WE WELCOME THOSE WITH A GENUINE INTEREST IN BING CROSBY. YOU WILL BE ASKED THREE QUESTIONS WHEN YOU REGISTER. DEPENDING ON YOUR ANSWERS, WE WILL EITHER APPROVE OR NOT APPROVE YOUR MEMBERSHIP. This requirement arises from misuse of the forum by a few.
KEEP AN EYE ON:-
Jon Oye keeps adding images to his site Contemplations on Classic Movies and Music
David Lobosco has continual additions to his site The Bing Crosby News Archive
Tony Mead adds photos and other interesting material Bing's Photos
NOTE: If you are having trouble logging in, please contact David Lobosco at davidlobosco@yahoo.com.
Offline
Bing's Chesterfield show of 1/9/52 was a a broadcast using snippets from other shows. A fellow Bing fan says it is because of Dixie Lee's illness but I am not too sure.
Does anyone know why they did this and what was the reasoning Bing did not appear on the show that week?
Thanks Crosby sleuths!
Last edited by Lobosco (13/7/2020 12:16 pm)
Offline
Lobosco,
Would Malcolm’s book help?
I expect you mean 1st. September. (As we go day, month, year)
Offline
I'm sure that David is referring to the broadcast of 9 January 1952 which was indeed artificially created out of taped pieces from earlier shows. The timeline from Malcolm's "Day By Day" suggests that Dixie's cancer was not diagnosed until later in the year. Bing himself had kidney stone problems and had been in hospital for a few days early in January nut there is no evidence that this had a great impact on his usual acitivities as shows were still being taped around this time. Personally I have long held the theory that it was an exercise to show to themselves that it could be done.
Go to here
and here
and scroll down to 9 January 1952 on each case.
Also Day By Day here
Offline
Richard Baker wrote:
I'm sure that David is referring to the broadcast of 9 January 1952 which was indeed artificially created out of taped pieces from earlier shows. The timeline from Malcolm's "Day By Day" suggests that Dixie's cancer was not diagnosed until later in the year. Bing himself had kidney stone problems and had been in hospital for a few days early in January nut there is no evidence that this had a great impact on his usual acitivities as shows were still being taped around this time. Personally I have long held the theory that it was an exercise to show to themselves that it could be done.
Go to here
and here
and scroll down to 9 January 1952 on each case.
Also Day By Day here
Thanks! The Bing fan that thought Dixe was ill has a ticket to the show but he claimed it was cancelled so maybe it was because of Bing's kidney stones. Poor Bing. He had the kidney stone issues almost all his life!
Online!
I know where this question stems from as I am in that very same group.
Offline
The Crosby radio shows by this time were prerecorded and assembled from a number of recordings. I do not have the exact reason for the 9 Jan 1952 being so disjointed, but there are two main reasons. First, Jack Mullin had left the job of editing the show in the summer of 1951 to work on the video recorder. The replacements were still trying to learn his craft. Secondly, Bing had a lot on his plate during this period between his family and his engagements. January also was a bad month to bring people together to do a show after the busy Christmas season. When Bing and the announcer were not together, we recorded them separately and put the two conversations together. This task was difficult, and sometimes Bing was not available.
Had Jack Mullin been doing the editing one would probably not noticed the problems. The shows before this one were edited versions of an earlier recorded audience show. These were not too difficult to do, but to assemble a show from many old ones is a real art. The new editors did not make the grade. As for Dixie being the reason, it is hard to say, but Bing was concerned about her.
For more on the radio show see:
Bob Phillips
Offline
Robert Phillips wrote:
The Crosby radio shows by this time were prerecorded and assembled from a number of recordings. I do not have the exact reason for the 9 Jan 1952 being so disjointed, but there are two main reasons. First, Jack Mullin had left the job of editing the show in the summer of 1951 to work on the video recorder. The replacements were still trying to learn his craft. Secondly, Bing had a lot on his plate during this period between his family and his engagements. January also was a bad month to bring people together to do a show after the busy Christmas season. When Bing and the announcer were not together, we recorded them separately and put the two conversations together. This task was difficult, and sometimes Bing was not available.
Had Jack Mullin been doing the editing one would probably not noticed the problems. The shows before this one were edited versions of an earlier recorded audience show. These were not too difficult to do, but to assemble a show from many old ones is a real art. The new editors did not make the grade. As for Dixie being the reason, it is hard to say, but Bing was concerned about her.
For more on the radio show see:
Bob Phillips
Thank you Bob, for that very informative post and link.
It is a pleasure to welcome someone with such first hand memories and links to important developments of so long ago.
.
Richard