The band returned to Chicago for a booking at the
Edgewater Beach Hotel, where they did their first
radio remote broadcast on March 29, 1924. The band had a four-year engagement at the hotel. In August 1925, the Russo-Fio Rito orchestra opened Chicago's new
Uptown Theatre. They opened the famous
Aragon Ballroom in July 1926, doing radio remotes nationally from both the Aragon and the
Trianon Ballrooms. In 1927, he had a radio program on
KTHS in Hot Springs, Arkansas. Dan Russo left the band in 1928, and Fio Rito took over as leader, touring the midwest with engagements in St. Louis, Kansas City and Cincinnati. In August 1929, the band's first recording without Russo featured
Ted Lewis on clarinet and vocal. Billed as Ted Fio Rito and His Edgewater Beach Hotel Orchestra, they headed for San Francisco to fill in for the
Anson Weeks orchestra at the Mark Hopkins Hotel.
Radio in the 1930s Fio Rito reached a national audience through syndicated and network radio programs. In Chicago, the band was heard on the
Brunswick Brevities program, and they were the featured orchestra on NBC's
Skelly Gasoline Show in New York. They broadcast on many 1930s radio programs, including
The Old Gold Hour,
Hollywood Hotel,
The Al Jolson Show,
Frigidaire Frolics and
Clara, Lu, and Em. The Fio Rito Orchestra's vocalists included Jimmy Baxter,
Candy Candido, the Debutantes,
Betty Grable,
June Haver, the Mahoney Sisters,
Muzzy Marcellino, Joy Lane (1947–1951),
Billy Murray ("the Denver Nightingale"), Maureen O’Connor, Patti Palmer (born Esther Calonico), Kay and
Ward Swingle. During the 1940s, the band's popularity diminished, but Fio Rito continued to perform in Chicago and Arizona. He played in Las Vegas during the 1960s. In his last years, he led a small combo at venues throughout California and Nevada until his death in
Scottsdale, Arizona, from a
heart attack. He is buried in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in the Mission Hills community of northern Los Angeles. Details of his chart successes are given below. ==Recordings==