Amos 'n' Andy is a
situation comedy based on stock sketch comedy characters but set
in the African-American community, and popular in the United
States from the 1920s through the 1950s. The show began as one
of the first radio comedy serials, written and voiced by Freeman
Gosden and Charles Correll and originating from station WMAQ in
Chicago, Illinois. After the series was first broadcast in 1928,
it grew in popularity and became a huge influence on the radio
serials that followed. The program ran on radio as a nightly
serial from 1928 until 1943, as a weekly situation comedy from
1943 until 1955, and as a nightly disc-jockey program from 1954
until 1960. A television adaptation ran on CBS-TV from 1951
until 1953, and continued in syndicated reruns from 1954 until
1966.
Amos 'n' Andy creators Gosden and Correll were white actors
familiar with minstrel traditions. They met in Durham, North
Carolina, in 1920, and by the fall of 1925, they were performing
nightly song-and-patter routines on the Chicago Tribune's
station WGN. Since the Tribune syndicated Sidney Smith's popular
comic strip The Gumps, which had successfully introduced the
concept of daily continuity, WGN executive Ben McCanna thought
the notion of a serialized drama could also work on radio. He
suggested to Gosden and Correll that they adapt The Gumps to
radio. They instead proposed a series about "a couple of colored
characters" and borrowed certain elements of The Gumps. Their
new series, Sam 'n' Henry, began January 12, 1926, fascinating
radio listeners throughout the Midwest. That series became
popular enough that in late 1927 Gosden and Correll requested
that it be distributed to other stations on phonograph records
in a "chainless chain" concept that would have been the first
use of radio syndication as we know it today. When WGN rejected
the idea, Gosden and Correll quit the show and the station that
December. Contractually, their characters belonged to WGN, so
when Gosden and Correll left WGN, they performed in personal
appearances but could not use the character names from the radio
show.[1]
When WMAQ, the Chicago Daily News station, hired the team and
their WGN announcer, Bill Hay, to create a series similar to Sam
'n' Henry, they offered higher salaries than WGN and the rights
to pursue the "chainless chain" syndication concept. The
creators later told an anecdote that they named the new
characters Amos and Andy after hearing two elderly
African-Americans greet each other by those names in a Chicago
elevator. Amos 'n' Andy began March 19, 1928, on WMAQ, and prior
to airing each program they recorded their show on 78 rpm disks
at Marsh Laboratories, operated by electrical recording pioneer
Orlando R. Marsh.
For the program's entire run as a nightly serial, Gosden and
Correll portrayed all the male roles, performing over 170
distinct voice characterizations in the show's first decade.
With the episodic drama and suspense heightened by cliffhanger
endings, Amos 'n' Andy reached an ever-expanding radio audience.
It was the first radio program to be distributed by syndication
in the United States, and by the end of the syndicated run in
August 1929, at least 70 stations besides WMAQ carried the
program by means of recordings.
Amos Jones and Andy Brown worked on a farm near Atlanta,
Georgia, and during the episodes of the first week, they made
plans to find a better life in Chicago, despite warnings from a
friend. With four ham-and-cheese sandwiches and $24, they bought
train tickets and headed for Chicago, where they lived in a
State Street rooming house and experienced some rough times
before launching their own business, the Fresh Air Taxi Company.
(The first car they acquired had no roof; the pair turned it
into a selling point.)
Amos was naïve but honest, hard-working and (after his 1935
marriage to Ruby Taylor) a dedicated family man. Andy was more
blustering, with overinflated self-confidence. Andy, being a
dreamer, tended to let Amos do most of the work. Their Mystic
Knights of the Sea lodge leader, George "the Kingfish" Stevens,
was always trying to lure the two into get-rich-quick schemes,
especially the gullible Andy. Other characters included John
Augustus "Brother" Crawford, an industrious but long-suffering
family man; Henry Van Porter, a social-climbing real estate and
insurance salesman; Frederick Montgomery Gwindell, a
hard-charging newspaperman; William Lewis Taylor, the
well-spoken, college-educated father of Amos's fiancee; and
"Lightning", a slow-moving Stepin Fetchit-type character. The
Kingfish's catch phrase "Holy mackerel!" soon entered the
American lexicon.
Of the three central characters, Correll voiced Andy Brown while
Gosden voiced both Amos and the Kingfish. The majority of the
scenes were dialogues between either Andy and Amos or Andy and
Kingfish. Amos and Kingfish, both voiced by Gosden, only rarely
appeared together. Since Correll and Gosden voiced virtually all
of the parts, the female characters, such as Ruby Taylor,
Kingfish's wife Sapphire, and Andy's various girlfriends, did
not appear as voiced characters in the original serial, but
entered the plots only as discussed by the male characters. When
the series switched to a weekly situation comedy in 1943,
actresses began voicing the female characters and other actors
were recruited for some of the male supporting parts. However,
Correll and Gosden continued to voice the three central
characters on radio until the series ended in 1960.[2]
With the listening audience increasing in the spring and summer
of 1928, the show's success prompted the Pepsodent Company to
bring it to the NBC Blue Network on August 19, 1929. At this
time the Blue Network was not heard on stations in the West.
Western listeners complained to NBC that they wanted to hear the
show. Under special arrangements Amos 'n' Andy debuted
coast-to-coast November 28, 1929, on NBC's Pacific Orange
Network and continued on the Blue. At the same time, the
serial's central characters -- Amos, Andy and George "The
Kingfish" Stevens -- relocated from Chicago to New York City's
Harlem.
The story arc of Andy's romance (and subsequent problems) with
the Harlem beautician Madame Queen entranced some 40 million
listeners during 1930 and 1931, becoming a national phenomenon.
Many of the program's plotlines in this period leaned far more
to straight drama than comedy, including the near-death of
Amos's fiancee Ruby from pneumonia in the spring of 1931, and
Amos's brutal interrogation by police following the murder of
the cheap hoodlum Jack Dixon that December. Following official
protests by the National Association of Chiefs of Police,
Correll and Gosden were forced to abandon that storyline –
turning the entire sequence into a bad dream, from which Amos
gratefully awoke on Christmas Eve.
The innovations introduced by Gosden and Correll made their
creation a turning point for radio drama, as noted by broadcast
historian Elizabeth McLeod:[1]
As a result of its extraordinary popularity, Amos 'n' Andy
profoundly influenced the development of dramatic radio. Working
alone in a small studio, Correll and Gosden created an intimate,
understated acting style that differed sharply from the broad
manner of stage actors – a technique requiring careful
modulation of the voice, especially in the portrayal of multiple
characters. The performers pioneered the technique of varying
both the distance and the angle of their approach to the
microphone to create the illusion of a group of characters.
Listeners could easily imagine that that they were actually in
the taxicab office, listening in on the conversation of close
friends. The result was a uniquely absorbing experience for
listeners who in radio's short history had never heard anything
quite like Amos 'n' Andy.
While minstrel-style wordplay humor was common in the formative
years of the program, it was used less often as the series
developed, giving way to a more sophisticated approach to
characterization. Correll and Gosden were fascinated by human
nature, and their approach to both comedy and drama drew from
their observations of the traits and motivations that drive the
actions of all people: While often overlapping popular
stereotypes of African-Americans, there was at the same time a
universality to their characters which transcended race....
Beneath the dialect and racial imagery, the series celebrated
the virtues of friendship, persistence, hard work, and common
sense, and as the years passed and the characterizations were
refined, Amos 'n' Andy achieved an emotional depth rivaled by
few other radio programs of the 1930s.
Above all, Correll and Gosden were gifted dramatists. Their
plots flowed gradually from one into the next, with minor
subplots building in importance until they took over the
narrative, before receding to give way to the next major
sequence, and seeds for future storylines were often planted
months in advance. It was this complex method of story
construction that kept the program fresh, and enabled Correll
and Gosden to keep their audience in a constant state of
suspense. The technique they developed for radio from that of
the narrative comic strip endures to the present day as the
standard method of storytelling in serial drama.
Only a few dozen episodes of the original serial have survived
in recorded form. However, a number of scripts from the original
episodes have been discovered, and were utilized by Elizabeth
McLeod in preparing her 2005 book cited above.
Amos 'n' Andy was officially transferred by NBC from the Blue
Network to the Red Network in 1935, although the vast majority
of stations carrying the show remained the same. Several months
later, Gosden and Correll moved production of the show from
NBC's Merchandise Mart studios in Chicago to Hollywood. After a
long and successful run with Pepsodent, the program changed
sponsors in 1938 to Campbell's Soup; because of Campbell's
closer relationship with CBS, the series switched to that
network on April 3, 1939.
In 1943, after 4,091 episodes, the radio program went from a
15-minute CBS weekday dramatic serial to an NBC half-hour weekly
comedy. While the five-a-week show often had a quiet, easygoing
feeling, the new version was a full-fledged sitcom in the
Hollywood sense, with a regular studio audience (for the first
time in the show's history) and an orchestra. More outside
actors, including many African-American comedy professionals,
were brought in to fill out the cast. Many of the half-hour
programs were written by Joe Connelly and Bob Mosher, later the
writing team behind Leave It to Beaver and The Munsters. In the
new version, Amos became a peripheral character to the more
dominant Andy and Kingfish duo, although Amos was still featured
in the traditional Christmas show, where he explains the Lord's
Prayer to his daughter, Arbadella. The later radio program and
the TV version were advanced for the time, depicting Blacks in a
variety of roles including as successful business owners and
managers, professionals and public officials, in addition to the
comic characters at show's core. It anticipated many later
comedies featuring working class characters (both Black and
White) including All in the Family, The Honeymooners and Sanford
and Son.
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