Early career Although he appeared in a few legitimate musical comedies, Grant was primarily a
burlesque comedian, straight man and producer. He performed in shows on the
Columbia and
Mutual Burlesque wheels in the 1920s, and at
Minsky's in the early 1930s. His second wife, Dorothy Maye, was a
strip tease artist.
Abbott and Costello Grant met
Bud Abbott in burlesque in the early 1920s when Abbott was still working in theater box offices. While working for Mutual as a general manager and trouble shooter, Grant cut
Lou Costello's salary during the Great Depression. Two years later, according to
Hedda Hopper, he and Costello met again when the latter was appearing on a bill at a Brooklyn theatre; Abbott was also appearing there and Grant suggested that they team up. They did and were an immediate success. (This story is inconsistent with the most credible and documented version of events, where the team first performed together at the Eltinge Theater in 1935 and teamed nearly a year later.) Abbott and Costello spent the next two years playing burlesque, vaudeville, and the
Steel Pier in Atlantic City. In February 1938 they were booked on the
Kate Smith radio program. After several appearances they hired Grant, who was working in Toronto, to be their head writer. Grant contributed material for Abbott and Costello on radio, in films, and on the
Colgate Comedy Hour. Grant contributed to nearly every Abbott and Costello film by injecting comedy routines into stories written by other screenwriters. Most of his material would be included in the final film because he was the only writer Abbott and Costello trusted. He was also on the set during filming and helped with ad-libbed material. In 1941 Hedda Hopper described Grant as "much more than the writer of those laugh jerkers that have zoomed the pair into box office tops; he's their friend, confidant and godfather, and the three of them are more like brothers than business associates." Grant frequently modified established burlesque material and other comedians sometimes claimed ownership. In October 1941 a former burlesque colleague of Grant's, Barney Gerard, claimed Grant and Abbott and Costello had plagiarized or paraphrased two routines when the team were regulars on
The Chase and Sanborn Hour radio show.
Producer In May 1943, with Abbott and Costello temporarily sidelined by Costello's illness, Grant was promoted to producer at the team's home studio, Universal. The studio announced that he would produce a musical in color,
Hip Hip Hooray. This became
Bowery to Broadway (1944). Grant also received a producer credit on the Abbott and Costello films
Here Come The Co-Eds and
The Naughty Nineties (both 1945).
Firing and Re-hiring During the second
Red Scare, Costello became convinced that there was a communist conspiracy to infiltrate the film industry. He demanded that his employees sign a loyalty oath swearing that they had no Communist ties. Grant refused to sign and Costello fired him in 1951. Grant, who was never
blacklisted, did not work on their film
Lost in Alaska (1952), but did work on the films
Double Crossbones (1951) with Donald O'Connor,
Ma and Pa Kettle at the Fair (1951), and
Sailor Beware with
Martin and Lewis. Costello felt that the script for
Lost in Alaska suffered because of Grant's absence and rehired him for
Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd (1952) and subsequent films. Grant's later screenplay credits include
Abbott and Costello Go to Mars (1953);
Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1953);
Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops (1955); and
Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955). Grant was credited on a film originally written for Abbott and Costello,
Fireman Save My Child (1954), which was made with
Hugh O'Brian and
Buddy Hackett when Costello became ill.
Final Years Grant died of a heart attack on 19 November 1955 in Palm Desert, California. He was survived by his wife, Dorothy; his brother and three sisters; and two daughters from his first marriage. == Family ==