
Situation Comedy (1946 - 53)
Phil
Harris was on the Jack Benny
Show since 1934, playing the jive-talking hipster
bandleader of questionable repute. His band members
were helpful in the sarcastic, fast-talking department,
too. So when Phil Harris (in real life) married the
glamorous and talented movie star Alice Faye, it seemed
more like a match made in Hollywood than in Heaven.
They knew each other from the old days of the Rudy Vallee
Show, and were both radio veterans when they decided,
in the Benny tradition, to work together professionally,
using their own show-biz personas. Hey, Ozzie
and Harriett had done well with it!
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This show isn't like Ozzie
and Harriett. Beside fame and glamour, Phil
and Alice had two big things in their life, their lovely
daughters. Jeanine Roose played Alice Jr. and Anne Whitfield
was little Phyllis. Both took after Phil in the wisecrack
department. The big headache in their lives - Phil's
Band! It was a congregation with enough wise guys to
make Abbott and Costello
sit up and start take notes.

Alice Faye Publicity Still
As both Phil and Alice were known singers,
there were two musical numbers in each show, and they
were always for real, except some of Phil's, which were
for laughs. But Phil's band gave much more than music
to the show. Frankie Remley was the band's left handed
guitar player, with a sardonic sense of humor out of
left field. The character was first done on The
Jack Benny Show, and, of course, now on a show
about the band itself, Frankie was even more obnoxious.
Famed radio actor Elliott Lewis played him with relish.
In fact, later in the run they actually started calling
the character Elliott! (Elliott Lewis changes his name
on the show from Frankie Remly to Elliott because Harris
stopped leading Jack Benny's
band--so he wasn't connected to Remly any more.)
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A couple of actors well known on other
shows were Gale Gordon and Walter Tetley. Gale Gordon
(Principal Conklin on Our
Miss Brooks) was Mr. Scott, the long-suffering
Rexall representative, doing stealth commercials for
Rexall, again like the The
Jack Benny Show and Fibber
McGee and Molly had done. Walter Tetley (Leroy
on The Great Gildersleeve)
played the delivery boy Julius Abbruzio. Nice guy? No.
Other characters included Alice's deadbeat brother Willie,
ably played by Robert North, and announcer Bill Forman.
The show was produced and directed by Paul Phillips.

Phil Harris, western publicity still
It's a hip show, as sharp and free-wheeling
as Benny, but with a bite and abrasiveness that seems,
looking back now, to foreshadow most modern television
sit-coms.
John Dunning, in "On
the Air, The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio,"
writes, "It remains, on tape, one of radio's brightest
lights: the passage of time has done nothing to blunt
its delightful impact. The characters were bums, but
the listeners knew it and didn't care. When Harris crowed,
'Oh, you dawg!' a listener knew he was probably looking
at himself in a mirror. The timing displayed by the
star leaves a modern listener with nothing but admiration
"