home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Ü
- Bob Hope
-
-
- (September 20, 1943)
-
- For fighting men, this grimmest of wars is in one small way
- also the gayest. Never before have the folks who entertain the
- boys been so numerous or so notable; never have they worked so
- hard, traveled so far, risked so much. From the ranks of show
- business have sprung heroes and even martyrs, but so far only
- one legend.
-
- That legend is Bob Hope. It sprang up swiftly,
- telepathically, among U.S. servicemen in Britain this summer,
- traveling faster than even whirlwind Hope himself, then flew
- ahead of him to North Africa and Sicily, growing larger as it
- went. Like most legends, it represents measurable qualities in
- a kind of mystical blend. Hope was funny, treating hordes of
- soldiers to roars of laughter. He was friendly--ate with
- servicemen, drank with them, read their doggerel, listened to
- their songs. He was indefatigable, running himself ragged with
- five, six, seven shows a day. He was figurative--the straight
- link with home, the radio voice that for years had filled the
- living room and that in foreign parts called up its image. Hence
- boys whom Hope might entertain for an hour awaited him for
- weeks. And when he came, anonymous guys who had had no other
- recognition felt personally remembered.
-
-