


Photos from L to R: #1. Samia Thuruvan, a
homeless veteran from Vietnam attended a ceremony honouring the comic. #2.
Onlookers gathered to see a street being renamed Bob Hope Square. #3. Bob
Hope's children Kelly Hope, Zachary, Linda, and Tony, from left, held a sign
after the ceremony.


Photos from L
to R: #1. Bob Hope was born Leslie Townes Hope in Eltham, London, the son of
a stonemason and concert singer. Here he is aged about six. #2. After spells
on Broadway in the 1930s, he first made an impact on screen alongside
Dorothy Lamour in The Big Broadcast of 1938
The "Road Pictures" with
Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour made Hope a box office star.
A
Bob Hope movie on television, be it the 'early movie' or the 'late-late
show', is watched and enjoyed by all ages. Consequently, his movies claim a
large and faithful following with each generation.
In all, Hope starred in
more than 50 feature films and has appeared in cameos for another 15 -- the
last being "Spies Like Us" in 1985. As with radio -- Hope earned the status
of #1 at the box office.
Bob has introduced two
Academy Award-winning songs: "Thanks for the Memory" with Shirley Ross in
"The Big Broadcast of 1938" and "Buttons and Bows" in "The Paleface" (1948).
To his credit are "Two
Sleepy People" from the movie "Thanks for the Memory," "Silver Bells" from
"The Lemon Drop Kid;" and with Crosby and Lamour in the "road" pictures:
"Put It There Pal," "Teamwork," and "We're Off On the Road to Morocco."
Ah yes, the "road"
pictures! Paramount had been planning a movie called "The Road to Mandaley"
(later changed to "The Road to Singapore") for George Burns and Gracie
Allen. Because Burns and Allen were not available, Paramount tapped Fred
MacMurray and Jack Oakie -- they were also overbooked. Enter Bing Crosby,
Bob Hope, and Dorothy Lamour... and film history is made.
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