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<reviews itemIdentifier="eddie_cantor_1923">
  <review>
    <reviewbody>More historically important sound films using the DeForest sound on disk system.  This time, Eddie Cantor, who would go onto be a comedy star in Hollywood in the 1930s, does basically a vaudeville routine.  While critically important to the development of popular entertainment in the early decades of the 20th century, so few examples of vaudeville acts, primarily visual acts, such as acrobats, still exist.

Here, Cantor performs what is clearly the origins of the standup comic; humorous stories interspersed with song and dance.   He is set up on a black stage, which it seems like an orchestra and a small audience (the crew, perhaps?) set up off camera.  Intriguingly, the comedy patter still holds up for the most part, though clearly from a different era.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Vaudeville</reviewtitle>
    <stars>5</stars>
    <reviewer>Wilford B. Wolf</reviewer>
    <createdate>2005-07-22 17:27:40</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2005-07-22 17:27:40</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>Cantor  was  to go  on  to  make a big hit on B-way from  25-30-untill  the  depression  and  everyone  went west. 
     You  can  see the  essentials  of his  routine  in  ur-form  in  this  clip.
    The  material  was  not  strong,  but he was  family  friendly, unlike  his immediate  colleagues,  the  Marx bros. One noticeble  thing  is  he  was  the  Muhammed  Ali of  vaudeville- always   float  like  a  bee  &amp; dancing. Another  thing  is  he  became almost iconic like Chaplin and  Keaton  for  his  costume which  consisted  of  a  bow  tie, slicked  hair and  way too  tight  jacket.  This  costume  was   resurrected  60  yrs  later when  Pee  Wee  Herman used  it exactly, 
         Herman  was  a  great  dissapointment  because  he  was  on  the  verge  of  a  new  comedy  form  in  a   quasi french idiom  but  for  whatever  reason  he punked  out.
          Cantor  I  always  loved  because  he  had a  self  depreciating  sense  of  humor  that  never  went  so far  as  to  be  maudlin</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Moments of  Greatness</reviewtitle>
    <stars>4</stars>
    <reviewer>Tamlin</reviewer>
    <createdate>2005-08-21 16:04:35</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2005-08-21 16:04:35</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>Eddie Cantors comedy is really tame for today, but he was not family friendly in his day. Many of his jokes were adult oriented and his movies were the same.(at least the ones I've seen)Personally I don't find him as funny as some of his contemporaries mentioned in another review.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>A Fair Sound Test</reviewtitle>
    <stars>2</stars>
    <reviewer>Therby</reviewer>
    <createdate>2006-01-02 09:14:52</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2006-01-02 09:14:52</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>Having met Mr. Cantor personally back around 1940 when he was doing his very popular national weekly radio show that ended with his rendition of "I Loved to Spend This Hour With You," I can testify he was a wonderful guy  with a lot of dignity and class who was all heart and a true icon of show biz. I was about 18 at the time. I was fresh out of high school when I asked him if he would give me a quote I could use for a show we were putting on at Pasadena City College in which he was the major star. He said, "Just say anything and you can quote me." The show was a patriotic rally about saving Democracy, a very crucial issue in those times before Pearl Harbor. He appeared free of charge and brought Dinah Shore and his personal music conductor with him, and did his shtick that was a hoot. He was not as brassy as our comics of today. Four letter words weren't being used at the time in front of audiences in Pasadena. This was long before the "anything goes" kind of comics we have today, but he was a big star for Samuel Goldwyn movies and he was a really entertaining and original singer with his banjo eyes and bouncing gestures as he performed "If You Knew Susie Like I Know Susie." You can read his bio elsewhere, you don't need me for that. What was important, he was a red, white &amp; blue American and a great worker for FDR's March of Dimes. Nuff said about that. As for this little video made by Lee DeForest, remember this was ca. 1923, four years before Al Jolson made film history with The Jazz Singer, the first real talking picture. This sample is amazingly clear, and not stilted, and gave the folks of that day a taste of what was to come, far ahead of its time. Motion Pictures with sound were still just a glint in the Warner Bros. eyes, and the movie screens were dominated by the likes of silent stars like Rudy Valentino, Gloria Swanson and Douglas Fairbanks and dozens of other stars no longer remembered, but beloved and worshipped in their own time. We couldn't hear their voices but, As Swanson said in Sunset Boulevard, "We had faces back then" and their silent personas were the rage of the Roaring 20s. If all this seems too far off the track, this little bit of Eddie Cantor video, proves what his colleague Al Jolson said, "You ain't heard nothing yet!"</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>He was all heart and a true icon of show biz</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>Mr. Nostalgia</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2008-07-04 23:19:03</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2008-07-04 23:19:03</createdate>
    <stars>5</stars>
  </review>
  <info>
    <num_reviews>4</num_reviews>
    <avg_rating>4.00</avg_rating>
  </info>
</reviews>
