Fred Allen (Fred Allen)

Fred Allen

Radio Entertainer, Actor. Born John Florence Sullivan on May 31, 1894, Fred Allen began his career in vaudeville before becoming one of radio’s most original and admired comedians. Allen began his radio career on October 23, 1932, starring on The Linit Bath Club Revue. By 1934, Allen was starring on Town Hall Tonight, a one-hour show which featured Allen examining current events and interviewing unusual guests. It was here that Allen began radio’s longest-running “feud” in 1937, when he made a series of jokes about fellow comedian Jack Benny. Allen invented an entirely new form of radio comedy which consisted of lampooning current events, making fun of his sponsors, and presenting skits that featured a cast of memorable recurring characters. Allen’s best-remembered feature was “Allen’s Alley,” a weekly segment in which he would discuss issues of the day with characters like the blustery Senator Claghorn, Brooklyn housewife Pansy Nussbaum and stoic New Englander Titus Moody. He was featured in the Texaco Star Theater from 1940-1944. Poor health forced Allen off the air in 1944, but he returned in the fall of 1945 with The Fred Allen Show, which lasted until June 26, 1949. He was a regular panelist on “What’s My Line?” from 1954-56. Fred Allen was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1988. (bio by: Eamonn)  Family links:  Spouse:  Portland Hoffa (1905 – 1990)* *Calculated relationship

Born

  • May, 31, 1894
  • USA

Died

  • March, 03, 1956
  • USA

Cemetery

  • Gate of Heaven Cemetery
  • USA

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