Bob Hope |
Hope in 1978 |
Born |
Leslie Townes Hope
(1903-05-29)May 29, 1903
Eltham, London, England |
Died |
July 27, 2003(2003-07-27) (aged 100)
Toluca Lake, California[1] |
Cause of death |
pneumonia |
Nationality |
American |
Occupation |
Actor, comedian, author, golfer |
Years active |
1925–2001 |
Religion |
Roman Catholic |
Spouse |
Grace Louise Troxell (m. January 25, 1933-1933)
Dolores Hope (m. 1934–2003) |
Children |
Eleanora(born 1930)
Linda(born 1933)
William Kelly Francis(born 1937)
Anthony (born 1940, died 2004) |
Family |
Jack Hope (brother) |
Bob Hope, KBE, KCSG, KSS (born Leslie Townes Hope; May 29, 1903 – July 27, 2003) was an English-born American comedian and actor who appeared in vaudeville, on Broadway, and in radio, television and movies. He was also noted for his work with the US Armed Forces and his numerous USO shows entertaining American military personnel.[2] Throughout his long career, he was honored for his humanitarian work. In 1996, the U.S. Congress honored Bob Hope by declaring him the "first and only honorary veteran of the U.S. armed forces." Bob Hope appeared in or hosted 199 known USO shows.[3]
Hope was born in Eltham, London, England, the fifth of seven sons. His English father, William Henry Hope, was a stonemason from Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, and his Welsh mother, Avis Townes, was a light opera singer from Barry who later worked as a cleaning woman. She married William Hope in April 1891 and the couple set up home at 12 Greenwood Street in the town, then moved to Whitehall and St George in Bristol, before eventually moving to Cleveland, Ohio in 1908. The family emigrated to the United States aboard the SS Philadelphia, and passed inspection at Ellis Island on March 30, 1908.[4] Hope became a U.S. citizen in 1920 at the age of 17.[5] In a 1942 legal document, Hope's legal name is given as Lester Townes Hope.[6] His name on the Social Security Index is also listed as Lester T. Hope.[7] His name as registered at birth was Leslie Towns [sic] Hope. [8]
From the age of 12, Hope worked at a variety of odd jobs at a local boardwalk. He would busk,[9] doing dance and comedy patter to make extra money (frequently on the trolley to Luna Park). He entered many dancing and amateur talent contests (as Lester Hope),[9] and won prizes for his impersonation of Charlie Chaplin. Hope also boxed briefly and unsuccessfully under the name Packy East (after the popular Packey McFarland), once making it to the semifinals of the Ohio novice championship.[10][11]
In 1918, at the age of 15, Hope was admitted (as Lester Hope) to the Boys Industrial School in Lancaster, Ohio.[12] Formerly known as the Ohio Reform School, this was one of the more innovative, progressive institutions for juvenile offenders. As an adult, Hope donated sizable sums of money to the institution.[13]
Silent film comedian Fatty Arbuckle saw one of Hope's performances with his first partner, Lloyd "Lefty" Durbin, and in 1925 got the pair steady work with Hurley's Jolly Follies. Within a year, Hope had formed an act called the Dancemedians with George Byrne and the Hilton Sisters, conjoined twins who had a tap dancing routine. Hope and his partner, George Byrne, had an act as a pair of Siamese twins as well, and both danced and sang while wearing blackface, before friends advised Hope that he was funnier as himself.[14] In 1929, he changed his first name to "Bob". In one version of the story, he named himself after racecar driver Bob Burman. In another, he said he chose Bob because he wanted a name with a friendly "Hiya, Fellas!" sound to it. After five years on the vaudeville circuit, by his own account, Hope was surprised and humbled when he and his partner (and future wife) Grace Louise Troxell failed a 1930 screen test for Pathé at Culver City, California.
Hope, like other stage performers, made his first films in New York. Educational Pictures employed him in 1934 for a short-subject comedy, Going Spanish. Hope sealed his fate with Educational when Walter Winchell asked him about the film. Hope cracked, "When they catch John Dillinger, they're going to make him sit through it twice."[15] Educational fired him, but he was soon before the cameras at New York's Vitaphone studio starring in 20-minute comedies and musicals from 1934 through 1936, beginning with Paree, Paree (1934).
Paramount Pictures signed Hope for the 1938 film The Big Broadcast of 1938, also starring W. C. Fields. During a duet with Shirley Ross as accompanied by Shep Fields and his orchestra, Hope introduced the song later to become his trademark, "Thanks for the Memory", which became a major hit and was praised by critics. The sentimental, fluid nature of the music allowed Hope's writers (whom he is said to have depended upon heavily throughout his career[16]) to later invent endless variations of the song to fit specific circumstances, such as bidding farewell to troops while on tour.
Hope became one of Paramount's biggest stars, and would remain with the studio through the 1950s. Hope's regular appearances in Hollywood films and radio made him one of the best known entertainers in North America, and at the height of his career he was also making a large income from live concert performances. He was both a world-class singer and dancer, introducing many major songs during the course of his career, including the Oscar-winning "Buttons and Bows" in The Paleface (1948), his biggest hit song by far, and he matched James Cagney's bravura dancing during the tabletop showdown sequence in The Seven Little Foys (1955).
Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, and Dorothy Lamour
As a movie star, he was best known for comedies like My Favorite Brunette and the highly successful "Road" movies in which he starred with Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour. Hope had seen Lamour as a nightclub singer in New York, and invited her to work on his USO tours. Lamour is said to have arrived for filming prepared with her lines, only to be baffled by completely re-written scripts from Hope's writers without studio permission. Hope and Lamour were lifelong friends, and she remains the actress most associated with his film career. The series consists of Road to Singapore (1940), Road to Zanzibar (1941), Road to Morocco (1942), Road to Utopia (1946), Road to Rio (1947), Road to Bali (1952), and The Road to Hong Kong (1962). Hope's other leading ladies included Paulette Goddard, Katharine Hepburn, Hedy Lamarr, Lucille Ball, Jane Russell, Betty Grable, Betty Hutton, Arlene Dahl, Rosemary Clooney, Eva Marie Saint, Rhonda Fleming, Lana Turner, Anita Ekberg, and Elke Sommer.
Bob Hope & Bing Crosby sing and dance during "Chicago Style" in
Road to Bali (1952)
Hope's informal teaming with the famous Bing Crosby for the seven "Road" pictures from 1940 to 1962 and countless stage, radio, and television appearances together over the decades were critically important to Hope's career. Hope was a star on Broadway, but when the "Road" series began, he was relatively unknown nationally and was actually billed under Dorothy Lamour in the first film. After the release of Road to Singapore (1940), Hope's screen career took off until his final starring role in Cancel My Reservation (1972). Bing Crosby and Bob Hope became linked in public perception to the extent that it became difficult to think of one without the other even though they actually conducted predominately separate careers. They had planned one more movie together, The Road to the Fountain of Youth, until Crosby's demise abruptly intervened.[17]
File:Road to Utopia.jpg
Dorothy Lamour, Bing Crosby, and Bob Hope made up to look older at the end of Road to Utopia
Hope starred in fifty-two theatrical features altogether between 1938 and 1972, not to mention cameos and short films, and frequently stated that his movies were the most important part of his career. Some notable examples include College Swing (1938; with George Burns, Gracie Allen, and Betty Grable), Some Like It Hot (1939; with Shirley Ross and Gene Krupa), The Ghost Breakers (1940, with Paulette Goddard), The Paleface (1948; with Jane Russell), Sorrowful Jones (1949; with Lucille Ball), The Seven Little Foys (1955; with James Cagney as George M. Cohan), The Iron Petticoat (1956; with Katharine Hepburn), and Beau James (1957; with Hope as James J. Walker).
Hope was host of the Academy Awards ceremony 18 times between 1939 and 1977. His feigned lust for an Academy Award became part of his act. In one scene from Road to Morocco he erupted in a frenzy, shouting about his imminent death from exposure. Bing Crosby reminds him that rescue is just minutes away, and a disappointed Hope complains that Crosby has spoiled his best scene, and thus his chance for an Academy Award. Also, in Road to Bali, when Crosby finds Humphrey Bogart's Oscar for The African Queen, Hope grabs it, saying "Give me that. You've got one." Although Hope was never nominated for an Oscar for his performances (Bing Crosby won the 1944 Best Actor Oscar for Going My Way), the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honored him with four honorary awards, and in 1960, the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award. While introducing the 1968 telecast, he quipped, "Welcome to the Academy Awards, or, as it's known at my house, Passover."[18]
Hope first appeared on television in 1932 during a test transmission from an experimental CBS studio in New York. In January 1947, Hope was master of ceremonies for the first telecast by California's first television station, KTLA. His career in broadcasting spanned 64 years and included a long association with NBC. Hope made his network radio debut in 1937 on NBC. His first regular series for NBC Radio was the Woodbury Soap Hour. A year later, The Pepsodent Show Starring Bob Hope began, continuing as The New Swan Show in 1948 (for the same sponsor, Lever Brothers). After 1950, the series was known simply as The Bob Hope Show, with Liggett & Myers (1950–52), General Foods (1953) and American Dairy Association (1953–55) as his sponsors, until it finally went off the air in April 1955. Regulars on his radio series included zany Jerry Colonna and Barbara Jo Allen as spinster Vera Vague.
Hope did many specials for the NBC television network in the following decades, beginning in April 1950. These were often sponsored by General Motors (1955–1961), Chrysler (1963–73) and Texaco (1975–1985), and Hope served as a spokesman for these companies for many years and would sometimes introduce himself as "Bob, from Texaco, Hope." Hope's Christmas specials were popular favorites and often featured a performance of "Silver Bells" (from his 1951 film The Lemon Drop Kid) done as a duet with an often much younger female guest star (such as Olivia Newton-John, Barbara Eden, and Brooke Shields), or with his wife Delores, with whom he dueted on two specials.
In October 1956, Hope appeared on an episode of the most-viewed program in America at the time, I Love Lucy. He said, upon receiving the script: "What? A script? I don't need one of these"[cite this quote], and ad-libbed the entire episode. Desi Arnaz said of Hope after his appearance: "Bob is a very nice man, he can crack you up, no matter how much you try for him to not."[cite this quote] Lucy and Desi returned the favor by appearing on one of his Chevy Show specials (with Vivian Vance and William Frawley) later that season.
Hope's 1970 and 1971 Christmas specials for NBC—filmed in Vietnam in front of military audiences at the height of the war—are on the list of the Top 30 U.S. Network Primetime Telecasts of All Time. Both were seen by more than 60% of the U.S. households watching television.
In 1992, Bob Hope made a guest appearance as himself on The Simpsons, in the episode "Lisa the Beauty Queen" (season 4, episode 4). The episode attracted 11.1 million viewers when it premiered on October 15. Hope's NBC television career consisted of monthly shows successfully spanning so many decades that it literally outlasted his ability to read his monologue from cue cards; toward the end, SCTV Hope impressionist Dave Thomas would deliver the monologue for him while imitating Hope's delivery. After 1992, his specials were re-formatted into retrospectives of Hope's past career, for occasions such as his 90th birthday in May 1993, which resulted in an Emmy-winning TV celebration on NBC, featuring guests such as Betty White, Walter Cronkite, Gerald Ford, Jay Leno and a rare post-Tonight Show appearance by Johnny Carson.
Hope's brother producing his early '50s show.
In October 1996, Hope announced, via a press release, that he was ending his 60-year contract with NBC, joking that he "decided to become a free agent". His final television special, Laughing with the Presidents, was broadcast in November 1996, with Tony Danza helping Hope present a personal retrospective of presidents of the United States known to the comedian. The special received mixed reviews, mostly due to the weakening appearance and speech of the 93-year-old Hope.
Following a brief appearance at the 50th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1997. Bob Hope's last TV appearance was in a 1997 K-Mart commercial directed by Penny Marshall.
For more on this topic see USO – Honoring Bob Hope
Bob Hope's 1966 Christmas Show at Nakhon Phanom, Thailand
Bob Hope sits with men of X Corps, as members of his troupe entertain at Womsan, Korea. October 26, 1950. (Army)
Bob Hope and golf club, Lackland Air Force Base, 1990
Hope's first wartime performance occurred at sea. Aboard the RMS Queen Mary when World War II began in September 1939, he went to the captain to volunteer to perform a special show for the panicked passengers, during which he sang "Thanks for the Memory" with rewritten lyrics.[19] Hope performed his first United Service Organizations (USO) show on May 6, 1941, at March Field, California. He continued to travel and entertain troops for the rest of World War II[20] and later during the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the third phase of the Lebanon Civil War, the latter years of the Iran–Iraq War, and the 1990–1991 Persian Gulf War. When overseas he almost always performed in Army fatigues as a show of support for his audience. Hope's USO career lasted half a century, during which he headlined approximately 60 tours. For his service to his country through the USO, he was awarded the Sylvanus Thayer Award by the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1968.
Of Hope's USO shows in World War II, writer John Steinbeck, who was then working as a war correspondent, wrote in 1943:
“ |
When the time for recognition of service to the nation in wartime comes to be considered, Bob Hope should be high on the list. This man drives himself and is driven. It is impossible to see how he can do so much, can cover so much ground, can work so hard, and can be so effective. He works month after month at a pace that would kill most people.[21] |
” |
In addition to the star-studded casts Hope recruited his own family members for the far-reaching travel. Wife Dolores sang from atop an armored vehicle as recently as the Desert Storm tour, with granddaughter Miranda alongside Hope on an aircraft carrier in the Indian Ocean.[22]
A 1997 act of Congress signed by President Clinton named Hope an "Honorary Veteran." He remarked, "I've been given many awards in my lifetime — but to be numbered among the men and women I admire most — is the greatest honor I have ever received."[23]
Hope appeared in so many theaters of war over the decades that it was often cracked (in Bob Hope style) that "Where there's death, there's Hope".
In 2009, Stephen Colbert carried a golf club on stage each night during his own week-long USO performance and taping of The Colbert Report[24] and explained in his last episode that it was an homage to Hope.
Hope's first Broadway appearances, in 1927's The Sidewalks of New York and 1928's Ups-a-Daisy, were minor walk-on parts.[25] He returned to Broadway in 1933 to star as Huckleberry Haines in the Jerome Kern/Dorothy Fields musical Roberta. Stints in the musicals Say When, the 1936 Ziegfeld Follies (with Fanny Brice), and Red, Hot and Blue with Ethel Merman and Jimmy Durante followed. His performances were generally well received, and critics noted his keen sense of comedic timing. Hope reprised his role as Huck Haines in a 1958 production of Roberta at The Muny Theater in Forest Park, St. Louis, Missouri.
Hope rescued Eltham Little Theatre from closure by providing the funds to buy the property. He continued his interest and support and regularly visited when in London. The Theatre was renamed in his honor in 1982.[26]
Bob Hope, a golf fan, putting a golf ball into an ashtray held by President Richard Nixon in the Oval Office in 1973.
Hope was an avid golfer. He was introduced to the game in the 1930s, and eventually played to a four handicap. His love for the game, and the humor he could find in it, made him a much sought-after foursome member. He once remarked that President Dwight D. Eisenhower gave up golf for painting – "fewer strokes, you know."[27] Throughout his career, a golf club became an integral prop for Hope during the stand-up segments of his television specials and USO Shows. In 1978, he putted against a then two-year-old Tiger Woods in a television appearance with James Stewart on The Mike Douglas Show. The Bob Hope Classic was founded in 1960, and it was the only FedEx Cup tournament that took place over five rounds; but for the first time in 2012, it was reduced to the standard four rounds. The tournament made history in 1995, when Hope teed up for the opening round in a foursome that included Presidents Gerald R. Ford, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton – the only time ever that three presidents participated in a golf foursome.[28]
Hope would frequently use his television specials to promote the annual College Football All-America Team. The team members would enter the stage one by one and introduce themselves, and Hope would then give a one-liner about the player or his school. Hope would often don a football uniform for these presentations.
Hope bought a small stake in the Cleveland Indians in 1946[29] and owned it for most of the rest of his life.[30] In 1993, he sang "Thanks for the Memory" after the Indians' last game at Cleveland Stadium. Hope also bought a share of the Los Angeles Rams football team in 1947 with Bing Crosby[31] and sold it in 1962.[32]
The Hope family. Back, from left: Tony, Dolores, and Linda. Front, from left: Kelly, Hope, and Nora.
According to biographer Arthur Marx, Hope's first wife was his vaudeville partner Grace Louise Troxell, whom he married on January 25, 1933. When the marriage record was unearthed some years later, Hope denied that the marriage had any substance and said they had quickly divorced. There were rumors that he fathered a daughter with Troxell and that he continued to send generous checks to her despite a widely documented reputation for frugality. In 1934, Bob Hope married Dolores (DeFina) Reade, and adopted four children at The Cradle in Evanston, Illinois: Linda, Tony, Kelly and Nora.[33] From them he had several grandchildren, including Andrew, Miranda, and Zachary Hope. Tony (Anthony J. Hope), who served as a presidential appointee in the George H.W. Bush and Clinton administrations and in a variety of posts under Presidents Ford and Reagan, died at age 63 in 2004.[34]
Hope's "endless extramarital flings had been an open secret in Hollywood for years."[35] In 1949, while Hope was in Dallas on a publicity tour for his radio show, he met starlet Barbara Payton, a contract player at Universal Studios, who at the time was on her own PR jaunt. Shortly thereafter, Hope set Payton up in a luxury apartment in Hollywood.[36] The arrangement soured as Hope was not able to satisfy Payton’s definition of generosity and her insatiable need for attention.[37] Hope paid her off to end the affair quietly. Payton later revealed the affair with a tell-all printed in July 1956 in Confidential.[38] "Hope was...at times a mean-spirited individual with the ability to respond with a ruthless vengeance when sufficiently provoked."[35] His advisors counseled him to ignore the Confidential expose in order to avoid further publicity.[35] "Barbara's ...revelations caused a minor ripple...and then quickly sank without causing any appreciable damage to Bob Hope's legendary career."[35] According to Arthur Marx's Hope biography, The Secret Life of Bob Hope, Hope's subsequent long-term affair with actress Marilyn Maxwell was so open that the Hollywood community routinely referred to her as "Mrs. Bob Hope".[citation needed]
Hope served as an active honorary chairman on the board of Fight for Sight. He led a coast-to-coast telecast for Fight for Sight in 1960, and donated $100,000 to establish the Bob Hope Fight for Sight Fund.[39] He recruited numerous top celebrities for the annual "Lights On" fundraiser; as an example, he hosted Joe Frazier, Yvonne DeCarlo, and Sergio Franchi as headliners for the April 25, 1971 show at Philharmonic Hall.[40]
Result |
Record |
Opponent |
Method |
Date |
Round |
Time |
Event |
Location |
Notes |
Win |
1-0-0 |
Unknown[41] |
Knockout |
1919 |
1 |
|
Ohio State Boxing Amateurs (Tournament) |
Moose Hall, Cleveland, Ohio |
Opening match (Lightweight Division) Hope fought as Packy East. Source: New York Herald Tribune, July 10, 1938. |
Win |
2-0-0 |
Unknown[41] |
Default (Hope's opponent failed to show for bout.) |
1919 |
|
|
Ohio State Boxing Amateurs (Tournament) |
Moose Hall, Cleveland, Ohio |
Semi-Finals (Lightweight Division) Hope fought as Packy East. |
Loss |
2-1-0 |
Happy Walsh[41] |
Knockout |
1919 |
|
|
Ohio State Boxing Amateurs (Tournament) |
Moose Hall, Cleveland, Ohio |
Finals (Lightweight Division) Hope fought as Packy East. Source: The Plain Dealer, August 17, 1984. |
Win |
3-1-0 |
Jack Dempsey[41] |
Knockout |
April 10, 1948 |
1 |
0:14 |
Charity match for the US Airforce |
Madison Square Garden, New York |
Clearly a "rigged" bout. Former heavyweight champ Dempsey is "KO'd" in 14 seconds.[42] |
No-Contest |
3-1-0-1 |
Rocky Marciano |
No Contest |
1968 |
1 |
|
"Salute To The USO" |
Madison Square Garden, New York |
Charity match. Bing Crosby was referee. 19,000 fans attended. (RING Magazine, May 1968, page 33) |
N/A |
3-1-0-1 |
Sugar Ray Robinson |
Result Unknown |
April 21, 1972 |
|
|
Sugar Ray Youth Foundation |
North Hollywood, California |
Charity match for the Sugar Ray (Robinson) Youth Foundation[43] |
Hope (left) with President Ronald Reagan in 1981
As Hope entered his ninth decade, he showed no signs of slowing down and continued appearing in numerous television specials. He was given an 80th birthday party in 1983 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. which was attended by President Ronald Reagan. In 1985 at 82, he was presented with the Life Achievement Award at the Kennedy Center Honors. He was presented with the Ronald Reagan Freedom Award in 1997 at 94 by Nancy Reagan.[44] The following year, Hope was appointed an honorary Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II. Upon accepting the appointment, Hope quipped, "I'm speechless. 70 years of ad lib material and I'm speechless."[45]
At the age of 95, Hope made an appearance at the 50th anniversary of the Primetime Emmy Awards with Milton Berle and Sid Caesar. Two years later at 97, Hope was present at the opening of the Bob Hope Gallery of American Entertainment at the Library of Congress. The Library of Congress has immortalized Bob Hope's life with two major exhibitions - "Hope for America: Performers, Politics and Pop Culture" and "Bob Hope and American Variety."[46][47] Hope celebrated his 100th birthday on May 29, 2003. He is among a small group of notable centenarians in the field of entertainment. To mark this event, the intersection of Hollywood and Vine in Los Angeles, California was named Bob Hope Square and his centennial was declared Bob Hope Day in 35 states. Even at 100, Hope was said to have maintained his self-deprecating sense of humor, quipping, "I'm so old, they've canceled my blood type."[1] He converted to Roman Catholicism.[48]
Hope had premature obituaries on two separate occasions. In 1998, a prepared obituary by The Associated Press was inadvertently released on the Internet, prompting Hope's death to be announced in the U.S. House of Representatives.[49][50] In 2003 he was among several famous figures whose pre-written obituaries were published on CNN's website because of a lapse in password protection.
Beginning in 2001 at 98, Hope's health steadily declined and he was hospitalized several times before his death. In June 2000 a month after his 97th birthday, he spent nearly a week in a California hospital after being hospitalized for gastrointestinal bleeding.[51] In August 2001, he spent close to two weeks in the hospital recovering from pneumonia.[52]
On July 27, 2003, Bob Hope died at his home in Toluca Lake at 9:28 p.m. According to the Soledad O'Brien interview with Hope's grandson Zach Hope, when asked on his deathbed where he wanted to be buried, Hope told his wife, "Surprise me."[53] He was interred in the Bob Hope Memorial Garden at San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Los Angeles, where his mother is also buried.
After Hope's death, many newspaper cartoons worldwide featured some variation of Bing Crosby welcoming Bob Hope into heaven or his work for the USO.[54]
Hope appeared in twenty six short subjects. The first (Going Spanish) was made in 1934 and the final short (Rowan & Martin at the Movies) was made in 1968.
- In 1962, Bob Hope was presented with the United States Congressional Gold Medal.
- In 1969, President Lyndon Johnson bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Bob Hope for his service to the men and women of the armed forces through the USO.[55]
- Inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1983.
- He was a member of the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in the radio division.[56]
- Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory the Great (KCSG) – 1989
- In 1995, Bob Hope was presented with the National Medal of Arts.
- Hope received the Ronald Reagan Freedom Award in 1997.[57]
- Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) – 1998
- Member of the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels
- One of the few non-members given the privilege of dotting the 'i' in the Script Ohio routine performed by The Ohio State University Marching Band.
- The historic chapel at the Los Angeles National Cemetery was renamed as the Bob Hope Veterans Chapel on his 99th birthday, May 29, 2002 in "celebration of his lifelong service to our American Veterans."
- San Diego Chargers owner and friend, Alex Spanos donated $500,000 to the historic Fox Theater in downtown Stockton, California to rename the theater, it was later approved from the city to change it to "The Bob Hope Theater".
- The Burbank, California, public airport was renamed Bob Hope Airport in 2003.
- The historic Bob Hope Patriotic Hall building on Figueroa Street in Los Angeles County was named in his honor on August 3, 2003, by the Board of Supervisors.
- USNS Bob Hope (T-AKR-300) of the U.S. Military Sealift Command was named after the performer in 1997. It is one of very few U.S. naval ships that were named after living people.
- The United States Air Force named a C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft after Hope, the Spirit of Bob Hope.
- The hotel on Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, OH, the scene of the Dayton Peace Accords ending the fighting in the Former Yugoslavia, is named the Hope Hotel after Bob Hope. The bar in the hotel is called "Packy's" after Hope's prize fighting name.
- The USO at Los Angeles International Airport LAX is dedicated to Bob Hope.
- The dining facility at Camp Lemonnier (Djibouti) is named the Bob Hope Galley.
- In 2008, the research library at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum was renamed by Congress with the consent of the President, as the Bob Hope Memorial Library.
- For contributions to the live theater, radio, motion picture, and television, Bob Hope was honored with four stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[58]
- At the U.S. Naval Academy, Alumni Hall is home to the Bob Hope Performing Arts Center.
- The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. has a wing funded by Dolores and Bob Hope in memory of his mother.[59] It is dedicated to a miracle in Pontmain, France.
- The municipal clock tower of Utica, New York is named the Tower of Hope in honor of Bob Hope.
- In 2009, "A National Salute to Bob Hope and the Military" was dedicated in San Diego, California.[60]
- The 64th and only civilian recipient of the United States Air Force "Order of the Sword." The Order of the Sword recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to the enlisted corps. Presented June 10, 1980.
- In 2011, British independent label Audio Antihero released a charity compilation to raise money for the Japan crisis entitled "Bob Hope would" in tribute to his many fundraising efforts.
- At Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, the base theater is named the Bob Hope Theater.[61]
- In 1996 TV Guide ranked Hope number 25 on it's '50 Greatest TV Stars' of All Time' list.[62]
- Hope had a long and close association with Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas, Texas, USA. "The Bob Hope Theatre, which opened in 1968" in the Owen Fine Arts Center of the Meadows School of the Arts at SMU, "was built with gifts from the entertainer totaling more than $800,000."[63]
Listed in chronological order:
- Hope, Bob. They Got Me Covered. Hollywood California: Bob Hope, 1941.
- Hope, Bob. I Never Left Home. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1944.
- Hope, Bob. Bob Hope's So This is Peace. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1946.
- Hope, Bob and Pete Martin. Have Tux, Will Travel: Bob Hope's Own Story. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1954. ISBN 0-7432-6103-8.
- Hope, Bob. I Owe Russia $1200. New York: Doubleday, 1963. ISBN 978-0-01-745039-5.
- Hope, Bob. Five Women I Love: Bob Hope's Vietnam Story. Amarillo , Texas: Hale Publishing, 1967. ISBN 978-0-517-50455-0.
- Hope, Bob and Pete Martin. The Last Christmas Show. New York: Doubleday, 1974. ISBN 0-7091-5660-X.
- Hope, Bob and Bob Thomas. The Road to Hollywood: My 40-year Love Affair with the Movies. New York: Doubleday, 1977. ISBN 0-385-02292-1.
- Hope, Bob and Dwayne Netlund. Bob Hope's Confessions of a Hooker: My Lifelong Love Affair with Golf. New York: Doubleday, 1985. ISBN 0-385-17442-X.
- Hope, Bob and Melville Shavelson. Don't Shoot, It's Only Me: Bob Hope's Comedy History of the United States. New York: Putnam, 1990. ISBN 0-399-13518-9.
- Hope, Bob and Linda Chandler Munson. We Could've Finished Last Without You: An Irreverent Look at the Atlanta Braves, the Losingest Team in Baseball for the Past 25 Years. Longstreet Press, 1991. ISBN 0-929264-84-3.
- Hope, Bob and Ward Grant. Bob Hope Remembers World War II: The European Theater and D-Day. Hollywood, California: Hope Enterprises, 1994. ISBN 1-885997-01-9.
- Hope, Bob and Ward Grant. Bob Hope's Dear Prez, I Wanna Tell Ya!: A Presidential Jokebook. Los Angeles, California: General Pub. Group, 1996. ISBN 1-57544-009-1.
- Hope, Bob, Delores Hope and Ward Grant. Thanks for the Memories. Los Angeles, California: General Pub. Group, 1998. ISBN 1-57544-040-7.
- Hope, Bob and Linda Hope. Bob Hope: My Life in Jokes. New York: Hyperion Books, 2004. ISBN 1-4013-0742-6.
- Notes
- ^ a b "Comedian Bob Hope dies." BBC News Online, July 28, 2003. Retrieved: September 23, 2011.
- ^ "June 7, 1945." war-letters.com. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ Down-Range." USO Publication August 11, 2004.
- ^ Moreno 2008, p. 88.
- ^ Molotsky, Irvin. "Bob Hope's Gift to the Nation? Quips, of Course." The New York Times, November 28, 2007. Retrieved: May 20, 2008.
- ^ "Application for Permit to Enter Alaska, 1942, in On the Road: USO Shows: Bob Hope and American Variety." Library of Congress. Retrieved: December 24, 2008.
- ^ http://ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
- ^ According to English birth records at http://www.freebmd.org.uk the birth of a Leslie Towns Hope was registed in Lewisham in London some time in July, August or September 1903. The family could have delayed registering the birth by a few weeks.
- ^ a b "Bob Hope and the American Variety: Early Life." Library of Congress. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ Current Biography 1941, pp. 402–404.
- ^ http://www.cleveland.com/homegrown/index.ssf?/homegrown/more/hope/bio.html
- ^ "Boys' Industrial School: Ohio History Central." Ohio Historical Society, July 1, 2005. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Boys and Girls Industrial School Index." Ohiohistory.org. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ Faith 2003, pp. 402–403.
- ^ Maltin 1972, p. 25.
- ^ Lahr 1998
- ^ "The Road to the Fountain of Youth." BBC. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ McCaffrey 2005. p. 56.
- ^ Friedrich 1986, p. 26.
- ^ "WW2 4th of July concert." war-letters.com. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ Steinbeck 1958, p. 65.
- ^ King, Larry. "Interview Q&A between Hope-Smith and Z. Hope: Tribute to Bob Hope." CNN Larry King Live, CNN Transcripts, August 27, 2003.
- ^ Faith 2003, p. 429.
- ^ "A salute for Stephen Colbert." Los Angeles Times, June 13, 2009.
- ^ Faith 2003, p. 403.
- ^ "Bob Hope's 100th Birthday." Bobhopetheatre.co.uk,May 29, 2003. Retrieved: April 11, 2010.
- ^ West, Bob. "Bob West Sports Rap." Port Arthur (TX) News, May 31, 1980. Retrieved: July 19, 2008.
- ^ "Bob Hope Chrysler Classic history." Bhcc.com. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Bing Crosby Buys Chunk of Pirates As Club Sold to New Owners' Group." The Windsor Daily Star, August 9, 1946: Second Section, p. 3.
- ^ Rea. Steven X. "Why Bob Hope's Still on the Road." The Montreal Gazette, August 21, 1982, p. E1.
- ^ "Reeves Gives Up Active Interest in L-A Rams." The Lewiston Daily Sun, December 28, 1949, p. 8.
- ^ "Reeves Buys Rams For $4.8 Million." Lodi News-Sentinel, December 28, 1962, p. 9.
- ^ "Bob Hope dead at 100." CNN, July 29, 2003. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/02/us/anthony-j-hope-63-head-of-panel-and-bob-hope-s-son.html
- ^ a b c d O'Dowd 2006, p. 313.
- ^ O'Dowd 2006, p. 65.
- ^ O'Dowd 2006, pp. 66, 67.
- ^ O'Dowd 2006, p. 311.
- ^ "Bob Hope Notice." The New York Times, July 29, 2003. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ Wilson, Earl. (April 14, 1971). The Milwaukee Sentinel, Milwaukee, WI
- ^ a b c d "Bob Hope". boxing-scoop.com. http://www.boxing-scoop.com/show_boxer.php?boxer_ID=11277. Retrieved April 11, 2012.
- ^ http://www.itnsource.com/shotlist//RTV/1948/10/04/BGX411070158/?s=*
- ^ http://www.newspaperarchive.com/SiteMap/FreePdfPreview.aspx?img=106587368
- ^ "Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Library." Reaganfoundation.org. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Bob's Biography (Television)." BobHope.com.
- ^ "Hope for America: Performers, Politics and Pop Culture." Library of Congress. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Bob Hope and American Variety." Library of Congress. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "St. Charles Catholic Church." Seeing-stars.com. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ House Proceeding, June 5, 1998 (6:01:45 from start). From C-SPAN.
- ^ Quirk 1998, p. 313.
- ^ "Bob Hope released from hospital." CNN, June 7, 2000. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Bob Hope stays in hospital." guardian.co.uk, September 4, 2009. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Hope grandson: Laughter until the end." CNN, July 29, 2003. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "In Memory of Bob Hope". http://www.fac-assoc.org/memorial/memorial04-hope.html. Retrieved 2012-01-22.
- ^ "USA Patriotism!: Great American Patriot Bob Hope." Usa-patriotism.com, May 6, 1941. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "NAB Hall of Fame." National Association of Broadcasters.[dead link]
- ^ "Bob Hope gets freedom award". The Record. May 1, 1997.
- ^ "Bob Hope." Hollywood Walk of Fame database. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Crypt Church: National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception." Nationalshrine.com. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "A Tribute to Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories." A National Salute to Bob Hope and the Military. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ "Bob Hope Theater." Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. Retrieved: August 7, 2011.
- ^ TV Guide Book of Lists. Running Press. 2007. p. 188. ISBN 0-7624-3007-9.
- ^ "Bob Hope and SMU" Retrieved: December 25, 2011.
- Bibliography
- Faith, William Robert. Bob Hope: A Life in Comedy. New York: Da Capo Press, a division of Perseus Books, 2003, First edition 1982. ISBN 0-306-81207-X.
- Friedrich, Otto. City of Nets: A Portrait of Hollywood in the 1940's. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1986. ISBN 0-520-20949-4.
- Lahr, John. "Profiles: The CEO of Comedy." The New Yorker, December 21, 1998, pp. 62–79.
- Maltin, Leonard. The Great Movie Shorts. New York: Outlet, 1972. ISBN 978-0-517-50455-0.
- McCaffrey, Donald W. The Road to Comedy: The films of Bob Hope. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 2005, First edition 2004. ISBN 978-0-275-98257-7.
- Moreno, B. : Ellis Island's Famous Immigrants (Images of America: New Jersey). Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7385-5533-1.
- O'Dowd, John. Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye, The Barbara Payton Story. Duncan, Oklahoma: BearManor Media, 2006. ISBN 978-1-59393-063-9.
- Quirk, Lawrence J. Bob Hope: The Road Well-Traveled. New York: Applause Books, 1998. ISBN 978-0-7862-3307-6.
- Steinbeck, John. Once There Was A War. New York: Bantam, 1958.
- Further reading
- Mills, JD, Robert L. The Laugh Makers:: A Behind the Scenes Tribute to Bob Hope's Incredible Gag Writers. Duncan, Oklahoma: BearManor Media, 2009. ISBN 1-59393-323-1.
- Marx, Arthur. The Secret Life of Bob Hope: An Unauthorized Biography. New York: Barricade Books, 1993. ISBN 978-0-942637-74-8.
- Young, Jordan R The Laugh Crafters: Comedy Writing in Radio & TV's Golden Age. Beverly Hills: Past Times Publishing 1999. ISBN 0-940410-37-0.
Awards for Bob Hope
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1980 |
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1981 |
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1982 |
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1983 |
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1984 |
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1985 |
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1986 |
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1987 |
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1988 |
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1989 |
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1927–1940 |
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1941–1960 |
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1961–1980 |
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1981–2000 |
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2001–2020 |
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Persondata |
Name |
Hope, Bob |
Alternative names |
Hope, Leslie Townes |
Short description |
English entertainer |
Date of birth |
May 29, 1903 |
Place of birth |
Eltham, London, England, UK |
Date of death |
July 27, 2003 |
Place of death |
Toluca Lake, Los Angeles, California, USA |