Eddie Cantor

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie) 01:57 Tools
Makin' Whoopee 00:00 Tools
Margie 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie 00:00 Tools
Mandy 00:00 Tools
I'll Have Vanilla 00:00 Tools
When My Ship Comes In 00:00 Tools
You'd Be Surprised 00:00 Tools
Look What You've Done 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee! 00:00 Tools
Over Somebody Else's Shoulder 00:00 Tools
Put a Tax On Love 00:00 Tools
The Man On The Flying Trapeze 00:00 Tools
Oh, Is She Dumb 00:00 Tools
Ma, He's Making Eyes At Me (from Bullets Over Broadway) 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep Your Mind on Dancing 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir, That's My Baby 00:00 Tools
No, No, Nora 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whopee 00:00 Tools
Coming In On a Wing and a Prayer 00:00 Tools
Keep Young and Beautiful 00:00 Tools
Doodle Doo Doo 00:00 Tools
Oh! Gee, Oh! Gosh, Oh! Golly I'm In Love 00:00 Tools
Susie 00:00 Tools
The Dumber They Come, The Better I Like 'Em 00:00 Tools
Oh, Gee, Georgie! 00:00 Tools
That's the Kind of Baby for Me 00:00 Tools
Cheer Up! Smile! Nertz! 00:00 Tools
He Loves It 00:00 Tools
What A Perfect Combination 00:00 Tools
My Baby Just Cares For Me 00:00 Tools
Okay Toots 00:00 Tools
Palesteena 00:00 Tools
I'm Hungry for Beautiful Girls 00:00 Tools
No No Nora 00:00 Tools
How I Love That Girl 00:00 Tools
The Only Thing I Want For Christmas (Is Just To Keep The Things That I've Got) 00:00 Tools
Ma! (He's Making Eyes At Me) 00:00 Tools
If You Do What You Do 00:00 Tools
Hungry Women 00:00 Tools
Ma! He's Making Eyes At Me 00:00 Tools
An Earful Of Music 00:00 Tools
Ida, Sweet as Apple Cider 00:00 Tools
Cheer Up, Smile, Nertz 00:00 Tools
There's Nothing Too Good For My Baby 00:00 Tools
The Only Thing I Want For Christmas 00:00 Tools
Row, Row, Rosie! 00:00 Tools
Ain't She Sweet 00:00 Tools
Monkey Doodle 00:00 Tools
I Love Me (I'm Wild About Myself) 00:00 Tools
Sophie 00:00 Tools
Oh! Boy, What a Girl 00:00 Tools
Dinah 00:00 Tools
Eddie (Steady) 00:00 Tools
I Love Her-She Loves Me 00:00 Tools
I Never Knew I Had a Wonderful Wife 00:00 Tools
Little Curly Hair in a High Chair 00:00 Tools
Charley, My Boy 00:00 Tools
I've Got the Yes! We Have No Bananas Blues 00:00 Tools
We're Back Together Again, My Baby And Me 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopie 00:00 Tools
Charley My Boy 00:00 Tools
Ritzi Mitzi 00:00 Tools
Josephine Please No Lean On the Bell 00:00 Tools
If I Give Up the Saxophone 00:00 Tools
Doodle-Doo-Doo 00:00 Tools
Little Lady Make Believe & Says My Heart 00:00 Tools
Build A Little Home 00:00 Tools
Makin' Woopee 00:00 Tools
On a Windy Day 'Way Down in Waikiki 00:00 Tools
Now's the Time to Fall In Love 00:00 Tools
Those Panama Mammas 00:00 Tools
Lambeth Walk 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie) (78rpm Version) 00:00 Tools
Joe Is Here 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down on the Farm 00:00 Tools
No One Knows What I'ts All About 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter 00:00 Tools
I've Got The Yes! 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee! (Whoopee!) 00:00 Tools
I Wish That I'd Been Born in Borneo (1921) 00:00 Tools
Oh Pappa! 00:00 Tools
Laff It off! 00:00 Tools
Alabamy Bound 00:00 Tools
That's the Kind of a Baby for Me 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir, That's My Baby - Broadway 1941 00:00 Tools
Making Whoopee! 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie) - 78rpm Version 00:00 Tools
I Love Her 00:00 Tools
How You Gonna Keep 'Em Down On The Farm? 00:00 Tools
Goo-Goo-Good-Night Dead!! 00:00 Tools
Ma (He's Making Eyes at Me) 00:00 Tools
Ma He's Makin Eyes at Me 00:00 Tools
Margie - Broadway Brevities 1920 00:00 Tools
The Lambeth Walk 00:00 Tools
Oh, Papa! 00:00 Tools
Eddie Cantor's Tips on the Stock Market 00:00 Tools
Mandy (Kid Millions) 00:00 Tools
A Girl Friend Of A Boy Friend Of Mine 00:00 Tools
Don't Put a Tax On the Beautiful Girls 00:00 Tools
In The Moonlight 00:00 Tools
Ballin' the Jack 00:00 Tools
My Wife Is on a Diet 00:00 Tools
Lambeth Walk - Remastered 2000 version 00:00 Tools
Baby Face 00:00 Tools
Little Lady Make Believe 00:00 Tools
How Ya' Gonna Keep 'em Down On the Farm 00:00 Tools
Calabash Pipe 00:00 Tools
Tips on the Stock Market 00:00 Tools
Cheer Up! Smile! Nertz! (1931) 00:00 Tools
Okay, Toots 00:00 Tools
Waiting for the Robert E. Lee 00:00 Tools
Making The Best Of Each Day 00:00 Tools
We're Staying Home Tonight 00:00 Tools
We're Having A Baby, My Baby And Me 00:00 Tools
They Go Wild, Simply Wild over Me 00:00 Tools
No, No, Nora - 78rpm Version 00:00 Tools
DIXIE MADE US MAD 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down On The Farm? 00:00 Tools
Ma! He’s Making Eyes At Me 00:00 Tools
Making Whoopie 00:00 Tools
How 'Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down On The Farm? 00:00 Tools
Makin’ Whoopeee 00:00 Tools
Yes, Yes, My Baby Said Yes, Yes 00:00 Tools
The Lady Dances 00:00 Tools
Ball In the Jack 00:00 Tools
Maxi The Taxi 00:00 Tools
OLD PIANO ROLL BLUES 00:00 Tools
No, No, Nora (78rpm Version) 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir, That's My Baby! 00:00 Tools
My, How The Time Goes 00:00 Tools
Ma, He's Making Eyes At Me 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee! - From Whoopee! 00:00 Tools
If I Give Up the Saxophone, Will You Come Back to Me? 00:00 Tools
Oh Boy, What A Girl! 00:00 Tools
I Never See Maggie Alone 00:00 Tools
Laugh Your Way Through Life 00:00 Tools
Is Just To Keep The Things That I've Got 00:00 Tools
When Nathan Was Married to Rose of Washington Square 00:00 Tools
If I Give Up The Saxophone Will you come Back To Me? 00:00 Tools
I've Got My Captain Working For Me Now 00:00 Tools
BALLIN THE JACK 00:00 Tools
I Want A Girl 00:00 Tools
The Dumber They Come, The Better I Like Em 00:00 Tools
Ida (Sweet As Apple Cider) 00:00 Tools
1923-11-17 - No, No, Nora 00:00 Tools
JOSEPHINE PLEASE DON'T LEANA ON THE BELL 00:00 Tools
Yes, Yes My Baby Said Yes, Yes 00:00 Tools
Yes, Yes, My Baby Said Yes, Yes! 00:00 Tools
Makin Whopee - Eddie Cantor (1 00:00 Tools
All the Boys Love Mary 00:00 Tools
The Only Thing I Want For Christmas( is YOUR2 front teeth) 00:00 Tools
No One Knows What It's All About 00:00 Tools
Oh, Boy! What A Girl 00:00 Tools
Josephine, Please No Lean on the Bell 00:00 Tools
They Go Wild, Simply Wild, Over Me 00:00 Tools
Eddie Cantor's Tips on the Stock Market - Remastered 2003 00:00 Tools
Okay, Toots! 00:00 Tools
Oh, the last rose of summer 00:00 Tools
When They're Old Enough To Know Better (from "Ziegfeld Follies Of 1919") 00:00 Tools
Yes, Sir That’s My Baby 00:00 Tools
Yes, We Have No Bananas 00:00 Tools
Row! Row! Rosie 00:00 Tools
Swing Is Here To Stay 00:00 Tools
1 FAW DOWN GO BOOM 00:00 Tools
I Used to Call Her Baby 00:00 Tools
We're Having A Baby My Baby And Me 00:00 Tools
Oh! the Last Rose of Summer, Was the Sweetest Rose of All 00:00 Tools
The Dumb Ones Know How To Make Love 00:00 Tools
The Modern Maiden's Prayer 00:00 Tools
Merrily We Roll Along 00:00 Tools
In My Arms 00:00 Tools
Waiting For The Robert E Lee 00:00 Tools
We're Having a Baby (My Baby and Me) 00:00 Tools
The Argentines & The Greeks 00:00 Tools
I Love Her, She Loves Me 00:00 Tools
You Don't Need The Wine To Have A Wonderful Time, While They Still Make Those Wonderful Girls 00:00 Tools
Now I Always Have Maggie Alone 00:00 Tools
Yes, Yes, My Baby Said Yes 00:00 Tools
I Don't Want to Get Well 00:00 Tools
The Oh Last Rose Of Summer (from "Ziegfeld Follies") 00:00 Tools
Oh, Gee, Oh Gosh, Oh Golly! 00:00 Tools
You'd be Surprised! 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir That's My Baby 00:00 Tools
The Man On The Flying Trapeze - Columbia Years 1922-1940 Circus 00:00 Tools
I Love Her - She Loves Me 00:00 Tools
Goo-Goo-Good-Night-Dear! 00:00 Tools
The Mad Russian (feat. Bert Gordon) 00:00 Tools
Medley - Little Lady Make-Believe / Says My Heart 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie) [From Big Boy] 00:00 Tools
Medley 00:00 Tools
Santa Claus Is Coming to Town 00:00 Tools
Hello Wisconsin 00:00 Tools
Margie (1921) 00:00 Tools
Maxie the Taxi 00:00 Tools
Down In Borneo Isle 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Suzie 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie) (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Makin’ Whoopee 00:00 Tools
Give Me the Sultan's Harem 00:00 Tools
Yes, Sir! That's My Baby 00:00 Tools
When I See All the Loving They Waste On Babies 00:00 Tools
When They're Old Enough to Know Better, It's Better to Leave Them Alone 00:00 Tools
The Older They Get, The Younger They Want 'Em 00:00 Tools
Etheremin 00:00 Tools
I Never Knew I Had a Wonderful Wife (Till the Town went Dry) 00:00 Tools
Oh Gee, Oh Gosh, Oh Golly, I'm In Love 00:00 Tools
The Only Thing I Want For Christmas (Is Just To Keep The Things That I've Got) (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Wer'e Back Together Again, My Baby And Me 00:00 Tools
When It Comes to Loving the Girls 00:00 Tools
Those Panama Mamas 00:00 Tools
Snoops the Lawyer 00:00 Tools
Nows the Time to Fall In Love 00:00 Tools
Oh Gee, Oh Gosh, Oh Golly 00:00 Tools
Jack Renard 00:00 Tools
A Girlfriend Of A Boyfriend Of Mine 00:00 Tools
When They're Old Enough To Know Better 00:00 Tools
What A Perfect Combination 1932 00:00 Tools
How You Gonna Keep 'Em Down on the Farm 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
You Don't Need the Wine to Have a Wonderful Time 00:00 Tools
Oh Papa! 00:00 Tools
Eddie Steady 00:00 Tools
I Love Her-She Loves Me (I'm Her He-She's My She) 00:00 Tools
Swing Is Here to Sway 00:00 Tools
Jimmy Durante and Eddie Cantor Medley 00:00 Tools
Oh! How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning 00:00 Tools
The Dixie Volunteers 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep Em Down on The Farm (After They've Seen Paree) 00:00 Tools
You Ain't Heard Nothing Yet 00:00 Tools
Bye Bye Blackbird 00:00 Tools
Row, Row, Row 00:00 Tools
I Never Knew I Had a Wonderful Wife (Till the Town went Dry) (1919) 00:00 Tools
Don't Put a Tax on Love 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (Like I know Susie) [Big Boy] 00:00 Tools
Charlie, My Boy 00:00 Tools
Don't Put a Tax On the Beautiful Girls(Emerson) 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir, That's My Baby - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
Timbuctoo 00:00 Tools
the modern maid 00:00 Tools
Making Whoopie! 00:00 Tools
Noah's Wife Lived a Wonderful Life 00:00 Tools
(Potatoes Are Cheaper-Tomatoes Are Cheaper) Now's the Time To Fall in Love 00:00 Tools
I Faw Down an' Go Boom! 00:00 Tools
Now I'll Always Have Maggie A 00:00 Tools
Waiting For The Robert E.lee (the Correct Version) 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee! (1929) 00:00 Tools
Goo-Goo-Good-Night Dear! 00:00 Tools
We're Back Together Again 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie - Like I Know Susie 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down on the Farm - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
Merrie Melodies (Merrily We Roll Along) 00:00 Tools
Eddie Cantor-If You Knew Susie 00:00 Tools
One Hour With You 00:00 Tools
Come On and Play Wiz Me 00:00 Tools
Hello Sunshine Hello 00:00 Tools
Rise 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir, That’s My Baby 00:00 Tools
I Faw Down And Go Boom 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (like I Know Susie) - Remastered 00:00 Tools
Josephina Please Don't Lean On the Bell 00:00 Tools
You Ought to See My Baby 00:00 Tools
Margie (1944) 00:00 Tools
Yes, We Have No Bananas! 00:00 Tools
Im Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter 00:00 Tools
Ida! Sweet as Apple Cider 00:00 Tools
Oh, Gee, Oh Gosh, Oh Golly, I'm In Love! 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
Ma 00:00 Tools
Medley: Little Lady Make Believe / Says My Heart 00:00 Tools
I Faw Down An' Go Boom 00:00 Tools
if you knew susie like i knew susie 00:00 Tools
When It Comes to Loving the Girls(Emerson) 00:00 Tools
You’d Be Surprised 00:00 Tools
Alabama Bound 00:00 Tools
Hungry Women (from "Whoopee") 00:00 Tools
Oh Gee, Oh Gosh, Oh Golly I'm In Love 00:00 Tools
Leena, Queen of Palesteena (1920) 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir,Thats My Baby (From 'Yes Sir That's My Baby') 00:00 Tools
Anna In Indiana 00:00 Tools
Dixie Made Us Jazz Band Mad 00:00 Tools
You Don't Need the Wine(Emerson) 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie (Like I Know Susie) - Previously Unissued Take 00:00 Tools
At the High Brown Babies Ball 00:00 Tools
Fantansie for Piano Four Hand, D940 00:00 Tools
Eddie Cantor Show - 1948DEC28 Guest Jack Benny 00:00 Tools
Oh the Last Rose of Summer(Pathe) 00:00 Tools
The Mayor Of Texaco Town 00:00 Tools
Dixie Made Us Jazz Mad 00:00 Tools
The Argentines, the Portugese, and the Greeks 00:00 Tools
The Modern Maidens Prayer 00:00 Tools
Oh Gee Georgie 00:00 Tools
I Never Knew I Could Love Anybody 00:00 Tools
Cheer Up 00:00 Tools
I Love Me 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee - The Eddie Cantor Story 00:00 Tools
My How The Time Goes By 00:00 Tools
When My Ship Comes In [1934] 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Suzie (Like I Know Suzie) 00:00 Tools
Eddie Cantor's Tips On The Stock Market [1929] 00:00 Tools
Making Whoopee (Whoopee) 00:00 Tools
Doodle Doo Doo 1925 00:00 Tools
When I'm the President 00:00 Tools
Okay Toots (Kid Millions (1934)) 00:00 Tools
When They're Old Enough to Know Better(Pathe) 00:00 Tools
The Chain 00:00 Tools
There's Nothing Too Good for My Baby [12OY] 00:00 Tools
If They Feel like A War Let Them Keep It Over There 00:00 Tools
That's the Kind of a Baby for Me (Recorded 1917) 00:00 Tools
Hello, Sunshine, Hello 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopeee 00:00 Tools
We're Having A Baby 00:00 Tools
No No Nora (78 rpm Version) 00:00 Tools
I Love To Spend Each Sunday With You aka One Hour With You 00:00 Tools
If You Do What I Do 00:00 Tools
When My Ship Comes In - Previously Released Only In England 00:00 Tools
The Automobile Song 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep ‘Em Down On The Farm 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee - Digitally Re-Mastered 00:00 Tools
Ma (He's Magind Eyes At Me) 00:00 Tools
Oh, Gee, Georgie 00:00 Tools
Ma, He's Makin Eyes at Me - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
She Gives Them All the Ha Ha Ha 00:00 Tools
I Faw Down And Go Boom 28-1-1929 00:00 Tools
Suzie (Recorded 1922) 00:00 Tools
I Feel So Spanish Tonight 00:00 Tools
I've Got the "Yes! We Have No Banana" Blues 00:00 Tools
Oh Suzanna Dust Off That Old Pianna! 00:00 Tools
Rizi Mitzi 00:00 Tools
Oh! Gee, Oh! Gosh, Oh! Golly, I'm In Love 1923 00:00 Tools
Joes Is Here 00:00 Tools
You Don't Need the Wine(Pathe) 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee 1928 00:00 Tools
I fall down go boom 00:00 Tools
Josephine, Please No Lean on the Bell - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
You'd Be Suprised 00:00 Tools
Making Whoopie(1920) 00:00 Tools
Yes|Sir! That's My Baby 00:00 Tools
Oh Gee, Oh Gosh, I'm In Love 00:00 Tools
Put a Tax on Love (1933) 00:00 Tools
Baby Face - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
Laff It Off 00:00 Tools
Now I'll Always Have Maggie Alone 00:00 Tools
Texaco Town: November 1, 1936 (Part 4) 00:00 Tools
What Do I Want With Money? 00:00 Tools
We're Having A Baby , My baby And Me 00:00 Tools
Yes Sir, That's My Baby! (1925) 00:00 Tools
Dixie Made Us Jazz-Mad 00:00 Tools
You'd Be Surprised 1920 00:00 Tools
Little Lady Make Believe / Says My Heart 00:00 Tools
Doodle-Doo-Doo (1924) 00:00 Tools
Dinah (The New Plantation Revue, 1925 Show) 00:00 Tools
Little Lady Make-Believe . . . Says My Heart 00:00 Tools
If You Knew Susie Like I Know Susie (Big Boy, 1925 Show) 00:00 Tools
When They're Old Enough to Know Better(Emerson) 00:00 Tools
Hungry Women (from Whoopee) 00:00 Tools
Texaco Town: November 1, 1936 (Part 3) 00:00 Tools
When It Comes to Lovin' the Girls, I'm Way Ahead of the Times 00:00 Tools
If I Give Up The Saxophone (Will You Come Back To Me) 00:00 Tools
Texaco Town: November 1, 1936 (Part 2) 00:00 Tools
Margie - Spoken Introduction 00:00 Tools
Ziegfeld Follies Of 1919: You'd Be Surprised 00:00 Tools
Now’s The Time To Fall In Love 00:00 Tools
Makin' Whoopee ( from the musical "Whoopee") (Rec. 18 December 1928) 00:00 Tools
Okay, Toots 1934 00:00 Tools
How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down On The Farm! 00:00 Tools
The Oh Last Rose Of Summer 00:00 Tools
Thank Your Lucky Stars - We're Staying Home Tonight 00:00 Tools
I Don't Want To Make History 00:00 Tools
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Eddie Cantor (January 31, 1892 - October 10, 1964) was an American comedian, singer, actor, songwriter. Known to Broadway, radio and early television audiences as Banjo Eyes, this "Apostle of Pep" was regarded almost as a family member by millions because his top-rated radio shows revealed intimate stories and amusing antics about his wife Ida and five children. Early life Cantor was born as Isidore Itzkowitz[1] in New York City, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants, Meta and Mechel Itzkowitz. His mother died of lung cancer two years after his birth, and he was abandoned by his father, left to be raised by his grandmother, Esther Kantrowitz. A misunderstanding when signing her grandson for school gave him her last name of Kantrowitz (later Americanized to "Cantor") instead of Itzkowitz. He adopted the first name Eddie when he met his future wife, Ida Tobias, in 1903, because she liked the idea of having a boyfriend named Eddie. The two married in 1914 and remained together until Ida died in 1962. By his early teens. Cantor began winning talent contests at local theaters and started appearing on stage. One of his earliest paying jobs was doubling as a waiter and performer, singing for tips at Carey Walsh's Coney Island saloon where a young Jimmy Durante accompanied him on piano. In 1907, Cantor became a billed name in vaudeville. In 1912 he was the only performer over the age of 20 to appear in Gus Edwards' Kid Kabaret, where he created his first blackface character, Jefferson. Critical praise from that show got the attention of Broadway's top producer, Florenz Ziegfeld, who gave Cantor a spot in the Ziegfeld rooftop post-show, Midnight Frolic (1916). Broadway and recordings A year later, Cantor made his Broadway debut in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1917. He continued in the Ziegfeld Follies until 1927, a period considered the best years of the long-standing revue. For several years Cantor co-starred in an act with pioneer African-American comedian Bert Williams, both appearing in blackface; Cantor played Williams's son. Other co-stars with Cantor during his time in the Follies included Will Rogers, Marilyn Miller and W.C. Fields. He moved on to stardom in book musicals, starting with Kid Boots (1923), Whoopee! (1928) and Banjo Eyes (1940). Cantor began making phonograph records in 1917, recording both comedy songs and routines and popular songs of the day, first for Victor, then for Aeoleon-Vocalion, Pathé and Emerson. From 1921 through 1925 he had an exclusive contract with Columbia Records, returning to Victor for the remainder of the decade. Cantor was one of the era's most successful entertainers, but the 1929 stock market crash took away his multi-millionaire status and left him deeply in debt. However, Cantor's relentless attention to his own earnings in order to avoid the poverty he knew growing up caused him to search quickly for more work, quickly building a new bank account with his highly popular, bestselling book of humor and cartoons about his experience, Caught Short! A Saga of Wailing Wall Street in "1929 A.C. (After Crash)". Films Cantor also bounced back in movies and on radio. Cantor had previously appeared in a number of short films and two features (Special Delivery and Kid Boots) in the 1920s, but he became a leading Hollywood star in 1930 with the film version of Whoopee!. Over the next two decades, he continued making films until 1948, including Roman Scandals (1933), Ali Baba Goes to Town (1937) and If You Knew Susie (1948). Radio Cantor's initial radio appearance was with Rudy Vallee's The Fleischmann's Yeast Hour on February 5, 1931, and it led to a four-week tryout with NBC's The Chase and Sanborn Hour. Replacing Maurice Chevalier, who was returning to Paris, Cantor joined The Chase and Sanborn Hour on September 13, 1931. This hour-long Sunday evening variety series teamed Cantor with announcer Jimmy Wallingford and violinist Dave Rubinoff. The show established Cantor as a leading comedian, and his scriptwriter, David Freedman, as “the Captain of Comedy.” Soon, Cantor became the world's highest paid radio star. His shows began with a crowd chanting, "We want Cantor - We want Cantor," a phrase said to have originated when a vaudeville audience chanted to chase off an opening act on the bill before Cantor. Cantor's theme song was the 1903 pop tune "Ida, Sweet as Apple Cider," dedicated to his wife. Indicative of his impact on the mass audience, he agreed in November 1934 to introduce a new song by the songwriters J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie that other well-known artists had rejected as being "silly" and "childish." The song, "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town", immediately had orders for 100,000 copies of sheet music the next day. It sold 400,000 copies by Christmas of that year. In the 1940s his NBC national radio show was Time To Smile. In addition to film and radio, Cantor recorded for Hit of the Week Records, then again for Columbia, for Banner and Decca and various small labels. He was a founder of the March of Dimes, and did much to publicize the battle against polio. Cantor also served as first president of the Screen Actors Guild. His heavy political involvement began early in his career, including his quick rush to strike with Actors Equity in 1919, against the advisement of father figure and producer, Florenz Ziegfeld. Cantor's career declined somewhat in the late 1930s due to his public denunciations of Adolf Hitler and Fascism. Wishing to distance themselves from any political controversy, many sponsors dropped Cantor's shows. However, it soon bounced back with the United States' entry into World War II. Television In the 1950s he was one of the alternating hosts of the television show The Colgate Comedy Hour, in which he would introduce variety acts and play comic characters like "Maxie the Taxi." However, the show landed Cantor in an unlikely controversy when a young Sammy Davis, Jr. appeared as a guest performer. Cantor embraced Davis and mopped Davis's brow with his handkerchief after his performance. Worried sponsors led NBC to threaten cancellation of the show; other sources claim that NBC threatened to cancel the show when Davis was booked for two weeks straight. Cantor's response to the controversy was to book Davis for the rest of the season. Books In addition to Caught Short!, Cantor wrote or co-wrote at least seven other books, including booklets released by the then-fledgling firm of Simon & Schuster, with Cantor’s name on the cover. Some were "as told to" or written with David Freedman). Customers paid a dollar and received the booklet with a penny embedded in the hardcover. They sold well, and H. L. Mencken (1880-1956) asserted that these books did more to pull America out of the Great Depression than all government measures combined. Tributes Cantor was profiled on the popular program This Is Your Life, in which an unsuspecting person (usually a celebrity) would be surprised on live television with a half-hour tribute. Cantor was the only subject who was told of the surprise in advance; he was recovering from a heart attack and it was felt that the shock might harm him. In 1953 Warner Brothers, in an attempt to duplicate the box-office success of The Jolson Story, filmed a big-budget Technicolor feature film, The Eddie Cantor Story. The film found an audience, but might have done better with someone else in the leading role. Actor Keefe Brasselle played Cantor as a caricature, with high-pressure dialogue and bulging eyes wide open at all times; the fact that Brasselle was considerably taller than Cantor didn't lend realism, either. Eddie and Ida Cantor were seen in a brief prologue and epilogue set in a projection room, where they are watching Brasselle in action; at the end of the film Eddie tells Ida, "I never looked better in my life" ... and gives the audience a knowing, incredulous look! Something closer to the real Eddie Cantor story is his self-produced 1944 feature Show Business, a valentine to vaudeville and show folks that was RKO's top-grossing film that year. Probably the best summary of Cantor's career is in one of the Colgate Comedy Hour shows. The Colgate hour was a virtual video autobiography, with Cantor recounting his career, singing his familiar hits, and re-creating his singing-waiter days with his old pal Jimmy Durante (Jimmy's wearing a lavish toupee!). This show has been issued on DVD as Eddie Cantor in Person. Family Eddie and Ida Cantor had five children: Marilyn, Marjorie, Natalie, Edna and Janet. Cantor's daughter, Janet Gari is a songwriter who has collaborated with Toby Garson, the daughter of composer Harry Ruby, on children's shows and off-Broadway revues. Cantor’s autobiographies, My Life is in Your Hands (with David Freedman) and Take My Life (with Jane Kesner Ardmore) were republished in 2000, thanks to the dedicated efforts of Cantor’s grandson, musician Brian Gari. On October 10, 1964 in Beverly Hills, California, Eddie Cantor suffered another heart attack and died. He is buried in Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery. Cantor was awarded an honorary Academy Award the year of his death. Filmography * Widow at the Races (1913) * A Few Moments with Eddie Cantor (1923) (DeForest Phonofilm short with sound) * Kid Boots (1926) * Special Delivery (1927) * A Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic (1929) (short) * Glorifying the American Girl (1929) * That Party in Person (1928) (short) * Insurance (1930) (short) * Getting a Ticket (1930) (short) * Whoopee! (1930) * Palmy Days (1931) * Talking Screen Snapshots (1932) (short) * The Kid from Spain (1932) * Roman Scandals (1933) * The Hollywood Gad-About (1934) (short) * Kid Millions (1934) * Strike Me Pink (1936) * Ali Baba Goes to Town (1937) * The March of Time Volume IV, Issue 5 (1937) (short) * Forty Little Mothers (1940) * Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943) * Show Business (1944) (also producer) * Hollywood Canteen (1944) * Screen Snapshots: Radio Shows (1945) (short) * American Creed (1946) (short) * Meet Mr. Mischief (1947) (short) (appears on poster) * If You Knew Susie (1948) * Screen Snapshots: Hollywood's Happy Homes (1949) (short) * The Story of Will Rogers (1952) * Screen Snapshots: Memorial to Al Jolson (1952) (short) * The Eddie Cantor Story (1953) (Cameo) Broadway * Ziegfeld Follies of 1917 (1917) - revue - performer * Ziegfeld Follies of 1918 (1918) - revue - performer, co-composer and co-lyricist for "Broadway's Not a Bad Place After All" with Harry Ruby * Ziegfeld Follies of 1919 (1919) - revue - performer, lyricist for "(Oh! She's the) Last Rose of Summer" * Ziegfeld Follies of 1920 (1920) - revue - composer for "Green River", composer and lyricist for "Every Blossom I See Reminds Me of You" and "I Found a Baby on My Door Step" * The Midnight Rounders of 1920 (1920) - revue - performer * Broadway Brevities of 1920 (1920) - revue - performer * Make It Snappy (1922) - revue - performer, co-bookwriter * Ziegfeld Follies of 1923 (1923) - revue - sketch-writer * Kid Boots (1923) - musical - actor in the role of "Kid Boots" (the caddie master) * Ziegfeld Follies of 1927 (1927) - revue - performer, co-bookwriter * Whoopee! (1928) - musical - actor in the role of "Henry Williams" * Eddie Cantor at the Palace (1931) - solo performance * Banjo Eyes (1941) - musical - actor in the role of "Erwin Trowbridge" * Nellie Bly (1946) - musical - co-producer Reference Goldman, Herbert G. (1997). Banjo Eyes: Eddie Cantor and the Birth of Modern Stardom. New York: Oxford University Press. Listen to * The Chase and Sanborn Hour with Eddie Cantor (excerpts) * Free OTR: The Eddie Cantor Show (30 1936-52 episodes) * OTR Network Library: The Eddie Cantor Show (11 1936-52 episodes) * Eddie Cantor on the Radio (four 1937-48 episodes) * A few moments with Eddie Cantor A 6-minute Phonfilm from 1923 featuring Eddie Cantor telling monologues and singing two songs. Quote "Do you know why Henry Ford so dislikes the Jewish people? They can get more for a secondhand Ford than he can for a NEW one!" (A Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic, 1929) Notes 1. ^ http://www.musicals101.com/who2.htm External links Eddie Cantor at the Internet Movie Database: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0134662/ Eddie Cantor official site: http://www.eddiecantor.com/ Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs: The Eddie Cantor Show: http://www.otrsite.com/logs/loge1005.htm Broadway Cafe Society.com The Entertainers: Eddie Cantor: http://www.broadwaycafesociety.com/entarc0307.htm Read more on Last.fm. 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