Eddie Cantor in 1923 | 2 vaudeville songs

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  • čas přidán 20. 02. 2007
  • Early sound film of comedian Eddie Cantor, using Lee De Forest's "Phonofilm" process.
    Cantor went on to become the highest paid comedian of the 1930s, making several hit movies for Samuel Goldwyn (Whoopee, Palmy Days, Roman Scandals, The Kid from Spain, Kid Millions, Strike Me Pink) but was primarily a radio comedian. Today largely forgotten, unlike the Marx Brothers or Buster Keaton, but one of the biggest names in comedy in his day.
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Komentáře • 137

  • @RaviShankar16
    @RaviShankar16 Před rokem +10

    Here I am looking at this video in 2023. 100 years to this legend 🔥

  • @DomP1989
    @DomP1989 Před 8 lety +120

    the actor they casted to play Eddie Cantor in Boardwalk Empire was on point.. jeez.

    • @rikardojay578
      @rikardojay578 Před 8 lety +8

      SPOT on. that actor must have studied for months

    • @jeremydesmond638
      @jeremydesmond638 Před 5 lety +4

      my same thoughts right away

    • @funkyfrunk3431
      @funkyfrunk3431 Před 3 lety +3

      Yoo was watching the show and the first song was on in it then looked this dude’s name up found this video. Good shit.

  • @kt1pl2
    @kt1pl2 Před 7 lety +36

    The actor that played him on Boardwalk Empire has the voice and everything down perfectly!

  • @marymargaretkujawa5598
    @marymargaretkujawa5598 Před 8 lety +29

    i am 70 yearsold and I remember him.

  • @basildonboroughfc
    @basildonboroughfc Před 5 lety +8

    Amazing to think that this footage is 95 years old!

  • @pegcage
    @pegcage Před 16 lety +7

    I remember him on the radio. He would lament his five daughters, and Bing Crosby would lament his four sons. Those were the good old days.

  • @FredericKahler
    @FredericKahler Před 16 lety +7

    I've been chosen to perform Eddie Cantor songs for an upcoming Yiddish Cabaret evening here in Las Vegas. What an honor!
    Frederic Kahler

  • @brucer9572
    @brucer9572 Před 4 lety +3

    Hey, Mister Kid Millions,
    Thank you very much, sir!

  • @marcreuben6012
    @marcreuben6012 Před 7 lety +3

    One of the great stars of Vaudeville and the Follies, now forgotten. Played a big role in radio and was a successful film star and a charitable celebrity with a good feel for doing the right thing. Used to listen to his radio show.

  • @matthewsmith3078
    @matthewsmith3078 Před rokem +3

    Wow, this is 100 years old now.

  • @JonathanHochman1
    @JonathanHochman1 Před 10 lety +23

    It's funny how in description for the clip, dated from 2007 reads " Today largely forgotten" and after Boardwalk Empire everyone knows who he was.

  • @Jackie371
    @Jackie371 Před rokem +4

    That's great! Eddie Cantor is a hoot! Thanks for posting. :) It's a nice break from how crazy the world is now to think about how many things were better back then.

  • @lindaeasley8390
    @lindaeasley8390 Před 10 lety +19

    What a treat to be able to have preserved for us clips of historical significance

  • @allisonsilverstein4335
    @allisonsilverstein4335 Před měsícem

    My grandfather was a newsie when he was a kid (late 1920s - early 1930s) and he said he would make 10 cents a day and give 5 cents to his mother (my great-grandmother) so she could go to an Eddie Cantor movie.

  • @sandrashevey8252
    @sandrashevey8252 Před 10 lety +11

    Great from the first...absolutely great. His gags however lacked for verve and his head gag writer Eddie Davis used to buy gags for $5 from gagsters working in and around Tin Pan Alley. My father had an office in the Palace Theatre building and a massive gag encyclopaedia. He used to sell Eddie Davis gags for Cantor.

  • @Cobralalalala
    @Cobralalalala Před 12 lety +9

    I've loved Eddie Cantor since I was a kid watching his movies on AMC with my grandma.
    Thanks for this. not only is it an interesting performance from him, I didn't even know there was sound in 1923. I need to read more about this :D

    • @Skreee99
      @Skreee99 Před rokem +1

      It was probably not sound film (which came later) but one where they recorded the sound on records and then played it together with the film.

  • @ChrisBrown-pw8fx
    @ChrisBrown-pw8fx Před 4 lety +3

    Loved his living room performance for chalky white priceless

  • @theinfamousmrsleep
    @theinfamousmrsleep Před 11 lety +3

    Just listening to this makes me want to dance

    • @parkchimmy_cherrycuties7474
      @parkchimmy_cherrycuties7474 Před 5 měsíci

      ME TOO..... ESPECIALLY THE ENTERTAINING ENTERTAINMENT HE'S DOING FOR ALL OF US HE'S DOING FOR MANY OF US..... HE'S A BRIGHT HEARTED GENUINE GENIUS MAN.... HE'S BRINGING ALL THE FUN FOR MANY OF US ESPECIALLY THE PEOPLE WHO ARE LISTENING TO HIM AND WATCHING HIM HE'S BRINGING ALL THE JOY THE LAUGHTER THE DANCING HIS CURIOUSNESS.... HE'S BRINGING EVERYONE TO THE DANCE FLOOR .... HE'S EVALUATED INTO THE EXPOSURE OF SMILING AND DANCING.....🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂🔥🔥🔥🔥😄😄😂

  • @SouthwestFloridaCircus
    @SouthwestFloridaCircus Před 15 lety +2

    brilliant, i love eddie!

  • @vilstef6988
    @vilstef6988 Před měsícem

    I have two or three CD discs of his best songs They date from the early 80s when the record companies were putting the best from the 20s and 30s on disc!

  • @pgronemeier
    @pgronemeier Před 5 lety +1

    What's REALLY amazing is.. WE are probably seeing AND hearing this better than they did in 1923!

  • @awuewete
    @awuewete Před 11 lety +1

    Boardwalk empire brought me here...and I'm thankful for it!! Amazing fellow.

  • @MattAttack54
    @MattAttack54 Před 15 lety +1

    This song is so Funny.

  • @okwateva
    @okwateva Před 8 lety +8

    boardwalk brought me here

  • @thedelta88
    @thedelta88 Před 13 lety +3

    guys got some moves

  • @aaronstennett
    @aaronstennett Před 13 lety +2

    @KidMillions The first song is done word for word by an actor playing Eddie in Episode 2 of Boardwalk Empire, a show about gangsters and bootleggers in 20s Atlantic City

  • @bertskoi
    @bertskoi Před 17 lety +1

    Truly Amazing, thanks!

  • @mintd8365
    @mintd8365 Před 8 lety +3

    this dude was super quirky and actually quite clever. lol, wow.

  • @carolcheny
    @carolcheny Před 11 lety +1

    hahahahahahaha OMG 90 years after and it's still funny.

  • @TheVelvetUnderdog
    @TheVelvetUnderdog Před 16 lety +1

    Ahhh it's all a bit clearer now. Thanks for the information sir, much appreciated.

  • @mtrott1
    @mtrott1 Před 16 lety

    I first became interested in Eddie Cantor after hearing a snippet of Cheer Up Smile Nertz in the movie Cinderella Man. I'm glad we can still get some video on him. He was truly a master. Thanks for posting.

  • @sesresu
    @sesresu Před 9 lety

    THIS IS HILARIOUS - I LOVE IT!

  • @aleccaprari8664
    @aleccaprari8664 Před 10 lety +6

    Four years before Al Jolson!

  • @jaywhofan
    @jaywhofan Před 13 lety +6

    "The dumber they come, the more that I like 'em, 'cause the dumb ones know how to make love". Wow. lol Just....wow. lol

  • @bag3lmonst3r
    @bag3lmonst3r Před 11 lety +2

    I would never have known about this if it hadn't been for Boardwalk Empire :)

  • @morecomfterblur1390
    @morecomfterblur1390 Před 10 měsíci

    Excellent!

  • @JamesIrwins78s
    @JamesIrwins78s Před 9 měsíci

    The lining up of the audio to the film is absolutely stunning, they didn’t make a successful sound recording until late 1925. So either this was later than the listed date, or they lined it up amazingly!

    • @KidMillions
      @KidMillions  Před 9 měsíci +1

      It's the Phonofilm sound-on-film process which was successful in early 1923. Hollywood did not adopt this technology, in stead Vitaphone by Warner Bros with better sound quality was introduced a few years later.

    • @JamesIrwins78s
      @JamesIrwins78s Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@KidMillions Thank you, I’m amazed I have never heard of this with how much I have researched audio recording history.

  • @Rollich
    @Rollich Před 16 lety

    Thanks for the explanation.

  • @IBetYouWill
    @IBetYouWill Před 14 lety

    HOT DANG-I JUST HAD AN EPIPHANY!
    We watched a video on hist. back in highschool, and it did the beginning of sound films....they showed a clip of this (I didn't know it was Eddie Cantor then) and I LAUGHED MY ASS OFF IN TEARS..this is great! Thanks.

  • @musicom67
    @musicom67 Před 10 lety +4

    1:59 - "In a Morris Chair"....Who knew (except furniture aficionados) it was a "Recliner"....

  • @LazlosPlane
    @LazlosPlane Před 16 lety

    This is an extraordinary document. Thanks so much for posting.
    By the way, those interested in Cantor's amazing life story a MUST read is Herb Goldman's "Banjo Eyes," a masterpiece of research.

  • @swallin19
    @swallin19 Před 15 lety +2

    Yes, it is George Olsen, and the problem with all early sound films was amplification, the valves required were new and very expensive. It took RCA to commercialise Amps for theatres, and that was in 1927, when Vitaphone hit the headlines. Sound was in use in the UK at the time, but only for newsreels, and strictly in big cinema houses.
    De Forrest had a UK division, bought out from him, that made hundreds of short sound films before Hollywood got into the act..

  • @baxter5431
    @baxter5431 Před 11 lety

    My mom was about 1yo when this film was made, she having been born in '22, my dad was 6yo in '23. Less & less people from that era alive today. My dad used to tell me stories about when he was kid in 1920's and all the fun they had. But my grandfather sweated blood for the $5 a day Ford's paid. Time is a curse, where things change, not necessarily for the better but for the worse.

  • @nancybeimananimation
    @nancybeimananimation Před 13 lety +2

    They had the recording technique for sound on film in 1923 (this is the Lee De Forest system) but the playback equipment and speakers were not good. We are hearing this better than it sounded back then.

  • @Dolores5000
    @Dolores5000 Před rokem

    Oh wow!!! Hahaha

  • @oggendoggen2
    @oggendoggen2 Před 15 lety

    2:20
    "When you're around I get so EXCITED!"
    hahahahahahahaha!!!!!!

  • @racingrubberbiker
    @racingrubberbiker Před 15 lety +1

    Eddie Cantor, in fact ,made several fims in the early 30's for Samuel Goldwyn (for whom he was under contract), not MGM. Goldwyn had his own company by then, and distributed through United Artists, which made him a partner, with Fairbanks, Pickford, and Chaplin

  • @johnhindsill1933
    @johnhindsill1933 Před 10 lety

    Feature films with sound did not occur until 1927. But sound with films had been experimented with for many years before. In 1923 the first sound shorts (sound on film) like the Eddie Cantor were being exhibited in a theatres.

  • @MrBRREEETTTT
    @MrBRREEETTTT Před 13 lety +7

    Lol Boardwalk Empire. This exact song is in first or second episode.

  • @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg
    @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg Před 11 lety +3

    This man is making a very good point.

  • @tuxguys
    @tuxguys Před 15 lety +1

    You titillate me... could you possibly post something so old for us? I am absolutely fascinated by this...

  • @tuxguys
    @tuxguys Před 8 lety +1

    I'm stunned.
    They had the technology in 1923, and they didn't really use it commercially until '28?
    Unbelievable.
    **KidMillions
    tuxguy, there were successful experiments with sound from the very beginning, in Germany as early as 1905. Edison in 1913. But if the projectionist would crank the film at slightly the wrong speed the voices sounded very weird of course (a girl would open her mouth and sound like a man) and audiences would boo these "talking pictures", while nickelodeon pictures with music became very popular...
    @@KidMillions
    You titillate me... could you possibly post something so old for us? I am absolutely fascinated by this... Addendum:
    If my father, born in 1910, saw this, or could have seen this, he would have been 13.
    I feel very, very heart-warmed by this.
    **Michael Neu
    they thought talkies were a fad that would pass, not the end of the silent film era. Looking back, they [the silent film makers] were idiots for not investing right away.
    @@Michael Neu
    I agree.
    I also think it's fascinating that Chaplin, for a number of years after 1928, continued to consider the "silent" film to be his medium, but he was willing to embrace "sound" insofar as it allowed him to compose and record the musical soundtracks to his films.

    • @filmflim
      @filmflim Před 6 lety +1

      Technically 1927 with The Jazz Singer. Sorry, just being nit-picky!

  • @stevegreedo5687
    @stevegreedo5687 Před 10 lety +4

    That first song should be Miley Cyrus' theme song whenever they show footage of her on TV.

  • @FredericKahler
    @FredericKahler Před 16 lety

    I'll do my best to post video coverage. That shouldn't be a problem. The show's slated for September. I'm gonna check out the song you recommended. Thank you!
    Keep young & beautiful!
    Frederic Kahler

  • @gasdorfymunchy2552
    @gasdorfymunchy2552 Před 11 lety

    a 1923 peace dollar bought me here

  • @butchganstine1728
    @butchganstine1728 Před 10 lety

    This was 1923. They practiced with sound and Film with shorts like this all the time.

  • @bichosolto101
    @bichosolto101 Před 8 lety

    Eddie has a big comedian.

  • @HeinrickXI
    @HeinrickXI Před 13 lety

    This is simply GREAT ! Most of our younger generations could learn something about music with these type of "reminders"1

  • @pitabrews
    @pitabrews Před 16 lety

    Correction: The Vitaphone process was developed by Western Electric, in what is now the WestBeth apartments in NYC's West Village.

  • @ctmale1956
    @ctmale1956 Před 4 lety +2

    good entertainment......without sex and foul language....

    • @KidMillions
      @KidMillions  Před 3 lety +2

      "The brainless baby keeps you down in the hole"

    • @ctmale1956
      @ctmale1956 Před 3 lety

      @@KidMillions at what time in the video does he say that? at least he is not using the "n" word -- or saying bitch or mother fucker right?

    • @ya.thegoat8795
      @ya.thegoat8795 Před 2 lety

      The smart girls speak Greek and another languages too, but the dumb girls only language is "poochi poochi is you"

  • @pika23
    @pika23 Před 13 lety

    He was the comedian singer at Babettes....That restaurant bar place owned by Nucky.

  • @SnarkyMike
    @SnarkyMike Před 12 lety +2

    Thanks Boardwalk Empire!

  • @MooPotPie
    @MooPotPie Před 10 lety

    318 East 48th Street in New York (where this was filmed) is a vacant lot in 2014.

  • @racingrubberbiker
    @racingrubberbiker Před 15 lety

    Whoopie was Cantor's first film for Goldwyn (1929) in partnership with Florenz Ziegfeld (who subsequently was ousted) in the early two-strip technicolor. After leaving Goldwyn he made some picutres for Fox, but these were less successful

  • @RayPointerChannel
    @RayPointerChannel Před 15 lety

    It was Western Electric, not RCA who had the lead in theatrical sound amplification.

  • @JayJasonTribute
    @JayJasonTribute Před 12 lety

    Jay Jason did a great impersonation of Eddie; check out Jay Jason, who was the comedy star in Sugar Daddy; vaudeville in the 1980s. See him on CZcams.

  • @KingDing4
    @KingDing4 Před 11 lety

    yes you are

  • @JeremyMayDDS
    @JeremyMayDDS Před rokem

    Norm brought me here

  • @glennmorris1807
    @glennmorris1807 Před 3 lety

    Boardwalk empire brought me here-
    Vaudeville stages were replaced by
    silver screen theatre's. Thanks to Scorsese for the enlightenment of an age where America's growing pains
    Remain in the psyche of modern society.

  • @69clubster
    @69clubster Před 12 lety

    look at his suit it is the same cut as these modern suits.

  • @aarongranda7825
    @aarongranda7825 Před 5 lety +1

    Maybe they recorded it on wax or shellac and synced it to the film, since they didn't have soundtracks in 1923.

    • @KidMillions
      @KidMillions  Před 4 lety +3

      No this was a sound-on-film process. There were a lot of experiments with sound before the "official" first talkie.

  • @angelomuto8516
    @angelomuto8516 Před rokem

    I honestly can’t see why chalky and Mr. Purnsley didn’t like him lol

  • @wakooooooooo
    @wakooooooooo Před 11 lety

    Huh. It's possible that's what's happening now with 3D pictures. Although we won't know for another ten years whether this is going to stick or not.

  • @pulp3215
    @pulp3215 Před 11 lety +1

    Haha loool@ "chalky is not impressed"

  • @skillsthatkills4832
    @skillsthatkills4832 Před 12 lety +1

    Boardwalk Empire!!

  • @betteroffsingle
    @betteroffsingle Před 16 lety

    you might be interested (tho it's very hard to hear it all) in a recording I believe in the Natl.Archives of Wm. F. Cody I think made late 1800's. I believe he's making a comment on the war with Spain. ? Not certain because it's been so long since I heard it.

  • @TheReelAnalyst
    @TheReelAnalyst Před 11 lety

    which episode did he sing that song in? i remember it

  • @NynesGG
    @NynesGG Před 14 lety

    Whats the name of the song at the beginning? I need to find the instrumental version.

  • @haroldsmith5413
    @haroldsmith5413 Před 4 lety +1

    george olsen orchestra!!

  • @AdamRamet
    @AdamRamet Před 15 lety

    the conductor must be George Olsen to whom Cantor is addressing...you can just catch the name.

  • @Diaredd59
    @Diaredd59 Před 13 lety

    @aconite2b Edison did a talkie in color in 1900. It took over 20 years to perfect the technology and to get Hollywood to accept the change-

  • @MrsNatari
    @MrsNatari Před 12 lety

    Mr. Awesome, would you play something for Eddie?

  • @betteroffsingle
    @betteroffsingle Před 16 lety

    "One thing that always stands out is the extraordinary diction and the carrying power of the voice"
    Indeed and before electronic age this was a must as you point out. Listening to the would be vocalists today, (and I try not to) I am struck by how often they throw away vowels and in fact whole words. It's considered "cool" but most of the time ya can't make out what they're singing anyway. Which might be a plus. Also, these old timers really understood the term, Show, in Show Business.

  • @TheNeoHuman
    @TheNeoHuman Před 11 lety +2

    any time an old white person complains about what rappers are doing with their hands when they rap, i'm just gonna show them this video

  • @Rollich
    @Rollich Před 17 lety

    Something is amiss here. Kid Millions was made in 1934. I'm doubtful these songs are from it. There not on the Kid Millions soundtrack.

  • @TheVelvetUnderdog
    @TheVelvetUnderdog Před 16 lety

    1923? I could have sworn this was 1926 when Warner Bros were experimenting with the Vitaphone system. I could be wrong though, the dates regarding sound invention are quite muddled considering the mutt like fashion that it eventually came to fruition. De Forest, Movietone, Edison and all that malarky.

  • @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg
    @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg Před 13 lety

    @jaywhofan Is the message really any different from pop music today? Sure, they don't come right out and say it, but things have not really changed all that much as far as what is expected of women.

  • @albertaguilar1059
    @albertaguilar1059 Před 7 lety +2

    A smart girl always wants to know if you mean to wed, the dumb ones never think of looking that far ahead. LOL 😂

  • @69clubster
    @69clubster Před 12 lety +1

    This is the begining of Hip Hop rapping about women and f*cking. Love this shit

  • @joemorgenstern9846
    @joemorgenstern9846 Před rokem +1

    This is the first white rapper.

  • @scf828
    @scf828 Před 11 lety

    im disturbed as well

  • @aconite2b
    @aconite2b Před 13 lety

    How can this be 1923 when talkies were invented in 1927?

  • @lennyhoffman6640
    @lennyhoffman6640 Před 10 lety

    "GRUNGE" was invented by TOOTS and the NEVER-TELLS in Cleveland in 1974.

  • @vladdrac88
    @vladdrac88 Před 13 lety

    Heeheee I love the music and the dancing. I hate the philosophy.

  • @karbin89
    @karbin89 Před 11 lety +1

    Stop projecting, he had a wife and 5 kids.

  • @smitehz
    @smitehz Před 11 lety

    and the flaming jew flames on

  • @zenpiper
    @zenpiper Před 10 lety +2

    There were no talkies in 1923. This had to be recorded later, at least after 1927. My guess is early '30's.

  • @pika23
    @pika23 Před 13 lety +1

    thumbs up if you're because of Boardwalk Empire!

  • @wisepopcorn
    @wisepopcorn Před 11 lety

    Chalky is not impressed...

  • @cheekyinnyc3085
    @cheekyinnyc3085 Před 9 lety +4

    Ok. So... I encounter this phenomenon often in the interwebs, primarily here on CZcams and it's becoming rather tedious. I suppose it is better than being totally uninformed about or disinterested in things one may otherwise never take up interest in, but does anyone else get annoyed with people watching videos of old or historic cultural things whose only link to it is some very recent television series, movie, etc? In this case, Boardwalk Empire. It's very telling that these people are ignorant outside of what they watch on TV. Call me a snob but I roll my eyes. Just like watching old movies with Sir Ian McKellan and the comments are littered with young people who are in love with him, who knew of him first and primarily through his performance in the Lord of the Rings and claim how much they love him, because of that role. Really? I mean, really?

    • @KidMillions
      @KidMillions  Před 9 lety +4

      It's a good way to introduce him to a new generation, some of those people may take an interest in seeing his movies because of Boardwalk Empire... Even searching him on youtube would make the man happy I think. It's ninety years later. But to be honest his comedy movies don't hold up so well, there are better movies to discover from that era. Marx Brothers particularly in the 30s, or Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd in the silent era.

    • @tommenklabe3853
      @tommenklabe3853 Před 9 lety +4

      would you rather no one but you know who ian mckellan is?

    • @erlendlundeholbek9965
      @erlendlundeholbek9965 Před 9 lety +4

      CheekyinNYC You're criticising people for... having heard about things and looking them up? I don't really understand your argument here. People who don't know Eddie Cantor's life story and place in vaudeville shouldn't be allowed to comment on this video, because that promotes ignorance?

    • @Spimp4
      @Spimp4 Před 8 lety

      +CheekyinNYC i understand what you talkin bout, but at least they are bumping into this kind of material because of tv. they wouldn't have otherwise

    • @melissaporksteak84hudson13
      @melissaporksteak84hudson13 Před 8 lety

      +CheekyinNYC I honestly dont think Lord of the rings or tv of any matter of today and age can even place there self in or near the ranking of things like this american history do not nock it in any way none of those are qualified !!!