Rudy Vallee "The Whiffenpoof Song" on The Ed Sullivan Show

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 чер 2021
  • Rudy Vallee "The Whiffenpoof Song" on The Ed Sullivan Show, February 13, 1949. Subscribe now to never miss an update: ume.lnk.to/EdSullivanSubscribe
    Watch Motown performances from The Ed Sullivan Show • The Temptations "Psych...
    Watch classic Rock and Roll performances from The Ed Sullivan Show: • The Beach Boys "Good V...
    Watch Comedy clips from The Ed Sullivan Show: • Video
    Sign up to receive the Ed Sullivan Show newsletter! umusic.digital/ed-sullivan-sh...
    Follow The Ed Sullivan Show:
    Website edsullivan.com/
    Facebook / edsullivanshow
    Twitter / edsullivanshow
    Instagram / theedsullivanshow
    The Ed Sullivan Show was a television variety program that aired on CBS from 1948-1971. For 23 years it aired every Sunday night and played host to the world's greatest talents. The Ed Sullivan Show is well known for bringing rock n' roll music to the forefront of American culture through acts like Elvis Presley, The Beatles, and The Rolling Stones. The entertainers each week ranged from comedians like Joan Rivers and Rodney Dangerfield, to Broadway stars Julie Andrews and Richard Burton, to pop singers such as Bobby Darin and Petula Clark. It also frequently featured stars of Motown such as The Supremes, The Temptations, Stevie Wonder and The Jackson 5. The Ed Sullivan Show was one of the only places on American television where such a wide variety of popular culture was showcased and its legacy lives on to this day.
    © SOFA Entertainment. All Rights Reserved.
    #RudyVallee #EdSullivan #EdSullivanShow

КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @radicalross7700
    @radicalross7700 11 місяців тому +9

    "We'll pass and be forgotten with the rest". Rudy Vallee has passed, but he hasn't been forgotten.

  • @irafutterman5557
    @irafutterman5557 Рік тому +12

    I'm sure many cool cats would reject this as so old fashioned and stodgy but this is masterclass sophistication, class,and talent a great treasure to be able to enjoy with our technology.

  • @bradstewart7007
    @bradstewart7007 Рік тому +5

    15 years between this an introducing The Rolling Stones. Feels like a century apart.

  • @jimdrake3436
    @jimdrake3436 2 роки тому +11

    He slipped in the first part of the “bridge” of the song by singing “Damned from here to eternity,” when “damned” was a curse word banned from television-but this was “live” and in his second rendering of that line he sang the accepted version, “Doomed from here to eternity.”

  • @johnhourigan6049
    @johnhourigan6049 3 роки тому +12

    I find these late 1940s clips of Ed’s shows fascinating.

  • @joycejean-baptiste4355
    @joycejean-baptiste4355 2 роки тому +4

    Ed Sullivan looks so young here. I watched his show on T. V. when I was a kid.

  • @williamschlenger1518
    @williamschlenger1518 5 місяців тому +1

    My mom used to sing this to me when I was very young.

  • @scifiradioguy
    @scifiradioguy 2 роки тому +5

    So great for you to have all of this material digitized and presented for generations to come.

  • @jones616
    @jones616 2 роки тому +4

    Wow, I didn't know Ed Sullivan was around for Rudy Vallee...I saw the Beatles "premiere " on Ed's show, was so exciting...I was just getting into adolescence, life was so full of promise .

    • @jimdrake3436
      @jimdrake3436 2 місяці тому

      I was fortunate to interview Rudy Vallee at length, and he told me that when he introduced the variety show on network radio in the early 1930s, Ed Sullivan, who was then a newspaper columnist, often covered Vallee's "Fleischmann Hour" shows in his column.

  • @juanlespin
    @juanlespin 3 роки тому +13

    Well my impression of Rudy Vallee just went up. Lovely introduction and sweet singing, especially the coda. Normally singers love holding long high notes but he pauses on the low ones. Very effective.

    • @jimdrake3436
      @jimdrake3436 Рік тому +1

      His ability to sustain such a long breath stemmed from his mastery of the clarinet and saxophone-actually, “saxophones” because he played the soprano, alto, C-melody, tenor, and bass saxophones with the Yale Collegians.

  • @davidhapka5410
    @davidhapka5410 3 роки тому +41

    A gentler time. In stark contrast to the ugliness of today 🥺

    • @eightinches6094
      @eightinches6094 3 роки тому +3

      Mankind has changed.

    • @davidhapka5410
      @davidhapka5410 2 роки тому

      @Frank Lopez Boo hoo...

    • @drfelixgraham
      @drfelixgraham 2 роки тому +6

      Oh yes, the time of lynchings. A much more beautiful and gentle time.

    • @davidhapka5410
      @davidhapka5410 2 роки тому +8

      @@drfelixgraham Virtue signal somewhere else, Doc.

    • @elainesmith7512
      @elainesmith7512 2 роки тому +3

      @@davidhapka5410 "Doc" is telling the truth.

  • @TomElvisSmith
    @TomElvisSmith 3 роки тому +18

    Now this is a great Rudy Vallee clip! I liked his explanation of the origin of the song too. I'm going to copy what I said on the previous Vallee post, since it would be better suited here. Rudy Vallee, along with Gene Austin, and eventually Bing Crosby and Russ Columbo, pioneered the crooning singing style which made the ladies swoon back in the 1920's and early '30's. Some of his big hits were "I'm Just a Vagabond Lover", "Betty Co-Ed", "Stein Song" and many, many others. He later experienced a revival in his career in the 1960's when he starred in "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying". Rudy appeared on quite a few early Sullivan shows. Other songs sung by Rudy on this episode were "Another Girl Like You" (possibly "If I Had a Girl Like You"), "Ragtime Gal" "Bamboo Tree" and "Tell Me Pretty Maiden".

    • @jimdrake3436
      @jimdrake3436 2 роки тому +1

      Indeed he sang “If I Had a Girl Like You,” which he had featured on his “Fleischmann Hour” in the early-1930s. He sang “Under the Bamboo Tree” and noted that the novelty song was a favorite of none other than Enrico Caruso.

  • @ricksandoval1187
    @ricksandoval1187 2 місяці тому +1

    He had a very relaxed demeanor and took the song serious. Too bad he didn't sing more

  • @steveperry1344
    @steveperry1344 2 роки тому +5

    i've been a fan of rudy vallee ever since i was a kid, i used to sing along with my mother to his records, great to hear and see him in this film clip.

  • @josephnatoli3935
    @josephnatoli3935 7 місяців тому +1

    I loved this crooner!❤❤

  • @trevorpark7768
    @trevorpark7768 3 роки тому +37

    I catch some of these old shows and it is a different world. The audiences are so civilized and classy. Everyone puts on their best. They cared how they looked in public. They all had manners. Do not know what happened to Americans.

    • @chipmartin1223
      @chipmartin1223 2 роки тому +5

      Yes indeed. When I was young my grandfather would play old 78’s of Rudy Vallee for me while showing me how to wire up old telephones. My grandfather was born in the 1800’s. We would leave the house to walk Into down town Memphis. He always wore a nice hat and a suit with tie. They all went out carry about their appearance and were very kind to one another. I miss those days. It was a totally different world then. Yes it was

    • @reneehenderson5787
      @reneehenderson5787 Рік тому +1

      Perhaps ‘Americans’ have reverted to their true nature. Maybe the polite audiences you recall are merely an illusion. The book “Lies My Teacher Told Me” reveals the true American that you so fondly remember.

    • @charlestait5303
      @charlestait5303 10 місяців тому +1

      Bad parenting!

    • @josephnatoli3935
      @josephnatoli3935 7 місяців тому

      1:01 1:06. There are no more civilized Americans as of late.
      BORDERS language and culture, without these 3 we will loose our beautiful AMERICA.
      We are not a democracy...
      We are a republic.🙏❤🙏👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @Itchybooty
      @Itchybooty 7 місяців тому

      Not just America, it’s all over the world. Also only the people with money dressed this way, the rest of the working class people May have tried to dress as nice and cleans as possible but only for special situations. 😂

  • @domenicleone8051
    @domenicleone8051 10 місяців тому +1

    Beautiful voice

  • @rjstreeter1961
    @rjstreeter1961 3 роки тому +16

    My mother turned 100 recently, and mentioned that she'd been thinking about Rudy Vallée singing The Whiffenpoof Song - I think she will love this version!
    RJ Streeter 7-2-2021

  • @deborahkelly1489
    @deborahkelly1489 Рік тому +2

    This song is beautiful it always makes me emotional.

  • @dougmilesmedia
    @dougmilesmedia 3 роки тому +8

    "Lord Marmaduke Phogg" from "Batman"

  • @reneleclerc6119
    @reneleclerc6119 3 роки тому +2

    I wonder if Steve Allen had as much fun with the lyrics of this song as he had with rock songs.

  • @Folkie44
    @Folkie44 Рік тому +1

    Had to listen to this song after reading Dylan's Philosophy of Modern Song, although his remarks are based on the Bing Crosby version.

  • @leobrussel9471
    @leobrussel9471 10 місяців тому +1

    What a marvelous voice, both singing and speaking. His introductory remarks were astonishingly articulate. Whether rehearsed or off-the-cuff, I have rarely, if ever, heard the like from a variety show guest.
    There are a lot of remarks here and on other videos from this era about how classy and dignified we were as a country back then, and not so much now. That is true up to a point. There were also terrible things in our national character at the time, racism being the most pernicious.
    When we who support President Trump now hear "Make America Great Again", we nearly all think of this side of America, the side of decency, fairness and dignity. Not the negative side. Not the racism. We were surely not great in those areas and need never return to them. But the positive side? We definitely will be greater with a return to that.

  • @catguy00
    @catguy00 Рік тому +1

    I wish I sounded like this

  • @finallybrainunderstood479
    @finallybrainunderstood479 3 роки тому +5

    @4:30 as weeeeeeeeee...... Yes🙏baaa👌

    • @jimdrake3436
      @jimdrake3436 2 роки тому

      It takes a professional clarinet and saxophone player, which he was, to be able to sing such a long phrase as his “such … as we-ee-ee-ee-ee-ee” on descending notes as he does “live” here as well as on his 1930s recording of “The Whiffenpoof Song.”

  • @randquadrozzi1280
    @randquadrozzi1280 19 днів тому

    I would cringe when my grandparents put Lawrence welk on but their generation loved it.

  • @pqdlindasgaiolascarlinhosd5758
    @pqdlindasgaiolascarlinhosd5758 3 роки тому +1

    👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @stevefaure415
    @stevefaure415 2 роки тому +3

    You can tell Ed and Rudy were friends.

  • @pdmacguire
    @pdmacguire Рік тому

    That was back when Yale was still a respected center of learning.

  • @timcarr6401
    @timcarr6401 Місяць тому

    Elvis does a shortened version of this song. It's much better than Rudy's take. But for sentimental reasons, Rudy gets the nod.

  • @chuckschafer942
    @chuckschafer942 Рік тому

    IN 1949 IT WAS "TOAST OF THE TOWN"

  • @markhyde7783
    @markhyde7783 Рік тому

    I have alot of his 45s promo no scratches I don't know if I should keep them or ditch them.

  • @manouka
    @manouka Рік тому

    he looks a lot like a young Edward Herrmann (who plays the grandfather in gilmore girls) and as soon as I thought that he said he's going to Hartford which is where that character lives in the show! so weird

  • @davidlogansr8007
    @davidlogansr8007 2 роки тому +1

    I still like Rudy Valee Eve my though he wasn’t very nice I’ve read.

    • @therudyvalleearchives6831
      @therudyvalleearchives6831 2 роки тому +1

      Rudy was a complicated person. From speaking with several folks who knew him and reading his autobiographies, he was very aware of the fact that he was opinionated, outspoken and not popular with many of the “in” crowd of Hollywood. He was not afraid to correct anyones grammar, or tell them what he really thought. However, he also was incredibly self aware, humble (almost to a point of self deprecation) and knew his strengths and weaknesses. Ultimately I think he was just like all of us, full of strengths and weaknesses, shades of gray.

  • @MattWillis
    @MattWillis 9 днів тому

    The Black Sheep Squadron

  • @Nonduality
    @Nonduality 3 роки тому +2

    Now let's see Elvis sing it.

    • @eightinches6094
      @eightinches6094 3 роки тому +2

      Or the Beatles!

    • @exenx2995
      @exenx2995 3 місяці тому

      If you would have researched first you would have seen that Elvis did sing this song in his 1969 movie "The Trouble With Girls (and how to get in to it)"

  • @miyoshiumeki
    @miyoshiumeki Рік тому

    There is a blandness about Rudy that is undeniable, maybe because he never appeared to have much of a vocal range and his facial expression when singing lacked personality. Somehow that was made humorous in the movie The Palm Beach Story and later to the exaggerated character in How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. I will never forget when as an old gentleman he appeared on a documentary about sexual mores of the 20th century and said rather proudly that in his life he slept with more than 200 woman and girls. I thought it was most interesting that he somehow kept score :)

  • @user-uh5wp4bh8m
    @user-uh5wp4bh8m 4 місяці тому

    Idle rich at Yale and Harvard......

  • @iluvhou
    @iluvhou 2 роки тому

    Whoo. Thank goodness for this, I was spooked and creeped out from watching earlier performances of Mr. Valle's. I was curious and decided to look him up and was fascinated that he was popular or successful at all. Stinkers. But I do not know what other choices were out there during his early career, they must've been horrendous. Maybe he was different? His voice definitely improved with age. Very nice! He just looked & sounded scary when he was young.

    • @Emiliee
      @Emiliee Рік тому +1

      Why were you spooked!

  • @gregoryian123
    @gregoryian123 Рік тому +1

    They are all fakes.

    • @exenx2995
      @exenx2995 3 місяці тому

      You must be talking about todays so called artists.