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ALLEN, GRACIE
 Gracie Allen Photo courtesy of George Burns GRACIE ALLEN. Born in San
Francisco, California, U.S., 26 July 1895. Attended Star of the Sea Convent
School. Married George Burns, 1926; children: Sandra Jean and Ronald John.
Joined sister Bessie in vaudeville act, Chicago, Illinois, 1909; played
vaudeville as "single" act from 1911; teamed with George Burns in 1922; toured
Orpheum vaudeville circuit; toured United States and Europe in the Keith
theater circuit from 1926; played BBC radio for twenty weeks in 1926; first
United States radio appearance, with Burns, on The Rudy Vallee Show,
1930; premiered as star of The Adventures of Gracie on CBS radio on 15
February 1932; starred, with Burns, in The Burns and Allen Show on NBC radio,
1932-50; performed in movies throughout 1930s; starred, with Burns, in The
George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, CBS television, 1950-58; retired
from show business in 1958. Died in Los Angeles, California, U.S., on 27 August
1964.
TELEVISION SERIES
1950-58 The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show
FILMS
100%
Service, 1931; The Antique Shop, 1931; Fit to Be Tied,
1931; Once Over, Light, 1931; Pulling a Bone, 1931; Oh, My
Operation, 1932; The Big Broadcast, 1932; International House,
1933; We're Not Dressing, 1934; Six of a Kind, 1934; Many Happy
Returns, 1934; The Big Broadcast of 1936, 1935; College Holiday,
1936; The Big Broadcast of 1937, 1936; A Damsel in Distress,
1937; College Swing, 1938; Honolulu, 1939; Gracie Allen Murder
Case, 1939; Mr. & Mrs. North, 1941; Two Girls and a Sailor,
1944.
PUBLICATIONS
"Inside Me." (As told to Jane Kesner Morris). Woman's Home Companion,
March 1953.
U.S. Comedienne
Gracie Allen transferred her
popular fictional persona from vaudeville, film, and radio, to American
television in the 1950s. Allen had performed with her husband and partner,
George Burns, for nearly 30 years when the pair debuted in The George Burns and
Gracie Allen Show on CBS in October 1950. They had enjoyed particular
success in radio, popularizing their audio program with a series of stunts that
involved Allen in fictitious man hunts, art exhibits, and even a candidacy for
the presidency of the United States. The transfer of their program to the small
screen both extended their career (the couple were becoming too expensive for
radio) and helped to legitimate the new medium.
The Burns and Allen act, a
classic vaudeville routine involving a "Dumb Dora" and a male straight man,
proved infinitely malleable. Initially a flirtation act, by the time it was
transferred to television it was housed in a standard situation-comedy frame:
Burns and Allen played themselves, a celebrity couple, enduring various
matrimonial mix-ups.
The impetus to comedy within the
program was the character portrayed by Allen. Her humor was almost entirely
linguistic. Often an entire episode hinged on her confusion of antecedents in a
sentence, as when the couple's announcer (who also took part in the program's
narrative) informed her that Burns had worked with another performer until he
(meaning the other performer) had married, moved to San Diego, and had two
sons--at which point she concluded that her husband was a bigamist.
The onscreen Gracie's
reinterpretations of the televisional world proved extremely disruptive to
people and events around her, although the disruptions were generally playful
rather than serious, and were quickly settled (usually by her husband the
straight man) at the end of each episode. Allen's character thus challenged the
rational order of things without ever actually threatening it.
The character's success on the
program, and popularity with the viewing public, depended in large part on her
total unawareness of the comic effects of her "zaniness." The onscreen Gracie
was a sweet soul who on the surface embodied many of the feminine norms of the
day--domesticity, reliance on her man, gentleness--even as she took symbolic
pot shots at the gender order by subverting her husband's logical, masculine
world.
The program, and Allen's
character, were always framed by audience knowledge about the "real" George
Burns and Gracie Allen. Audience members were aware, partly from well
orchestrated publicity for the show and partly from observation, that only a
talented and intelligent actress could manage to seem as dumb as Allen did
onscreen.
The offscreen Burns and Allen
were sometimes also invoked explicitly within episodes, when characters
reminded the fictional George that he was financially dependent upon his
co-star/spouse, who had always been the greater star of the two.
The strongest link between on-
and offscreen Burns and Allen, however, was the marital bond both pairs
shared--and the affection they displayed as actors and as people. Burns' first
autobiography, I Love Her, That's Why!, published in 1955 by Simon and
Schuster, placed the couple's relationship at the center of his life,
reflecting its centrality to the program in which the two starred.
Burns and Allen went off
the air upon Allen's retirement in 1958. Burns tried for a number of years to
sustain programs and acts of his own, but it took him almost a decade to emerge
as a performer in his own right. Much of his stage act for the rest of his life
featured numerous jokes and stories about his wife, perpetuating the memory of
her comedic energy even for those who had never seen her perform.
- Tinky "Dakota"
Weisblat
FURTHER READING
Blythe, Cheryl, and Susan Sackett. Say Goodnight Gracie! The Story of Burns
& Allen. New York: Dutton, 1986.
Burns, George. Gracie:
A Love Story. New York: Putnam's, 1988.
Burns, George, with
Cynthia Hobart. I Love Her, That's Why! An Autobiography. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1955. "....Burns and Allen..." Newsweek (New
York), 24 June 1957.
"How Gracie Gets
That Way." TV Guide (Radnor, Pennsylvania), 8 October 1955.
Hubbard, Kim.
"George Burns Writes a Final Loving Tribute to Gracie Allen..." People Weekly
(New York), 31 October 1988.
See also Comedy, Domestic
Settings; Burns,
George; George Burns
and Gracie Allen Show
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