Burns and Allen in The Babbling Book (1932)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2009
  • George Burns and Gracie Allen in "The Babbling Book', a Paramount short from 1932.
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Комментарии • 50

  • @christinephillipshagar2514
    @christinephillipshagar2514 6 лет назад +25

    I can never ever get enough of George and Gracie, it's so good to go to go on vacation from our crazy lives these days and laugh like I'm a 5 year old.
    Thank you so very much for posting all of these videos!!!

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад +2

      Christine Phillips Hagar 👍👍👍👍👍 😁😁😁😁😁

  • @fairybits
    @fairybits 10 лет назад +21

    Seems strange to see them both so young.I just started seeing these old films of them a few days ago.Great show.Gracie was always the best.

  • @deirdreryan6147
    @deirdreryan6147 4 года назад +7

    It's lovely seeing how George is enchanted with Gracie.

  • @paulsimmons3211
    @paulsimmons3211 8 лет назад +19

    The dialogue exchanges between George and Gracie are especially delightful and daffy in these early Educational short comedies...One could see how well they clicked as a team right from the beginning...

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 7 лет назад +2

      paul simmons These shorts that George & Gracie did were done by Paramount Pictures. 😃

    • @angelthman1659
      @angelthman1659 7 лет назад +3

      What do you mean "educational" short comedies?

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 6 лет назад +3

      Well, given that the length of their career was over 40 years, I suppose it was relatively early, but it was hardly the very beginning. They had done vaudeville together since 1922.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад +3

      angelthman There was a film studio called "Educational Pictures" that produced comedy shorts from the '20s until the mid-30s.

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 5 лет назад +4

      The only thing Educational about these are the education in dizziness you get! ;-)

  • @susanboylefanable
    @susanboylefanable 5 лет назад +7

    It was only after George died, of course, that anyone was allowed to release the old TV episodes. A girl I'd known for years got hooked on those, but had no idea that they'd already been stars for about 30 years before they ever decided to do the TV show.
    Her delivery through these old routines is absolutely PRICELESS! 😂😂😂

  • @larrypahl5756
    @larrypahl5756 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanx4Posting Burns&Allen: best COMEDY i’ve found; s’far

  • @KarinPluss
    @KarinPluss 14 лет назад +13

    Thank you so much for posting these shorts!! I can never get enough of this wonderful couple and seeing these shorts is a real thrill. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

  • @jeanninem8227
    @jeanninem8227 2 года назад +3

    I love their "Shorts".....Gracie is fabulous.

  • @calvinbealer7264
    @calvinbealer7264 2 года назад +2

    90 years ago Gold 🥇

  • @Jenifer_G
    @Jenifer_G 3 месяца назад +1

    Gracie SO beautiful. 2024, LOVE the old CLEAN COMEDY. thanks for posting.

  • @rustydog1236
    @rustydog1236 12 лет назад +10

    I read that Burns & Allen were so popular and valuable, they got $5K per week on their radio show in 1931: That's $74K per week in 2012 money after inflation. George said he got so used to being a straight Man that he came across a man drowning and the man yells "Help! Help". So George repeated the line, "Help! Help?" and while he was waiting for the punchline, the man drowned.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад

      rustydog1236 They started in radio in 1932, not 1931. A person your age should know this. 😠

    • @dontaylor7315
      @dontaylor7315 3 года назад +1

      @@dariowiter3078 Picky much?

  • @pennyblea2705
    @pennyblea2705 6 лет назад +4

    loving George and Gracie...

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 12 лет назад +6

    That "straight man" joke was a personal favorite of George's- he also used it in his opening monologue on their very first TV show on October 12, 1950....and he often included it in his various books as well...

  • @enriquesanchez2001
    @enriquesanchez2001 8 лет назад +8

    wonderful

  • @crystalheart9
    @crystalheart9 5 лет назад +2

    That was great, thanks!

  • @EthelBramble
    @EthelBramble 11 лет назад +7

    I saw these on tv as reruns when I was a little girl in the 50's. TV of those days shaped my life, but I never got the humor. I thought she made a lot of sense and the men were all crazy. I still think so....

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 6 лет назад +3

      EthelBramble, that's interesting because part of the construction of Gracie's character was the idea that she was not confused or stupid, but rather the world made complete sense to her in her own mind and it was other people who she found to be confused.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад

      inkyguy Yes, except that her character WAS stupid, and, that she was oblivious of that fact to herself and to others who saw her that way.

    • @susanboylefanable
      @susanboylefanable 5 лет назад +2

      And in his 1988 book about her & their lives together, George said pretty much the same thing: she struck a chord with male & female alike! 😁

  • @sandradee4914
    @sandradee4914 5 лет назад +1

    Thanx for the memories

  • @inkyguy
    @inkyguy 6 лет назад +4

    Brilliant lines and gags. I saw in the credits that George Burns wrote this script. He had an amazing mind, an absolute genius. The "far be it" gag even left me confused for a few moments - or is it the “be far it” gag?

  • @Veggieman87
    @Veggieman87 13 лет назад +4

    I just realized that the guy playing Gracie's father is the whiskey salesman in Stagecoach!

    • @dontaylor7315
      @dontaylor7315 3 года назад

      That's Donald Meek?! I thought I'd know him anywhere but I didn't spot him this time.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 13 лет назад +3

    Yes, that's Donald Meek as "Mr. Allen".

  • @fonso1030
    @fonso1030 5 лет назад +1

    Lmao at 3:35...”well, what is that?”...

  • @cbranalli
    @cbranalli 8 лет назад +1

    "far be me from it"
    running gag
    1:23
    2:12
    6:28
    8:58

  • @tomatenpaprika6323
    @tomatenpaprika6323 4 месяца назад

    Genius

  • @KarinPluss
    @KarinPluss 12 лет назад

    @nuts4clara Oh excellent! Now, if I only knew what Kino On Video was and where I find it...:)

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад

      Karin Pluss It's Kino Lorber now: www.kinolorber.com

  • @aresee8208
    @aresee8208 Год назад

    The video title says 1932. So does IMDB. But the opening credit says MCMXXXI, which is 1931.

    • @rrgomes
      @rrgomes  Год назад

      Copyrighted in 1931 but released in 1932.

    • @aresee8208
      @aresee8208 Год назад

      @@rrgomes I guess.

  • @noelanijacob3346
    @noelanijacob3346 3 года назад

    Rare love affair

  • @BuckyBrown-lt4ry
    @BuckyBrown-lt4ry 5 лет назад +2

    Never liked GB but Gracie was great. Made the act. Never liked him even after she died and he had his own career. Without her, GB would just be another old Jew comic in an old age home for actors.

    • @susanboylefanable
      @susanboylefanable 5 лет назад +2

      GB himself said he'd never have seen stardom if he hadn't been blessed with the breaks that ended up with him working with Gracie.
      My dad & maybe my mom apparently could see the same things Jack Benny could see in HIM, & history has it that Benny considered GB the funniest man alive! (Gracie died when I was 4, & I never SAW her until a few years after George died, but my folks never skipped a show GB was going to be in. Still, they told all of us kids how great they were before she died.)
      He wrote most of their material, but the way he.told the story, audiences only "laughed politely," even though Burns KNEW they were good jokes, so he started giving Gracie more & more of the lines he'd written for him, & NOW, audiences are laughing so hard they're CRYING, so Burns knew THAT was the direction in which any success lay.
      The rest, of course, is history....
      They both had this deadpan delivery, but SHE was just so much BETTER at it that it's STILL almost unreal!
      Small wonder that America (& much of the WORLD not many years after these) loved Gracie before we ever started loving Lucy!

    • @oluhamilton2121
      @oluhamilton2121 5 лет назад

      YOO STOOPID.

  • @Goregrinder83
    @Goregrinder83 11 лет назад +15

    Gracie was beautiful

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад +3

      videognob When George published his 1988 biography on he and Gracie, he showed a picture of Gracie that was taken in 1927-28 where she is wearing a cloche hat. She really looked fetching in that photo. 😁 💜

    • @susanboylefanable
      @susanboylefanable 5 лет назад +1

      Yep. Her, Thelma Todd, Carole Lombard, Luceille Ball.....all glamorous, even SEXY women who excelled at comedy!!