Baker first appeared on
Jack Benny's weekly radio program on November 3, 1935, having been hired to replace singer
Frank Parker. Parker had been very popular on the Benny program, and with his departure, it was widely believed that Benny would lose a large part of his audience; however, Kenny Baker is said to have won audiences over almost instantly, even surpassing Parker in popularity. Baker portrayed a high-voiced, innocent young man on the show, who would frequently cause the Jack Benny character frustration with his "silly" remarks. Baker's final regular appearance on Benny's radio show aired on June 25, 1939, leaving the $3,000 per week job because he no longer wanted to play the character. He was subsequently replaced by singer
Dennis Day. After his four-year stint on the Benny program, Baker returned to radio as a regular performer on
Fred Allen's
Texaco Star Theater program (1940–1942). He was also heard on
Blue Ribbon Town (1943–1944) and
Glamour Manor (1945–1947). He had his own programs, the
Kenny Baker Show (1954) and
SincerelyKenny Baker (1946). The latter was syndicated by the
Frederick W. Ziv Company via
electrical transcription. ==Later years==