The Amos 'n Andy Show (TV Series 1951–1953) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. ... Andy 78 episodes, 1951-1955 Tim Moore ... Kingfish 78 episodes, 1951-1955 Johnny Lee ... Calhoun 70 episodes, 1951-1955 ...
When Lubin joined the cast of A&A in 1944, he brought this routine with him, and performed it several times with different partners, including James Baskett (Gabby), Freeman Gosden (F. M. Gwindell), and Johnny Lee (Calhoun). The Baskett version was probably the most successful, and was first heard in the episode of 3/16/45 ("The Lecture Bureau.)
The show ran from 1951-’53, under the name The Amos ‘n’ Andy Show, 78 episodes in all, sponsored by the Blatz Brewing Company, and aired on CBS. Cast Amos: Alvin Childress (1907-1986) Childress was born in Meridian, MS, and had little in the way of film or TV credits before taking over as Amos when the show moved to the screen.
Jan 17, 2007 · Baskett was not confined to film and theater; he also played Gabby Gibson, a slick-talking lawyer on the popular radio program Amos ‘n’ Andy. Baskett is best remembered for his portrayal of Uncle Remus in Disney’s 1946 picture Song of the South. Baskett had actually only tested earlier for a minor role, but Disney remembered him and he was asked play as Uncle …
From 1944 until 1948, he was part of the cast of the Amos 'n' Andy Show live radio program as lawyer Gabby Gibson. In 1945, he auditioned for a bit part voicing one of the animals in the new Disney feature film Song of the South (1946), based on …
The show centered around the scheming Moore character, The Kingfish. In addition to Moore, the cast included Alvin Childress playing Amos Jones, Spencer Williams portraying Andrew Hogg ″Andy″ Brown and Johnny Lee playing lawyer Algonquin J. Calhoun.Jan 13, 1988
Gosden played Amos, an earnest and hardworking young black man, and Correll played Andy, his more worldly, somewhat shiftless friend. The two white actors adopted stereotypical dialect, intonations, and character traits that had been established in the blackface minstrel tradition in the 1800s.
While the show had a brief life on 1950s television with black actors, the 1928 to 1960 radio show was created, written and voiced by two white actors, Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, who played Amos Jones (Gosden) and Andrew Hogg Brown (Correll), as well as incidental characters.
Blatz had terminated its funding by then, and despite a succession of product sponsors, the now-host network CBS abruptly cancelled the television series in 1953. In the early 1960s, the Chicago CBS affiliate, ran the episodes until they were pulled completely by a quietly negotiated 1968 agreement.Jan 16, 2020
What lessons did Amos 'n' Andy teach White America? That it was acceptable to laugh at African Americans' attempts to get by in America. What roles did Blacks usually play in films produced by Whites?
The Amos 'n' Andy Show was the brainchild of Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, two white performers with Southern roots.
*Alvin Childress was born on this date in 1907. He was a Black Actor. From Meridian, Mississippi, He was educated at Rust College, from which he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology.
Stories mostly centered on The Kingfish's schemes to get rich, often by duping his brothers in the Mystic Knights of the Sea Lodge.
So, what did Kingfish do for a living? Well, he was a true entrepreneur. Kingfish knew how to make money! I recall one episode where Sapphire gives him a hard time because he has invested $5,000 in a property that was not generating any revenues.Mar 1, 2015
Set in Harlem, Amos 'n' Andy centered around the activities of George Stevens, a conniving character who was always looking for a way to make a fast buck. As head of the Mystic Knights of the Sea Lodge, where he held the position of "Kingfish," he got most of the lodge brothers involved in his schemes.
While the show had a brief life on 1950s television with black actors, the 1928 to 1960 radio show was created, written and voiced by two white actors, Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, who played Amos Jones (Gosden) ...
In 1930, RKO Radio Pictures brought Gosden and Correll to Hollywood to do an Amos 'n' Andy feature film, Check and Double Check (a catchphrase from the radio show). The cast included a mix of white and black performers (the latter including Duke Ellington and his orchestra) with Gosden and Correll playing Amos 'n' Andy in blackface.
Adapted to television, The Amos 'n Andy Show was produced from June 1951 to April 1953 with 52 filmed episodes, sponsored by the Blatz Brewing Company.
Amos Jones and Andy Brown worked on a farm near Atlanta, Georgia, and during the first week's episodes, 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 rooming house on State Street and experienced some rough times before launching their own business, the Fresh Air Taxi Company. (The first car they acquired had no windshield; the pair turned it into a selling point.) By 1930, the noted toy maker Louis Marx and Company was offering a tin wind-up version of the auto, with Amos and Andy inside. The toy company produced a special autographed version of the toy as gifts for American leaders, including Herbert Hoover. There was also a book, All About Amos 'n' Andy and Their Creators, in 1929 by Correll and Gosden (reprinted in 2007 and 2008), and a comic strip in the Chicago Daily News.
The final Amos 'n' Andy radio show was broadcast November 25, 1960. Although by the 1950s the popularity of the show was well below its peak of the 1930s, Gosden and Correll had managed to outlast most of the radio shows that came in their wake.
Freeman Gosden ('Amos') and Charles Correll ('Andy') in 1929. Gosden and Correll were white actors familiar with minstrel traditions. They met in Durham, North Carolina, in 1920. Both men had some scattered experience in radio, but it was not until 1925 that the two appeared on Chicago's WQJ.
In 1988, the Amos 'n' Andy program was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame. A pair of parallel, one-block streets in west Dallas, Texas are named Amos Street and Andy Street in honor of the characters.
Cast. Amos: Alvin Childress (1907-1986) Childress was born in Meridian, MS, and had little in the way of film or TV credits before taking over as Amos when the show moved to the screen. He did have experience with the American Negro Theater in New York City.
He has credits as a writer, producer, and director. Williams reportedly clashed with Gosden over the characterization and speaking mannerisms of Andy. Kingfish: Tim Moore (1887-1958) Long before his work and Amos ‘n’ Andy, he was a veteran of vaudeville, having travelled with the minstrel show Cora Miskel and Her Gold Dust Twins.
One thing was for sure: Gosden and Correll wouldn’t don the blackface for the television version of their show. By the end of the 1940’s it was clear that such a thing was just behind the times. Instead they would need actors. Gosden and Correll began scouting for talent, viewing various performances of Black theatre troupes ...
In 1945, he auditioned for a bit part voicing one of the animals in the new Disney feature film Song of the South (1946), based on the Uncle Remus stories by Joel Chandler Harris. Walt Disney was impressed with Baskett's talent and hired him on the spot for the lead role of Uncle Remus.
Baskett was prohibited from attending the film's premiere in Atlanta, Georgia, because Atlanta was racially segregated by law.
On March 20, 1948, Baskett received an Academy Honorary Award for his performance as Uncle Remus. He was the first African-American male actor to win an Academy Award. Additionally, Baskett was the last adult actor to receive an Honorary Oscar for a single performance.
On July 9, 1948, during the show's summer hiatus, James Baskett died at his home of heart failure resulting from diabetes at age 44. He was survived by his wife Margaret and his mother Elizabeth. He is buried at Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis.
Amos 'n' Andy is an American radio sitcom about black characters, initially set in Chicago and later in the Harlem section of New York City. While the show had a brief life on 1950s television with black actors, the 1928 to 1960 radio show was created, written and voiced by two white actors, Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, who played Amos Jones (Gosden) and Andrew Hogg Brown (Correll), a…
In 1930, RKO Radio Pictures brought Gosden and Correll to Hollywood to appear in an Amos 'n' Andy feature film, Check and Double Check (a catchphrase from the radio show). The cast included a mix of white and black performers (the latter including Duke Ellington and his orchestra) with Gosden and Correll playing Amos 'n' Andy in blackface. The film pleased neither critics nor Gosden and Correll, but briefly became RKO's biggest box-office hit before King Kong (1933).
In the summer of 1968 the premiere episode of a CBS News documentary series Of Black America, narrated by Bill Cosby, showed brief film clips of Amos 'n' Andy in a segment on racial stereotypes in vintage motion pictures and television programing.
In 1983, a one-hour documentary film titled Amos 'n' Andy: Anatomy of a Controversy aired in television syndication (and in later years, on PBSand on the Internet). It told a brief history of the …
In 2004, the now-defunct Trio network brought Amos 'n' Andy back to television for one night in an effort to reintroduce the series to 21st century audiences. Its festival featured the Anatomy of a Controversy documentary, followed by the 1930 Check and Double Check film.
In 2012, Rejoice TV, an independent television and Internet network in Houston, started airing the show weeknights on a regular, nationwide basis for the first time since CBS pulled the series fro…
Although the characters of Amos and Andy themselves are in the public domain, as well as the show's trademarks, title, format, basic premise and all materials created prior to 1948 (Silverman vs CBS, 870 F.2d 40), the television series itself is protected by copyright. CBS bought out Gosden & Correll's ownership of the program and characters in 1948 and the courts decided in the Silverman ruling that all post-1948 Amos 'n' Andy material was protected. All Amos 'n' Andy mate…