Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Judy Canova

 
Artist: Judy Canova
  • Born: 1916, Jacksonville, FL
  • Died: 1983
  • Active: '50s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Ozark Nightingale," "Collectors Edition," "Judy Canova"

Biography

Judy Canova is best remembered today as a comic actress, but she cut her share of records from the early '30s and into the end of the '50s. As either actress or singer, however, she was a most unlikely success story.

She was born Juliette Canova in Starke, FL, in 1916. By the time she was 12, she and her sister, Diane, and brother, Leon, were performing together and she had adopted the stage name Judy. The trio, known as the Three Georgia Crackers, told jokes and sang songs on the radio in Jacksonville, which led to bookings for nightclub performances in New York. The trio was signed to the American Record Company in 1931, cutting hillbilly novelty songs, and later appeared in a Broadway revue entitled Calling All Stars.

Judy Canova always stood out; she was very tall, with a wide-eyed expression seemingly impressed upon her face. This made her ideal as a future foil in comedy sketches, but not attractive in the conventional sense. She tried studying classical singing only to discover that she lacked the fundamental vocal equipment needed for that repertory. She then decided to take advantage of the one gift she did have -- a loud voice.

Following Calling All Stars, she made her debut onscreen as a Warner Bros. contract player, specializing in comedic material. The most notable of these early appearances was in the film In Caliente, doing a comical rendition of the then-current hit "The Lady in Red" under the direction of Busby Berkeley. Then it was back to Broadway to the Ziegfeld Follies, and then more work with her brother and sister. The trio even made it onto television before the decade was out. They were likely the first country group to perform in the new medium, courtesy of NBC's experimental broadcasting in 1939.

Canova had played bit parts in movies like Thrill of a Lifetime (starring Betty Grable and Dorothy Lamour) and Artists and Models (with Jack Benny and Ida Lupino). These were walk-ons, however, and nothing better came along from the major studios. Then in 1940, she received an offer of a contract from Republic Pictures, the biggest of Hollywood's "B" movie studios. Republic specialized in producing high-quality serials and entertaining low-budget comedies, Westerns, and action films.

Her first film for Republic, Scatterbrain, gave Canova star billing, and this was her breakthrough. She proved a sympathetic figure on the screen, the kind of persona audiences loved to root for. Sis Hopkins followed and was the movie that cemented her image. Canova played an innocent good-natured country waif new to the big city, whose honesty and fortitude allowed her to triumph over the more sophisticated people around her. She made 13 movies for Republic in 15 years, never veering from the role of the corn-fed Cinderella. She often worked opposite the likes of such then-popular comedians as Jerry Colonna and Joe E. Brown, and her co-stars included up-and-coming players like Susan Hayward.

Canova also took advantage of her singing voice and her yodelling, both onscreen and in the recording studio. During the early '40s, she was signed to RCA/Victor and she later also cut sides for the Okeh, Mercury, and Varsity labels. She also got her own radio program, The Judy Canova Show on CBS, beginning in 1943, which proved even more successful than her movies. In 1945, the program moved to NBC and became one of the Top Ten most popular radio shows in the country, drawing 18 million listeners at the peak of her career. A mix of country comedy and music, Canova's program was the forerunner to television series such as The Beverly Hillbillies. There was a serious, patriotic side to her work during World War II, when one of her most popular numbers was her show-closer, a version of the Patsy Montana song "Good Night Soldier." She also sold a lot of War Bonds and entertained thousands of soldiers.

Canova's radio show ended in 1953 and she never made the jump to television. She preferred doing guest appearances in the new medium, in between engagements in Las Vegas and other personal appearances. Her last film performance was in the 1960 feature Huckleberry Finn and she was seldom seen after that, apart from rare guest spots on shows such as Pistols 'N Petticoats in the 1960s, in which she again exploited her hillbilly persona. Her daughter Diana, born in 1953, emerged as an actress in the late '70s with appearances on shows like Happy Days, before getting starring roles in Soap and I'm a Big Girl Now.

Judy Canova died in 1983 after a long battle with cancer. Her movies aren't shown very much anymore, even on television, but there's no mistaking the tall, big-voiced country girl, a unique persona in movies and music for three decades. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Actor: Judy Canova
Top
  • Born: Nov 20, 1916 in Starke, Florida
  • Died: Aug 05, 1983 in Hollywood, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Musical
  • Career Highlights: Joan of Ozark, Chatterbox, Sis Hopkins
  • First Major Screen Credit: Thrill of a Lifetime (1937)

Biography

The Florida-born daughter of a cottonbroker father and concert-singer mother, Judy Canova joined her siblings in a radio singing act in Jacksonville when she was 10-years old. Judy had hoped to attend the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, but the exigencies of the Depression depleted her family's income. Relocating in New York City with her mother, Judy studied tap-dancing, taught a contortion-dancing class, and hit the nightclub circuit. Discovered by Rudy Vallee, Judy became a solo "hillbilly" singer on Vallee's radio show, then worked on bandleader Paul Whiteman's series, establishing herself as a cornpone comedienne. After appearing with her brother and sister in a 1934 Hollywood stage revue, Judy made her movie debut in Warner Bros. In Caliente, singing a comic reprise of the film's hit song "The Lady in Red." More radio and vaudeville work followed, and then Judy co-starred with Phil Silvers in the 1939 Broadway musical Yokel Boy. This led to a 15-year association with Republic Pictures, where Judy became one of that studio's biggest moneymakers in such raucous vehicles as Sis Hopkins (1941), Sleepy Lagoon (1942), Oklahoma Annie (1946) and Carolina Cannonball (1955). Among her best films were a pair of co-starring stints with Joe E. Brown, Joan of Ozark (1942) and Chatterbox (1943). In 1943, she inaugurated her own radio comedy series on CBS, which garnered high ratings for the next twelve years. After both her radio and movie contracts expired in 1955, Judy was seen infrequently on television and in nightclubs; her last film appearances were in 1960's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and 1976's Cannonball. Married four times, Judy Canova was the mother of TV actress Diana Canova of Soap fame. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Judy Canova
Top
Judy Canova

Sam Berman's 1947 caricature of The Judy Canova Show
Born Juliette Canova
November 20, 1913
Starke, Florida
Died August 5, 1983
Hollywood, California
Spouse(s) Bob Burns (1936–1939)
James Ripley (1941)
Chester B. England (1943–1950)
Filberto Rivero (1950–1964)

Judy Canova (November 20, 1913August 5, 1983) was an American comedienne, actress, singer and radio personality. She was sometimes introduced as the Ozark Nightingale.

Contents

Early career

Born Juliette Canova in Starke, Florida, her show business career began with a family vaudeville routine. She joined her sister Annie and brother Zeke, and their performances as the Three Georgia Crackers took them from theaters in Florida to a club in Manhattan. Judy Canova sang, yodeled and played guitar. The standout in the family, she had once aspired to a serious musical career. Instead, she was typed as a wide-eyed likable country bumpkin, often barefooted, and wearing her hair in braids, sometimes topped with a straw hat, and her hayseed character developed as radio's female equivalent of comedian Bob Burns's smalltown sage. When bandleader Rudy Vallée offered her a guest spot on his radio show in 1931, The Fleischmann Hour, it opened the door to a career that spanned more than five decades.

Radio and films

The popularity of the Canova family led to numerous performances on radio in the 1930s, and they made their Broadway debut in the revue Calling All Stars. An offer from Warner Bros. led to several bit parts before she signed with Republic Pictures. During her career, she recorded for the RCA Victor label and appeared in more than two dozen Hollywood films, including Scatterbrain (1940), Joan of Ozark (1942) and Lay That Rifle Down (1955).

The Judy Canova Show began on CBS in 1943 and moved to NBC in 1945.

In 1943, she began her own radio program, The Judy Canova Show, that ran for 12 years—first on CBS and then on NBC. Playing herself as a love-starved Ozark bumpkin dividing her time between home and Southern California, Canova was accompanied by a cast that included voicemaster Mel Blanc as Pedro (using the accented voice he later gave the cartoons' Speedy Gonzales) and Sylvester (using the voice that later became associated with the Looney Tunes character), Ruth Perrott as Aunt Aggie, Ruby Dandridge as Geranium, Joseph Kearns as Benchley Botsford and Sharon Douglas as Brenda—with Gale Gordon, Sheldon Leonard and Hans Conried also making periodic appearances. The Sportsmen Quartet joined the show in 1943 and backed Judy on most of her songs, and the Charles Dant Orchestra provided the rest, usually supporting Canova's country warble. Western singer and actor Eddie Dean also appeared with Canova on numerous occasions during the 1930s.

During World War II, she closed her show with the song "Goodnight, Soldier" ("Wherever you may be... my heart's lonely... without you") and used her free time to sell U.S. War Bonds. After the war, she introduced a new closing theme that she once said she remembered her own mother singing to her when she was a small child:

Go to sleep-y, little baby,
Go to sleep-y, little baby,
When you wake
You'll patty-patty cake,
And ride a shiny little pony.

Canova recorded the song in 1946.

While a hit with her own show, Canova made frequent appearances on other popular radio programs of the day, including and especially those hosted by Abbott and Costello and Fred Allen.

Television

Judy Canova and George Raft (1979)

By the time her radio program ended in 1955, Canova easily made a smooth transition to television with appearances on The Colgate Comedy Hour, The Steve Allen Show, Matinee Theatre, Alfred Hitchcock Presents and other shows. In 1967, she portrayed Mammy Yokum in an unsold TV pilot adapted from Al Capp's Li'l Abner. She also worked on Broadway and in Vegas nightclubs through the early 1970s, touring with No, No Nanette in 1971.

Her daughter, Diana Canova, is an actress best known for her role on the ABC television sitcom Soap.

In 1983, Judy Canova died from cancer at age 69 and was buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to the film industry (6821 Hollywood Boulevard) and a second star for her radio career (6777 Hollywood Boulevard).

Filmography

  • The Song of Fame (1934) (The Canova Family)
  • In Caliente (1935) — (Specialty number, "The Lady in Red")
  • Broadway Gondolier (1935) — (uncredited)
  • Going Highbrow (1935)
  • Artists & Models (1937)
  • Thrill of a Lifetime (1937)
  • Scatterbrain (1940)
  • Sis Hopkins (1941)
  • Puddin' Head (1941)
  • Sleepytime Gal (1942)
  • True to the Army (1942)
  • Joan of Ozark (1942)
  • Chatterbox (1943)
  • Sleepy Lagoon (1943)
  • Louisiana Hayride (1944)
  • Hit the Hay (1945)
  • Singin' in the Corn (1946)
  • Honeychile (1951)
  • Oklahoma Annie (1952)
  • The WAC from Walla Walla (1952)
  • Untamed Heiress (1954)
  • Carolina Canonball (1955)
  • Lay That Rifle Down (1955)
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960)
  • Cannonball (1976)

Listen to

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Carol Adams (Actor, Musical/Comedy)
Scatterbrain (1940 Musical Film)
Army Capers (1952 Musical Film)

Is Diana Canova still working as an actress? Read answer...
What move did Carey Grant say Judy Judy Judy? Read answer...
Who is Judy Kramer? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Who was the judis?
Will the OZ canova rim fit a scion TC?
How many sculptures were created by antonio canova?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Judy Canova" Read more

 

Mentioned in