in a 1927
Vitaphone Varieties short|left In the late 1920s
Warner Bros. filmed their songs and comic patter for
Vitaphone short subjects. On radio, Fields was heard on
The Ziegfeld Follies of the Air and other shows. Fields and Seeley were well paid, saving and investing wisely. The couple believed they had no financial worries until the stock market crash of 1929 wiped out everything they had worked for. Vaudeville went into a steep and rapid decline at about the same time as the stock market. Fields and Seeley struggled until he launched a solo career in New York in 1933. Times were so hard that the couple filed for bankruptcy in New York State in 1936. Benny Fields made a surprise comeback in 1944. The low-budget
PRC studio mounted its most ambitious production around Fields, and hired the imaginative
Joseph H. Lewis to direct it. The finished musical,
Minstrel Man, was a credit to the star, director, and studio. Reviewers were delighted by Fields's naturalistic performance—one critic described him as "a talent, voice, and personality the screen's been too long without."
Minstrel Man was a personal triumph for Fields, and PRC had planned to follow it up with a true-life film biography of Seeley and Fields. The story would not be told until 1952, however, in the
Paramount film
Somebody Loves Me (1952), starring
Betty Hutton and
Ralph Meeker. Seeley came out of retirement during the filming of the movie. Seeley and Fields retired from performing in public, but
George Burns fondly recalled a house party he threw in the late 1950s, when he asked the team to do one of their old vaudeville numbers. Seeley and Fields were rather embarrassed, worrying that their act wouldn't interest the many teenagers in the house, but at Burns's urging they sang—and their old magic captured the hearts of the young audience. Following the release of
Somebody Loves Me, they recorded three LP albums for the
Decca,
MGM. and
Mercury labels and made occasional TV appearances on
The Ed Sullivan Show. ==Death==