1927–1937: Early theatre and film roles In the early days, Hope's career included appearances on stage in vaudeville shows and Broadway productions. Hope's first Broadway appearances, in 1927's
The Sidewalks of New York and 1928's
Ups-a-Daisy, were minor walk-on parts. He returned to Broadway in 1933 to star as Huckleberry Haines in the
Jerome Kern and
Dorothy Fields musical
Roberta. Stints in the musicals
Say When, the 1936
Ziegfeld Follies with
Fanny Brice, and
Red, Hot and Blue with
Ethel Merman and
Jimmy Durante followed. He began performing on the radio in 1934 mostly with
NBC radio, and switched to television when that medium became popular in the 1950s. He started hosting regular TV specials in 1954, and hosted the
Academy Awards 19 times from 1939 through 1977. Overlapping with this was his movie career, spanning 1934 to 1972, and his
USO tours, which he conducted from 1941 to 1991. Hope signed a contract with
Educational Pictures of New York for six short comedies. The first was a comedy,
Going Spanish (1934). He was not happy with it, and told newspaper columnist
Walter Winchell, "When they catch [bank robber]
Dillinger, they're going to make him sit through it twice." Educational Pictures took umbrage at the remark and canceled Hope's contract after only the one film. He soon signed with the
Vitaphone short-subject studio in
Brooklyn, New York, making musical and comedy shorts during the day and performing in Broadway shows in the evenings.
1938–1949: Hollywood contract and stardom '' trailer (1940) Hope moved to
Hollywood when
Paramount Pictures signed him for the 1938 film
The Big Broadcast of 1938, also starring
W. C. Fields. The song "
Thanks for the Memory", which later became his trademark, was introduced in the film as a duet with
Shirley Ross, accompanied by
Shep Fields and his orchestra. The sentimental, fluid nature of the music allowed Hope's writers—he depended heavily upon joke writers throughout his career—to later create variations of the song to fit specific circumstances, such as bidding farewell to troops while on tour or mentioning the names of towns in which he was performing. sing and dance during the number "Chicago Style" in
Road to Bali (1952) As a film star, Hope was best known for such comedies as
My Favorite Brunette and the highly successful "
Road" movies in which he starred with
Bing Crosby and
Dorothy Lamour. The series consists of seven films made between 1940 and 1962:
Road to Singapore (1940),
Road to Zanzibar (1941),
Road to Morocco (1942),
Road to Utopia (1946),
Road to Rio (1947),
Road to Bali (1952), and
The Road to Hong Kong (1962). At the outset, Paramount executives were amazed at how relaxed and compatible Hope and Crosby were as a team. What the executives didn't know was that Hope and Crosby had already worked together (on the vaudeville stage in 1932), and that working so easily in the "Road" pictures was just an extension of their old stage act. Hope had seen Lamour performing as a nightclub singer in New York, and invited her to work on his
United Service Organizations (USO) tours of military facilities. Lamour sometimes arrived for filming prepared with her lines, only to be baffled by completely rewritten scripts or ad-libbed dialogue between Hope and Crosby. Hope and Lamour were lifelong friends, and she remains the actress most associated with his film career although he made movies with dozens of
leading ladies, including
Katharine Hepburn,
Paulette Goddard,
Hedy Lamarr,
Lucille Ball,
Rosemary Clooney,
Jane Russell, and
Elke Sommer. Hope and Crosby teamed not only for the "Road" pictures, but for many stage, radio, and television appearances and many brief movie appearances together over the decades until Crosby died in 1977. Although the two invested together in oil leases and other business ventures, worked together frequently, and lived near each other, they rarely saw each other socially. After the release of
Road to Singapore (1940), Hope's screen career took off, and he had a long and successful run. After an 11-year hiatus from the "Road" genre, he and Crosby reteamed for
The Road to Hong Kong (1962), starring the 28-year-old
Joan Collins in place of Lamour, whom Crosby thought was too old for the part. They had planned one more movie together in 1977,
The Road to the Fountain of Youth, but filming was postponed when Crosby was injured in a fall, and the production was canceled when he suddenly died of heart failure that October. Hope starred in 54 theatrical features between 1938 and 1972, as well as cameos and short films. Most of his later movies failed to match the success of his 1940s efforts. He was disappointed with his appearance in
Cancel My Reservation (1972), his last starring film; critics and filmgoers panned the movie. Though his career as a film star effectively ended in 1972, he did make a few cameo film appearances into the 1980s. and Hope, as caricatured by
Sam Berman for NBC's 1947 promotional book Hope's
career in broadcasting began on radio in 1934. His first regular series for
NBC Radio was the
Woodbury Soap Hour in 1937, on a 26-week contract. Serving as the master of ceremonies for these
Rippling Rhythm Revue radio broadcasts, Hope collaborated with the big band leader
Shep Fields during this period of transition from vaudeville to radio. A year later,
The Pepsodent Show Starring Bob Hope began, and Hope signed a ten-year contract with the show's sponsor,
Lever Brothers. He hired eight writers and paid them out of his salary of $2,500 a week. The original staff included
Mel Shavelson,
Norman Panama,
Jack Rose,
Sherwood Schwartz, and Schwartz's brother
Al. The writing staff eventually grew to 15. The show became the top radio program in the country. Regulars on the series included
Jerry Colonna and
Barbara Jo Allen as spinster Vera Vague. Hope continued his lucrative career in radio into the 1950s, when radio's popularity began being overshadowed by the upstart television medium.
1950–1979: Television specials Hope did many specials for the NBC television network in the following decades, beginning in April 1950. He was one of the first people to use
cue cards. The shows often were sponsored by
Frigidaire (early 1950s),
General Motors (1955–61),
Chrysler (1963–73), and
Texaco (1975–85). Hope's Christmas specials were popular favorites and often featured a performance of "
Silver Bells"—from his 1951 film
The Lemon Drop Kid—done as a duet with an often much younger female guest star such as
Barbara Mandrell,
Olivia Newton-John,
Barbara Eden, and
Brooke Shields, or with his wife Dolores, a former singer with whom he dueted on two specials. On April 26, 1970,
CBS released the
Raquel Welch television special
Raquel!; in it Hope appears as a guest. Hope's 1970 Christmas special for NBC—filmed in
Vietnam in front of military audiences at the height of the war—is on the list of the
highest-rated broadcasts in US history. It was seen by more than 60 percent of the US households watching television. Likely the most unusual of his television specials was
Joys!, a parody of murder mystery narratives, where the audience discovers at the end of the broadcast that Johnny Carson was the villain. Beginning in early 1950, Hope licensed rights to publish a
celebrity comic book titled
The Adventures of Bob Hope to National Periodical Publications, alias
DC Comics. The comic, originally featuring publicity stills of Hope on the cover, was entirely made up of fictional stories, eventually including fictitious relatives, a high school taught by movie monsters, and a superhero called
Super-Hip. It was published intermittently and continued publication through issue No. 109 in 1969. Writers included
Arnold Drake, and illustrators included
Bob Oksner and (for the last four issues)
Neal Adams. The special, though different from his usual specials, received high praise from
Variety, as well as other reviews. Following a brief appearance at the 50th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1997, Hope made his last TV appearance in a 1997 commercial about the introduction of
Big Kmart, directed by
Penny Marshall. Hope continued an active entertainment career past his 90th birthday, concentrating on his television specials and USO tours. Although he had given up starring in feature films after
Cancel My Reservation, he made several cameos in various films and co-starred with
Don Ameche in the 1986 television film
A Masterpiece of Murder. A television special created for his 80th birthday in 1983 at the
Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., featured President Ronald Reagan, actress Lucille Ball, comedian-actor-writer
George Burns, and many others. In 1985 he was presented with the Life Achievement Award at the
Kennedy Center Honors, and in 1998 he was appointed an honorary Knight Commander of the Most Excellent
Order of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen
Elizabeth II. Upon accepting the appointment, Hope quipped, "I'm speechless. 70 years of ad lib material and I'm speechless." == Other ventures ==