Wednesday, September 10, 2014
EARLE DOUD
Comedy writer/producer Earle Doud penned jokes for such television comics as Johnny Carson, Jack Paar, and Jonathan Winters and for the popular television series Father Knows Best in the 1950s and early '60s. His debut album, Sounds Funny, took a humorous look at sound effects.
Doud's most successful outing was an album, The First Family, recorded on October 27, 1962, that poked fun at President John F. Kennedy's White House. Written and produced with Bob Booker and featuring Vaughn Meader as the President and Naomi Brossart as the First Lady, it was a phenomenal success, selling more than seven and a half million copies. Although a second volume, released in the spring of 1963, received an equally warm reception, it was pulled from the marketplace following Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963.
The American presidency continued to be a source for Doud's humor, as he subsequently wrote and produced similar albums Lyndon Johnson's Lonely Hearts Club Band with Alen Robin in 1967 and The First Family Rides Again, which spoofed the Ronald Reagan era, in 1981. He also produced and wrote an album, Spiro T. Agnew Is a Riot, parodying Nixon's vice president, in 1971.
Here are three of his albums....
THE FIRST FAMILY
GET IT HERE
WELCOME TO THE LBJ RANCH!
GET IT HERE
THE FIRST FAMILY RIDES AGAIN
GET IT HERE
enjoy!
Best put-down ever delivered by a drunk to an entertainer.
ReplyDeleteAfter Vaughn Meader's career faded with the death of the President, he still had to make a living. He did stints in dinner theater and standup in non-descript clubs. One night, after doing his act, he was in the bar having a drink (and probably day dreaming of better days) when someone at the bar looked at him, did a doubletake and blearily asked him, "Aren't you dead?"