Showing posts with label Vaudeville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vaudeville. Show all posts

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Bombshell Mae West Introduced Americans to—Egad—Sex

  

                                                Mae West as we remember her best--blonde and brazen. 

She was a tiny lady, barely five foot tall.  It was more than just her trademark Gay ‘90s plumed hats that made her seem much bigger.  It was a bold, brassy, and irreverent persona that challenged everything puritanical America valued in submissive, virtuous, sexless, and dependent womanhood

It took decades, but by the time she died the culture had caught up with her.  Yet the feminists of those later days were hardly grateful.  They could only see a woman who marketed herself as a sex object.  Those feminists had more in common with the Puritans than they would ever like to admit.

Mary Jane West was born on August 17, 1893 in Brooklyn, New York.  Her father, Irish Catholic on   one side and Scotch Irish Presbyterian on the other had been a prize fighter and was then a “special policeman” and detective with his own small agency.  In the language of the time, which meant that he spent most of his time as a strike breaker.  Her mother was an immigrant from Bavaria and may have been part Jewish.  She was a striking woman who among other occupations had been a corset and fashion model.  It was a close, supportive family with three surviving children, who were raised, if not entirely seriously, as Protestants.

Mary Jane showed early promise as a singer and mimic who entertained her family and was competing—and winningtalent contests by the time she was 7.  She may have gotten some high school education—records at Erasmus Hall are missing.  At any rate, she dropped out by the age of 14 and was appearing in vaudeville as Baby May with the Hal Clarendon Stock Company in 1907.

 

                            Before peroxide, a vaudeville starlet in 1908 in her late teens. 

In vaudeville over the next few years she tried out various acts, including as a male impersonator and in a blackface “coon show.”  Already comfortable with the free sexual atmosphere of the theater and tolerance for what would today be called alternative life styles, Mae West, now filling out as a buxom young woman, copied her famous swaying-hips walk from female impersonator pals.

In 1911 she appeared in a small roll in a short lived Broadway revue but caught the notice of critics before the show folded after only 11 performances.  For the next few years she would alternate between Broadway revues, none of them notable, and the vaudeville circuit where she was becoming a star.

West began writing her own material for her vaudeville act and crafting a recognizable wise cracking, world weary character of questionable conventional morality.  She found the harder she pushed, the greater the gasps and laughs.  By 1921 she had written an extended skit—more like a one act play—The Ruby Ring and taken on the circuit.

But West wanted more, much more.  With a devoted audience cultivated in vaudeville—today we would call it a cult following—she was finally able to break on to Broadway as the star of her own show in 1926 at the age of 34.  Written under the nom de plume Jane Mast, she also produced and directed the boldly titled Sex.  Despite bad reviews and hand handwriting by newspaper editorial moralists, the play ran to packed houses for 375 performances before the theater was raided and West was arrested with her entire cast for public indecency.  She was sentenced to 10 days in jail and fined $500.  But the case made her instantly famous far beyond New York.

Her next play in 1927, The Drag, which as the title suggests dealt with cross-dressing and homosexual themes, only made it to out of town try-outs after New York officials made it clear that they would close any theater in which it opened and prosecute cast and patrons alike.

 

Mae West and co-star Barry O'Neill,  from her  in the Broadway  show Sex, on trial for obscenity at Jefferson Market Courthouse in 1927.   With an inset of a shocking scene from the play. 

During her long climb to “suddenfame, West had a colorful, if secretive, personal life.  In 1911 she married fellow vaudevillian Frank Szatkus, known by the stage name of Frank Wallace while on tour in Milwaukee.  The marriage was kept secret and not acknowledged until investigative reporting turned up the marriage certificate in 1934.  West claimed that the two were “friends” who had never shared a bed and lived together for convenience only for a few weeks.  After the marriage came to light, Szatkus, who she had not seen or heard from in years, resurfaced and tried to claim his share of the marital assets.  Some kind of pay-off was privately arranged and a divorce was finalized in 1943.

It may not have been West’s only marriage, however.  Although no firm documentation has been found some family members claim that she married Italian accordionist Guido Deiro in 1913 or 14.  In her autobiography she acknowledged an affair, “…deep, hittin’ on all the emotions. You can’t get too hot over anybody unless there’s somethin’ that goes along with the sex act, can you?”  The two managed to synchronize their bookings and traveled together until they broke up in 1916.

That was about the time West took up with lawyer James Timony, who was fifteen years her senior.  Timony became her business manager and the two remained close all of their lives, long after the romance had ended.  When he died in 1953 Timony was still living in the same building as West.

Sexually voracious, West took many lovers including Black middleweight boxing champion William Gorilla Jones who continued his association with her as her friend and chauffeur until her death.  Many of her former lovers like Timony and Jones maintained long lasting personal relationships with the star.

West returned to Broadway with another original play, The Wicked Age, which was greeted by more controversy, threats of arrest and packed houses.  

Then in 1928 West opened the play that truly defined her image as a Gay ‘90s temptressDiamond Lil.  It was a play she would revive frequently in her long career, last playing it on Broadway in 1951 at the age of 58.  She followed it up with two more hit shows, The Pleasure Man and Constant Sinner.

By this time Hollywood was converting to talking pictures and bringing plays to the screen and the Broadway stars who knew how to speak.  But West was considered too controversial to touch even in the any-thing-goes days before the Hayes Office imposed its vanilla sensibilities on films.

West never got the call to go to California until a former hoofer in her shows, and likely also a lover George Raft, convinced his bosses at Paramount to offer her a two week contract to appear in a supporting role in his film Night After Night.  She re-wrote her lines as the Texas Guinan inspired night club hostess.  The most famous exchanged occurred when a star struck hat check girl exclaimed, “Goodness, what beautiful diamonds.” and West replied, “Goodness had nothing to do with it, dearie.” 

Raft later admiringly said of her performance, “She stole everything but the cameras.”  

The film was a huge hit for the shaky studio which decided it was worth taking a chance on the now 38 year old sex goddess

 

West's break out staring movie role opposite young Cary Grant in She Done Him Wrong. 

In 1933 West’s first film under a star contract to Paramount was She Done Him Wrong, based on her own screenplay.  She played Lady Lou, a thinly disguised version of Diamond Lil.  She personally picked and extraordinarily handsome young British actor to play opposite her as a Salvation Army officer/secret agent.  The film helped launch Cary Grant’s career.  It also made more the $2 million at the box office with a production cost of only $200,000 saving the studio from looming bankruptcy.  Despite often harsh reviews, it garnered an Academy Award nomination for Outstanding Production—the award now known as Best Picture.

Both West and Paramount were eager to follow up on the success.  She was paired with Grant again in another of her original screenplays, I’m No Angel.  The dialogue with an avalanche of sexual double entendres thrilled audiences which made it the biggest box office hit of 1933.  It also made West the best paid actress in Hollywood, and reputably the second highest paid person in the United States behind only publishing tycoon William Randolph Hurst.

But the two films also brought down a torrent of protest, particularly from the Catholic Legion of Decency which had been instrumental in getting the film industry to adopt a new Production Code.  But the new Code had not been rigorously enforced.  Now the head of the office designated to enforce the Code, Will Hayes, used West’s films to vigorously impose his standards over the entire industry.  Overnight a new prudery reigned.

West’s new films came in for particular attention.  Hayes poured over scripts and reviewed footage stripping most of the punch from West’s dialogues and even demanding changes to situations and character names.  And sometimes when he was done a New York City censorship panel would make even more changes. 

The predictable result was disappointment for fans and waning box office receipts for Belle of the Nineties, and Goin’ to Town.  In 1936’s Klondike Annie West tried to take on themes of religious hypocrisy, sure to draw Hayes office scrutiny.  Despite heavy bowdlerization, enough tang remained to convince critics that it was West’s best performance

But it didn’t stop the box office slide that continued through Go West Young Man opposite Randolph Scott, her first film not based on her own story and script, although she did, as always, contribute dialogue. In 1938 Paramount ended her contract after the luke warm reception of Every Day is a Holiday and her inclusion on an infamous list of stars thought to be box office poison by an association of theater owners.

 

Two icons, West and W. C. Fields are closely associated in popular culture but made only one picture together, My Little Chickadee and personally detested each other. 

It was 18 months before West would go before the cameras again.  She was lured to another struggling studio, Columbia, to be paired with one if its biggest stars, W.C. Fields.  The two stars detested each other from the beginning, in no small part because each was used to writing their own material.  West wrote the first draft of the screenplay featuring her familiar persona recast as Flower Bell Lee.  Fields wrote one extended bar room scene in which she did not appear and some other gag lines.  But the studio credited them equally with the screen play.  The film was the biggest hit either star had in years, but West flatly refused to team up with Fields again.

West made one last film, the box office dud The Heat is On, released in 1943.  She did not return to the screen again until 1977.

Even though she had been one of the highest paid stars in town and often was as showered by jewelry and gifts by admirers as the characters she played, West spent lavishly and was in need of a steady income as her film career wound to a close.  An obvious possibility was radio where many stars were working and pulling down big salaries.  Earlier in the ‘30s she had been a popular guest on comedy variety shows.  

 

West's saucy ad libs on Edgar Bergan's show with Charlie McCarthy got her blackballed from radio.  

But on a 1937 broadcast of ventriloquist Edgar Bergens top rated program, West said dummy Charlie McCarthy was “all wood and a yard long.”  She followed that with an Adam and Eve sketch with Don Ameche liberally scattered with her double entendres including the line, “get me a big one... I feel like doin’ a big apple!”  West’s old nemeses, Catholic purity groups flooded NBC with complaints and threatened to boycott Bergen’s sponsor, Chase and Sandborn Coffee.  The recently formed Federal Communications Commission (FCC) launched its first ever indecency investigation into the network.

NBC deflected all of the blame to West and announced that they were banning her for life from all of their programs and even forbidding references to her name.  Other networks quietly fell into line and West was effectively black balled from radio.  She did not return to the airways again until Perry Como gave her a guest shot in 1950.  Even after that as the nation entered the highly repressed ‘50s West seldom was tapped for either radio or the infant medium of television.

West, however, was as plucky and resilient as her characters.  Frozen out of two media, she simply returned to the waiting, willing, and welcoming arms of Broadway.  More than twenty years after her last performance she starred in another hit show, Catherine Was Great in 1944 surrounding herself with muscular young actors playing dashing Russian courtiers and soldiers.  She would make handsome, husky, shirtless men a permanent feature of her act.  

Through the late ‘40s to 1950 she followed up with no less than three and a half revivals of her most famous play, Diamond Lil.  The first was in London in 1947. Back on Broadway the half came after she broke her ankle in early 1949 and had to close down production.  When the show re-opened a few months later it was advertised as “return engagement.”  That production closed in February 1950, but an entirely new production opened again in September of the same year.  Apparently audiences could not get enough of the nearly 60 year old sex symbol.

 

West's round breaking Las Vegas revue surrounded her with nearly naked body builders.

In 1950 writer/director Billy Wilder briefly considered West as his first choice to play Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard.  He declined to offer her the part when he realized that “…she thought she was as great, as desirable, as sexy as she had ever been.

Instead West turned in a different direction.  She became one of the first big name stars to mount a long running show in Las Vegas.  The show featured elaborate sets and costumes and a chorus of body builders in loincloths.

New generations of blond bombshells viewed Mae West as an inspiration.  Marilyn Monroe studied her.  So did Jayne Mansfield, who became something of a protégé—one of the few women West ever became close too.  Mansfield even married on of West’s muscle men, former Mr. Universe Mickey Hargitey.

West herself began a relationship with another one, Chester Rybonski who took the stage name Paul Novak.  She was 61, he was 30.  The relationship lasted the rest of West’s life.  Novak became yet another of her life-long servant/admirers.  He later told reporters, “I believe I was put on this Earth to take care of Mae West.”

In 1958 the Motion Picture Academy, almost in defiance of the prevailing bluenose atmosphere, let Mae sing Baby It’s Cold Outside with the top heart throb of the year, Rock Hudson on the Oscar broadcast.

West published her bestselling autobiography, Goodness Had Nothing to Do with It the next year.  Every word of it may not have been gospel truth—Cary Grant, for instance, bristled at her assertion that she had discovered him on the lot when he had already appeared in one hit film with Marlene Dietrich—but every paragraph crackled with wit and charm.  

She tried to introduce herself to new, younger audiences, releasing two Rock & Roll albums in the late ‘60s Way Out West and a holiday offering Wild Christmas.  The records may have been little more than a curiosity, but cultural developments were conspiring to bring her back into the lime light.

With the introduction birth control pills in the early ‘60s, the sexual revolution was on.  Suddenly West’s once brazen open sexuality, refusal to be tied down by marriage or children, and gleeful embrace of multiple partners, were being advanced in Helen Gurley Browns Cosmopolitan as the liberating edge of the culture.  Mae West could have been the original Cosmo Girl.

Second was the sudden discovery of irony, which had apparently been buried in the American psyche for centuries.  Irony led to a re-assessment of cultural icons.  This development was called camp.  And suddenly Mae West was the Queen of Camp.  Her old films were being shown in big city art house cinemas and on college campuses.  Her expanded autobiography was re-issued and was once again a best seller.  She regaled talk show hosts like Dick Cavett with her stories and the same saucy jokes she had been telling for more than 50 years.

 

With John Huston, Raquel Welsh, and Rex Reed in a publicity shot for the camp flick Myraa Breckinridge. 

In 1970 West returned to the screen in perhaps the highest of high camp films, Gore Vidals gender bending Myra Breckenridge with Raquel Welsh and Rex Reed.  West played Letitia Van Allen, an ancient Hollywood talent scout who runs an acting agency for leading men only.  The film was panned by critics and a failure at the box office.  Famous stars whose old film clips were used to punctuate bawdy jokes were horrified and litigious.  The highly religious Loretta Young sued to have her image erased from the X-rated film.  The Nixon White House pressured 20th Century Fox to remove clips of Shirley Temple who was then serving as Ambassador to Ghana Even Gore Vidal himself disowned the film.  It still shows up on lists of the worst pictures of all time.  Yet it was also embraced by a cult audience who loved all things camp.

Unfazed by the reception of the film and likely glorying at being once again the center of outrage and controversy, West just rolled on.  Mid decade she released yet another Rock & Roll album, Great Balls of Fire featuring cover of rock classics from Jerry Lee Lewis to the Doors.  She published a tongue-in-cheek self help book—cashing in on another cultural phenomenaMae West On Sex, Health and ESP.

She had one more ambitious film project, Sextette based on her own 1961 play.  Her leading man was dashing Timothy Dalton, soon to be James Bond and Tony Curtis was a former lover.   West played the same sexual object of desire as she always had, perhaps in middle age, not as an octogenarian. But during filming her health failed.  She had trouble with her lines, which had to be fed to her through an ear piece hidden under her wig.  She often seemed confused and could not even navigate around the set with ease.  Eventually the director shot her from the waste up and an assistant on hands and knees maneuvered her across the set.  Predictably, the film was a failure.

West had probably been experiencing mini-strokes all through the 1978 shooting.  Afterwards, her health began to fail and she was confined to her lavish apartment and the kind ministrations of Paul Novak and other devoted friends.

In August of 1980 she suffered a stroke and fell while getting out of bed.  She was admitted to a Los Angeles hospital where she suffered a second stroke a few days later and was paralyzed on the right side.  She made a recovery, but her days were numbered.  She was released to her home and died there on November 22, 1980 at age 87.

After a private Hollywood funeral, west was returned to New York where she was entombed with her parents and siblings at Cyprus Hills Abbey in Brooklyn.

 

Saturday, May 27, 2023

Al Jolson Had a Million of ‘em

Al Jolson's signature pose from The Jazz Singer.

Record keeping was hit and miss and life perilous in Jewish village of Srednik near Kaunas in Lithuania, then part of Tsarist Russia around 1886 so Asa Yoelson was never sure about his birthday.  Years later he would pick May 26 out of a hat to serve, and it has been dutifully reported by biographers ever since.

He was the son of a Rabbi and Canter and had three surviving siblings including a brother Hirsh.  His father Moses immigrated to the United States in 1891 and was able to send for his family when he found employment at Washington, D.C.’s Talmud Torah Synagogue in 1894.

Asa and Hirsh became fascinated with American music and show business hanging out on streets outside taverns and music halls.  By 1897 they were performing for spare change on the sidewalks.

In 1902 Asa launched a paying career as a singing usher in a traveling circus.  Soon after he teamed with Hirsh and worked as Al and Harry Jolson were doing specialties on the burlesque circuit.

Over the next five decades Al Jolson would perform and triumph in every possible American show business venue—vaudeville, the Broadway stage, concerts, records, movies, and radio.  He would have conquered television as well, but he died before his planned debut.  In the process he revolutionized stage and popular music by popularizing blues and jazz forms he learned as a young touring vaudevillian in New Orleans.  His charismatic performance style was the first to “make each song an event.”  And one way or another influenced every singer who came after.

Today he is dimly remembered in the popular imagination as the star of the first sound feature film, The Jazz Singer and for his performances in black face.  His style is dismissed as hammy and old fashion.  His black face work makes him suspect as a racist to modern sensibilities.

But one of his closest friends from the streets of Washington as a kid grew up to be tap dancer Bill Bojangles Robinson.  He encouraged Black performers and featured them for the first time on the Broadway stage.  He brought Cab Calloway to Hollywood and not only insisted on equal billing but got adjoining suites in Beverly Hills penthouse hotel rooms during the filming of The Singing Kid.  Eubie Blake, with whom he never worked professionally, was one of his closest personal friends and companion at boxing matches and racetracks.  The home he shared with his then wife dancer Ruby Keeler was the only one among all the stars where Blacks were freely welcome and entertained.  His work was widely admired in the Black community, including his black face because he never performed the usual coon stereotypes, but treated black music with heartfelt earnestness and respect.  He saw the affinity of Jews and Blacks as oppressed outcasts and recognized Exodus as a common metaphorical experience.  At his funeral, the entire of Black Hollywood turned out, he was lauded in the Black press, and eulogized by the President of the Negro Actors Guild.

Jolson first donned blackface in 1904 while working in vaudeville in a trio with brother Harry and veteran performer Joe Palmer.  It not only boosted his career, but it freed Jolson to be more animated and emotional on the stage.

He was on his own as a touring vaudevillian by 1906 based out of San Francisco.  He claimed that he relocated there because the city needed cheering up after the famous earthquake and fire.

In 1909 with his first wife Henrietta, he returned to New York City where he joined the cast of the most popular minstrel show of the day, Dockstaders Minstrels.  He was quickly the main attraction.

                                Jolson in 1916.

La Belle Paree at the Wintergarden Theater in 1911 was Jolson’s first Broadway show.  Not the headliner, he did Stephen Foster classics in blackface and stole the show.  From then until 1926 Jolson appeared in an unbroken string of hits with shows like Vera Violetta,  The Whirl of Society, Robinson Caruso, Jr., Bombo, Sinbad, and Big Boy.  As his popularity soared so did his weekly paycheck which grew to thousands of dollars a week making him the best paid performer in America.  At the age of 35 he became the youngest actor ever to have a Broadway theater named after him.  Overcoming paralyzing stage fright on opening night for Bombo in 1921, an ecstatic audience called him back for 37 curtain calls.

In 1911 Jolson began his recording career featuring songs from his shows and scores of others.  Had there been a Hit Parade, he would have topped it multiple times almost every year.  His signature songs included Rock-a-Bye My Baby with a Dixie Melodie, My Buddy, Swannee, Avalon, April Showers, Toot-Toot-Tootsie Good-by, Juanita, California Here I Come, I Wonder Whats Become of Sally, Im Sittin on Top of the World, When the Red Red Robin Comes Bob-bob-bobbing Along, My Mammy, Back in Your Own Back Yard, Theres a Rainbow Round My Shoulder, Sonny Boy, and Liza (Let the Clouds Roll Away).  That list is far from definitive.  Over 80 of his hundreds of recordings became hits.  No matter how you slice it, a huge chunk of the classic American song bag.

Jolson's image sold sheet music as fast as his recordings.  This one from 1922 struck a note with Great War vets.

In 1928 Jolson “retired” from the Broadway stage to try his hand in a new medium—movies.

The story of the Cantor’s son who defies his father and tradition to become The Jazz Singer closely paralleled Jolson’s own life.  The Warner Bros. Vitaphone release was the first feature film to include some sound dialogue and songs, although much of the picture was still silent.  The film also highlighted the parallels between the Jewish and Black experiences as expressed by Jolson’s blackface performance.  Legendarily it was a huge hit and doomed silent movies.

What ever was playing next door this crowd is going to The Jazz Singer.

His second film The Singing Fool was his first all talking picture and even a bigger hit because more theaters had been outfitted for Vitaphone sound.  Made and shown in 1928 it held the box office record until Walt Disneys Snow White and the Seven Dwarves ten years later.  The film also introduced the tearjerker Sonny Boy.

Jolson made four more features for Warner’s, did a short, and made cameo appearances through 1930.  Repetitive and poor quality scripts plus rapidly changing public taste made the last couple of films less successful.  Jolson decided to return to Broadway in a new show, Wonder Bar in 1931.  Although due to the Depression ticket sales to the new show did not match his earlier long string of hits, reviews were positive and helped re-boot his career.

After storied concerts in New Orleans with jazz greats, Jolson returned to Hollywood where Warner’s leant him to United Artists for his most unusual, and many believe finest, film, Hallelujah, Im a Bum.  This Depression era comedy/drama only takes its title from the Haywire Mac McClintock IWW song.  Songs were by Richard Rogers and Lorenz Hart with the script by Ben Hecht.  Jolson played a happy-go-lucky bum living with a bunch of others in Central Park who saves the Mayors girlfriend from suicide.  She loses her memory.  He falls for her, but also befriends the suffering Mayor, Frank Morgan channeling Jimmy Walker.  Much of the dialogue is in couplets

Despite the difference in their ages Jolson and Ruby Keeler, shown shipboard on the return from their 1928 Paris honeymoon, were described as the happiest couple in Hollywood.

His wife Ruby Keeler turned down the female lead fearing that if she made her film debut in her husband’s film she would be dismissed.  Instead, she made Forty Second Street and became an overnight top star.  Jolson’s picture, although now considered a minor classic, was a box office flop and led to a decline in his film career.

Back at Warner Bros. the next year he made a film version of his stage show Wonder Bar.  It incorporated more of the elaborate production numbers fans were now demanding in their musicals and was a moderate success.

The final film for his original studio was The Singing Kid, the film in which he showcased and co-starred Cab Calloway.  Busby Berkley, unaccredited, choreographed and shot the production numbers.

Although he appeared in several films in cameo, Jolson only starred in one more picture, Rose of Washington Square for Paramount in 1939.  He shared top billing with rising stars Tyrone Power and Alice Faye.  The film reprised some of his most famous numbers.

His film career might be winding down and changing public taste for crooners like Bing Crosby and Big Band singers might have cut deeply into his record sales, but Jolson still was a major star on radio.  He had started making broadcast appearances from the time he began making films.  He made a famous appearance on the Dodge Victory Hour early in 1928 live from New Orleans reaching an audience of 35 million over 47 radio stations, a landmark in early broadcasting.  He fronted his own network shows twice in the ’30’s.  But he was most in demand as a guest on shows hosted by all band leaders, singers, and comics.  Singers like Crosby, who had eclipsed his popularity, adored him and were glad to share a microphone.  These programs also showed off his considerable comedic talents and ability to ad lib with the best of them.  For those who know Jolson only from his sometimes stiff acting in his hyper sentimental early Warner Bros. films, audio from some of these radio shows is a revelation.

                            Jolson making a 1938 NBC broadcast.

Still, in the early ‘40’s Jolson was restless and depressed.  Occasional radio broadcasts and concerts were not enough to keep him busy.  His fading career and Ruby Keeler’s success had mirrored the fictional story in A Star is Born.  By the late ‘30’s their marriage, once considered the happiest in Hollywood was over.

World War II gave Jolson something to do.  As soon the fires of Pearl Harbor blew away he was pressing the War Department for permission to entertain the troops anywhere in the world.  Before the USO was up and running, he became the first star to perform at a GI base in early 1942.  In fact, it was a letter he wrote to President Franklin Roosevelts press secretary that is credited with the creation of the USO, in which he was later commissioned.  His first out of country tour  took him to Central America and Naval bases in the Caribbean.  Not long after he was in Britain playing to packed and cheering GI audiences.  He would go anywhere—remote Alaskan stations, North Africa, the South Pacific.  He was out of the gate long before his friend Bob Hope and did many more shows.  His tireless work damaged his health.  He contracted malaria and lost most of a lung.

Jolson also found personal happiness.  He met Erle Galbraith, a young x-ray technician in an Arkansas Army camp.  Late in the war he tracked her down and got her work as an actress at Columbia.  They were married in March of 1945.

When the war was over, Jolson found his career was resurrected.  He had gained legions of new young fans among returning GIs and publicity surrounding his shows had endeared him to the public.  Columbia Pictures was eager to produce a bio-pic and in 1946 Larry Parks was tapped to play the singer in The Jolson Story.  Parks carefully studied his performances to match his signature moves and style, but Jolson himself did the singing.  He even managed to play himself in one sceneSuwannee filmed entirely in a long shot showing him dancing and doing his famous runs into the audience on a special runway extending into the theater auditorium.  The Technicolor film was one of the biggest hits of the year.  Parks even earned an Academy Award nomination for the role.

                  Larry Parks won an Oscar nomination playing Jolson, but Al did the singing.

Jolson was back in the big time.  He got a new contract with Decca Records where he not only recreated many of his most famous songs, but also recorded new ones.  He had hits with both.  Among the post war hits were Carolina in the Morning, Waiting for the Robert E. Lee, When Your Were Sweet Sixteen, After Your Gone, Is It True What They Say About Dixie, and Are You Lonesome Tonight.

He was back on radio in a big way too.   From 1947 to ’49 he co-hosted the Kraft Music Hall with Oscar Levant. In 1948 he bested Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Perry Como and others in a Most Popular Male Vocalist poll by Variety.

Jolson Sings Again, with Parks reprising his role was released in 1949 and was another huge hit.  Jolson toured in support of the film and sang before thousands in special shows in New York and in Chicago.

He distrusted the emerging new medium of television and resisted going on as a guest star.  He wanted to have his own platform.  A proposal to introduce himself with a live two hour concert broadcast uninterrupted by commercials was naturally greeted coolly by network executives.  But talks were under way for a program of his own.

Those plans were laid aside when President Harry Truman announced he was sending troops to defend South Korea from an attack by the North in the summer of 1950.  Jolson called the White House and simply announced, “I’m going to Korea.”  With the USO officially disbanded Defense Secretary Harold Johnson tried to call him off.  There were no funds for entertainment, he was told. “Funds? Who needs funds? I got funds! I’ll pay myself!” Jolson told reporters.

Jolson in Korea.  The exhausting tour shattered his health.

By September he was on the ground with the troops.  He did 42 shows in 15 days.  He was presented with a medal by General Douglas MacArthur as he returned. 

But he paid a heavy price.  Dust had settled into his remaining good lung and he was exhausted.

While playing poker in a San Francisco hotel room just a few weeks later on October 22, 1950 Al Jolson suffered a massive heart attack.  He lived long enough to tell his pals, “Boys, I’m going.”  He was 64.