Joe Penner
{{short description|American actor (1904–1941)}}
{{Redirect|Joseph Pinter|the Hungarian chess player|József Pintér}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Joe Penner
| image = Go Chase Yourself lobby card 1938.JPG
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption = Lobby card from Go Chase Yourself (1938) with June Travis, Joe Penner, and Lucille Ball
| birth_name = József Pintér
| birth_date = {{birth date|1904|11|11}}
| birth_place = Nagybecskerek, (Zrenjanin), Austria-Hungary (now Serbia)
| death_date = {{death date and age|1941|1|10|1904|11|11}}
| death_place = Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
| resting_place =
| nationality =
| occupation = Radio & film comedian
| years_active = 1931–1940
| spouse = {{marriage|Eleanor May Vogt|1928}}
}}
Joe Penner (born József Pintér; November 11, 1904 – January 10, 1941) was an American vaudeville, radio, and film comedian.
Vaudeville and burlesque
In 1917, Penner's acts in which he dressed as Charlie Chaplin earned him 38 cents per week.{{cite news |title='Duck' laugh and catch phrases are Joe Penner's stock in trade |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/101047469 |access-date=February 12, 2021 |work=The New York Times |date=April 1, 1934 |page=X-11|id={{ProQuest|101047469}} }} Thanks to his clowning and "Wanna Buy a Duck?" routine, he was soon in small-time burlesque and vaudeville. A high point came when he performed in the Greenwich Village Follies in Chicago in 1926. After this break, he toured in mainstream vaudeville until its gradual demise around 1932.{{cn|date=January 2024}}
Radio
File:Riggspenner.jpg, Tommy Riggs, Charlie McCarthy, Edgar Bergen, Rudy Vallée and Joe Penner.]]
Penner's films include College Rhythm (1934) and New Faces of 1937. He developed his catch phrases in burlesque. In 1932 he toured in a vaudeville revue with Eddie Tamblyn, father of actor Russ Tamblyn. He was launched on his successful radio career by Rudy Vallée, appearances which led to his own Sunday evening half-hour, The Baker's Broadcast, which began on NBC's Blue Network on October 8, 1933. Penner was a zany comic, noted for his famed catchphrase, "Wanna buy a duck?", and his low hyuck-hyuck laugh.
He was voted radio's top comedian in 1934, but a 1935 dispute with the ad agency over the show's format resulted in Penner quitting The Baker's Broadcast on June 30, 1935. Vox Pop began as a summer replacement series for Penner in 1935. A year later, he returned with The Joe Penner Show, which began airing October 4, 1936 on CBS, sponsored by Cocomalt, with Harry Conn as his new head writer.{{cite book|author=Jordan Young|title=Writing for Jack Benny and Joe Penner: Interviews with Comedy Writers|url=https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Jack-Benny-Joe-Penner-ebook/dp/B00R2FEJ1W/|date=2014|publisher=Amazon Digital Services, Inc|pages=1–57}}
Reception in film
He was caricatured by Tex Avery and Friz Freleng in the musical cartoon, My Green Fedora, the Popeye the Sailor cartoon Can You Take It?, several pictures starring the bumbling stooge Egghead, and the Disney cartoon Mother Goose Goes Hollywood in which he says "Wanna buy a duck?" with Donald Duck on a plate.
After covering the 1932–34 rise of Jack Pearl, Elizabeth McLeod summed up Penner's popularity:
The ultimate Depression-era zany was Joe Penner. A forgotten performer today to most, and little more than a footnote to the average OTR [old-time radio] fan, Penner was a national craze in 1933–34. There is no deep social meaning in his comedy, no shades of subtlety — just utter slapstick foolishness, delivered in an endearingly simpering style that's the closest thing the 1930s had to Pee-wee Herman. An added attraction was Penner's in-character singing each week of a whimsical novelty song, specially written to suit his style. Like Pearl, however, Penner was doomed to early decline by the sheer repetitiveness of his format, even though he remained very popular with children right up to the end of his radio career.[http://www.midcoast.com/~lizmcl/rfy.html McLeod, Elizabeth. "Radio's Forgotten Years: Tuning Thru the Great Depression," 1998.] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303235626/http://www.midcoast.com/~lizmcl/rfy.html |date=2009-03-03 }}
Personal life
In 1928, he married showgirl Eleanor May Vogt.{{Cite web | url=http://www.mwotrc.com/rr2009_02/penner.htm | title=Radio Recall – MWOTRC}}
Penner died from a heart attack in his sleep in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on January 10, 1941, aged 36. His funeral in Los Angeles was attended by more than 2,000 people.{{cite news |title=Services for Joe Penner |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/105515731 |access-date=February 12, 2021 |work=The New York Times |date=January 17, 1941 |page=20|id={{ProQuest|105515731}} }}
Filmography
- The Life of the Party (1937)
- Mr. Doodle Kicks Off (1938)
- Go Chase Yourself (1938)
- The Day the Bookies Wept (1939)
- Millionaire Playboy (1940)
References
{{reflist}}
Listen to
- [http://craighodgkins.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/PennerVallee.mp3 Joe Penner and Rudy Vallee on The Fleishmann's Yeast Hour July 13, 1933]
External links
{{commons category|Joe Penner}}
- {{IMDb name|id=0672101}}
- [http://www.szineszkonyvtar.hu/contents/p-z/pinter.htm Joe Penner biography (in Hungarian)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924112837/http://www.szineszkonyvtar.hu/contents/p-z/pinter.htm |date=2015-09-24 }}
- [http://craighodgkins.com/joepenner Wanna Buy a Duck?]
- {{findagrave|2083|Joe Penner}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Penner, Joe}}
Category:Male actors from New York City
Category:American male radio actors
Category:Emigrants from Austria-Hungary to the United States
Category:American vaudeville performers
Category:20th-century American male actors
Category:Comedians from New York City
Category:American male comedians