- As Time Goes By
- If I Had You
- Smile (From United Artists Film 'Modern Times')
- Hi Lili, Hi Lo (From The MGM Film 'Lili')
- Make Someone Happy
- Young At Heart
- Hello, Young Lovers (From the 1951 Broadway Production of 'The King and I')
- Try A Little Tenderness
- The Glory of Love
- I'll Be Seeing You
- September Song (From the 1938 Musical Play 'Knickerboker Holiday')
- I'll See You in My Dreams
If any performer can truly be said to have carved out his own comedic turf, made a huge success out of it lasting over several decades, while completely owning that piece of turf lock, stock, and barrel, then that performer would have to be Jimmy Durante. There never has been -- nor is there likely ever to be -- a stylistic school of Durante; the man and his character are of one piece and ingrained in the national consciousness to the extreme. Anyone foolish enough to start appropriating any part of his act would be immediately branded as a slavish imitator -- someone just merely "doing Durante" -- while always being doomed to comparison with the one and only real-deal "Schnozzola" and again, falling well short of the mark. On the surface, Durante's mega-success defied all commonly understood show business laws. No one with such a gravelly voice should have been able to put over a song as well as he did. No one as ugly as him should have made as much profitable hay as he did about being that ugly, and parlaying those looks into a movie career at that. No one wore rumpled suits and a beat-up fedora (covering what little hair he had left), smoked a cheap cigar, and mangled the English language with more charm and hilarity than he. No one won the hearts of his audience by simply being himself -- a comic Everyman from the poor side of town -- than did one Jimmy Durante. He didn't sing good, he didn't look good, and he had the audacity to keep bringing it up, he dressed like a bum, and couldn't say a complete sentence without screwing up some (or all) of the words. Not much of a show business résumé on the surface of it, but Durante's uncloneable charm gathered its main strength from being just that; an average guy who -- as one critic put it -- "acted like a heckler from an audience who had finally decided he could do a better job himself and, upsetting all conventional show business decorum, had snuck into the spotlight." There was not one subtle thing about Jimmy Durante; whether it was wrecking a piano and throwing the resultant debris at the audience, singing a song like "I Know Darn Well I Can Do Without Broadway (But Can Broadway Do Without Me?)," or doing a complete about face and providing a brief glimpse of the wistful side of his character, he tapped the deepest of emotions every single time and did it at full bore.
He was born James Francis Durante on February 10, 1893 into an Italian
community on Manhattan's Lower East Side, just a stone's throw away from
Chinatown. He showed an early propensity for the piano and this,
indeed, is his least recognized talent. His parents had early
aspirations for him to enter the classical field with his talent, but
even the small child version of Durante
was already carving his own path: "My perfesser tried to make me play
"Poet and Peasant." I played "Maple Leaf," "Popularity," and "Wild
Cherries." I couldn't do nuttin' else then, and I can't do nuttin' else
today." Those who heard him in his pre-comedy days of working around
Harlem clubs and Coney Island clip joints spoke in high praise of a
white ragtime piano man who was the finest of his kind. Nobody of his
skin color had a more African-American feel for the ivories as Ragtime
Jimmy, his original stake moniker. His left hand was a law unto it
itself, while his right could combine with it to make early 20th century
ragtime achieve the status of American art. He was that good.
As the singing waiters inside Diamond Tony's -- a typical Coney Island
saloon -- went through their paces (one of them being a young Eddie Cantor), it was the 17-year-old Durante's
job to collect all the small tips the waiters could kick his way. He
had the reputation of being able to collect every bit of chump change
that came rolling his way while never missing a beat; Cantor was the best nickel kicker at Coney Island.
By early 1916, Durante
was working at the Club Alamo in Harlem and put together a sextet
called "Jimmy Durante's Original Jazz Novelty Band." It was a noisy
little combo to be sure, actually having to hold up signs when they
played waltzes and fox trots so their ear-bludgeoned audience would know
how to respond. It was during the run at the Alamo that one of the acts
on the bill started referring to Durante
as "The Schnozzola," what would become his most enduring nickname. The
act was an immediate hit, working every speakeasy around New York. He
still wasn't singing or talking or telling jokes in the act yet, just
playing his piano in his more than energetic style.
Legend has it that Durante
was a shy man, unwilling to draw attention to himself because of the
merciless teasing he had taken as a child about his looks. The majority
of this taunting primarily focused itself on the size of his nose, which
became even larger after a pack of schoolyard bullies broke it and it
mended incorrectly. It was his friend Eddie Cantor
who encouraged him to stand up while playing and start throwing insults
at his drummer to break up the act. As first he demurred ("I couldn't
do that, I'd be afraid people would laugh at me"), but very soon found
that the sound of laughter from an audience wasn't such a bad thing
after all. The die was cast. The act was certainly getting noticed, but Durante
certainly wasn't getting rich from his success. After pulling down a
mere $100 a week at the Club Nightingale, he was convinced by a waiter
at the club -- friend Frank Nolan -- that with his own club, he could become a millionaire in no time flat. Durante
found a loft above a used-car dealership in downtown Manhattan and
started looking for partners. Nolan was aboard and so was singing waiter
Eddie Jackson
and his song-and-dance partner Harry Harris. The four men started one
of the most notorious and legendary speakeasies of the Prohibition era,
the Club Durant, its odd spelling -- so legend has it -- the simple
result of the partners running out of money for the extra "e" on the
neon sign.
Despite Durante's
notable local following, the club was not an immediate hit. But one of
the regular clients was Lou Clayton, pretty big stuff in vaudeville
circles as a soft-shoe dancer. Clayton saw potential in the venture, especially as a springboard for showcasing the largely unused comedic talent of Durante. Buying out Harris' share and joining forces with Clayton and Durante
on-stage, the three men came up with an act that made the audience
packed into the tiny club feel like they were in the middle of a very
violent cartoon or all three acts of a three-ring circus. As noted
critic John Fisher pointed out, "The extraordinary gusto of their comic
performance, as it bounced from one to the other with Jimmy storming
backwards and forth, always the center of attention, set a standard for
improvised cabaret humor that has never been surpassed. It would be
inaccurate to say that they pulled out all the stops, but only for the
simple reason that in their crazy world the stops were inexhaustible."
The team of "Clayton, Jackson, and Durante" would form a friendship of
immense loyalty that lasted long after they stopped performing together
as a unit, indeed,' til death did they part.
The shows became legendary, the tiny club became the hot ticket in town,
and their star-studded audience on any given night could include
writers like Damon Runyon, Ed Sullivan, and Walter Winchell, Broadway stars like George Jessel, Al Jolson, and regular George M. Cohan,
to notorious gangsters such as Waxey Gordon and Legs Diamond. Once the
cops padlocked the place in the late '20s, the trio immediately found
work elsewhere, making successful forays on Broadway and the night club
circuit of the period. When Hollywood came calling, the offer was for Durante alone. He soon started working solo in a no less frenzied manner, with Clayton
staying on as his manager and Jackson hanging around as one of one of
many "vice presidents," still contributing material to the stage act.
His MGM movie contract found him initially teamed with fading silent
star Buster Keaton. Although it was reported that the two men didn't
enjoy working together -- each feeling the other one was impeding their
own personal styles -- they made a number of fine films together,
including 1932's Speak Easily. It was Durante's
appearance two years later in Palooka that introduced the song that
would soon become his enduring theme, "Inka Dinka Doo." His other film
credits include Hollywood Party, Roadhouse Nights, Student Tour, George
White's Scandals, Cuban Love Song, Music for Millions, It Happened in
Brooklyn, and The Milkman. The Durante
schnozzola also made several cameo "appearances" in assorted Walt
Disney and Warner Brothers cartoons of the period, truly becoming a
national star, an instantly recognizable comedic icon.
By the late '40s, he was on radio with his own show, sometimes working with partners as varied as Alan Young and Garry Moore.
But he truly hit his (second? third? fourth?) stride when television
became the new dominant medium. Recreating Club Durant with Eddie Jackson for television brought Durante
to a whole new audience who had never seen him work in a night club
setting and proved to be enormously successful. Even though it was a
variety show in the traditional sense (bringing on guest stars like Bing Crosby, Al Jolson, Eddie Cantor, Sophie Tucker,
etc.), Durante's manic energy combined with his established character
made for an hour of TV unlike any other. Many of the old songs and
routines were recycled for this new audience, but the biggest change in Durante's
act came with the show's closing. Instead of his trademark
head-waggling, fedora-shaking "hot cha cha" set-closing walk-off, the
new TV ending was a far more somber affair. A night with Durante
ended with him walking into successive spotlights -- each one further
away than the other til he disappeared -- turning to both the studio and
the unseen television audience and delivering the immortal line,
"Goodnight, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are." Durante
could do outrageous slapstick and tug at an audience's heartstrings
with equally consummate ease. The '60s saw him busy as ever with more TV
projects and a great deal of night club work. Although his character
stayed the same, his twilight years imbued it with an old man
wistfulness that made him even more lovable. At the age of 70, his
recordings of old standards, issued by Warner Bros as September Song,
became an unexpected Top 40 album hit in 1963. He made his final film
that same year as Smiler Grogan in Stanley Kramer's It's a Mad, Mad, Mad
World, where his cameo deathbed statement had him literally kick the
bucket.
Durante's
increasing frail condition worsened through the rest of the '60s. In
1970, he had a stroke which confined him to a wheelchair and relegated
his performing days to old film clips and scrapbooks. His circle of
friends and old cronies stayed with him to the end, regardless, until
his heart ceased on January 20, 1980. If any comedian could truly be
called a one of a kind, then Jimmy Durante deserves that accolade, and much, much more.
(By Cub Koda from allmusic.com)



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