner's popularity:

The ultimate Depression-era zany was Joe Penner. A forgotten performer today to most, and little more than a footnote to the average OTR [old-time radio] fan, Penner was a national craze in 1933–34. There is no deep social meaning in his comedy, no shades of subtlety — just utter slapstick foolishness, delivered in an endearingly simpering style that's the closest thing the 1930s had to Pee-wee Herman. An added attraction was Penner's in-character singing each week of a whimsical novelty song, specially written to suit his style. Like Pearl, however, Penner was doomed to early decline by the sheer repetitiveness of his format, even though he remained very popular with children right up to the end of his radio career.

Part of the reason for Penner's relative obscurity in modern times is the paucity of surviving recordings of Penner's work. His radio show aired in the early 1930s; widespread recording of popular radio shows began in 1936, just as his show was ending.

Personal life

He was an ethnic Hungarian born as József Pintér in Nagybecskerek, Austria-Hungary (in what is present-day Zrenjanin, Serbia). He passed through Ellis Island as a child when his family emigrated to New York City. He married Eleanor May Vogt (1908–1946).

Penner died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1941, aged 36.

Listen to

  • Joe Penner and Rudy Vallee on The Fleishmann's Yeast Hour July 13, 1933
  • References

    Joe Penner Wikipedia