F. Chase Taylor was married twice. His first wife was Lois deRidder, daughter of a prominent shoe manufacturer of Rochester, New York; they had one son, Frederick Chase Taylor, Jr., born in 1921. The couple was divorced in 1936. On February 15, 1936, Taylor married Kay Bell of the CBS press department; Budd was his best man. Budd Hulick was announcing a radio broadcast from the Palais Royal nightclub in Buffalo, where band vocalist Wanda Hart (1908–1978) was appearing; they were married two weeks later. They had two daughters, Dawn and Victoria; Victoria died at the age of five in 1947. Both Taylor and Hulick went on to steady solo careers in broadcasting. Taylor continued to appear in comedy movie shorts and whimsical radio programs. "Col. Stoopnagle" substituted for
Burns and Allen (1943), ''
Duffy's Tavern'' (1944),
Bob Hawk (1947), and
Vaughn Monroe's
Camel Caravan (1947–48). Taylor also achieved success as a whimsical quizmaster, in
Quixie Doodles on Mutual and CBS (1939–1944),
The Colonel (1943), ''Stoopnagle's Stooperoos
(1943), and Col. Stoopnagle's Quiz Academy'' (1948). Taylor was an attraction on early television. He was a quizmaster on a July 1944 program on pioneer Schenectady station WRGB. In 1949 Taylor made one foray into the new medium of commercial, network television with ''Colonel Stoopnagle's Stoop
. That same year Ed Gardner invited Taylor to join his production company in Puerto Rico, to write scripts and make appearances on Duffy's Tavern''. Taylor was working in these capacities when he fell ill in 1950. He died in Boston of a heart ailment on May 28, 1950, at the age of 52. Hulick returned to radio in the 1940s. In 1941 he teamed with
Ralph Dumke (formerly one of radio's "Sisters of the Skillet") for the comedy show
Studio X over WEAF in New York. Budd Hulick headed the cast of the
NBC children's fantasy
Happy the Humbug, a series of 12 quarter-hour comedies syndicated for the Christmas season of 1943; by 1946 the library had grown to 54 quarter-hours. In 1947 he hosted a late-night half-hour for WCAP (now WOBM) in Asbury Park, New Jersey. In 1948, with "Mr. and Mrs." radio programs sweeping the country, Hulick and his second wife Helen joined WJJL in Niagara Falls, N. Y. for a two-hour-long, weekday-morning show. Hulick's format had the couple as disc jockeys interviewing honeymooners visiting Niagara Falls. On March 13, 1950, the Hulicks were back in Buffalo, co-hosting WKBW's late-weekday-afternoon half-hour
Helen and Budd (also known as
The Mr. and Mrs. Budd Hulick Show), a light-conversation program aimed at the feminine audience. The Hulicks moved to New Jersey in 1956, where Hulick became a local radio personality. Later that year the Hulicks relocated to Florida and co-starred on the weekday television show
Home with the Hulicks for WPTV-TV in Palm Beach, Florida. Budd Hulick died in Palm Beach on March 22, 1961. ==References==