Morton Downey
11:15 Tues.-Thurs.-Sat.
11:15 Tues.-Thurs.-Sat.
WINS-MBS.
Morton Downey is back on the
airwaves for his favorite soft drink at 11:15 P.M. three times weekly, on
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, over the Mutual Network coast to coast.
In a program which is entirely
different from the homespun songs and poems which he used to broadcast during
the daytime, Downey is now specializing in what he calls his own kind of sooth-singing:
soft, sentimental ballads and tunes.
With Downey on his new program are
a quartet of male singers who provide soft, melodic background for Downey’s
silvery voice, and an intimate orchestra of right under the skillful baton of
Carmen Mastren.
Born in Wallingford, Connecticut,
the son of the local fire-chief, Downey is probably the Nutmeg State’s most
famous good-will ambassador and most popular citizen. Nutmeggers remember him
as the kid who used to sing at Elks’ benefits for nickels, accompanied by a
friend who played the accordion. And they also still talk about how he was
bounced from a job as candy-butcher on the New York, New Haven and Hartford
Railroad because of his irrepressible yen to whistle while he worked.
It was through one of the talent
scouts for Paul Whiteman that Downey really got his first big chance. That was
when he was singing at the Sheridan Square Theater in New York, and a
representative of Whiteman offered him seventy-five dollars for singing with
the band.
Fame came quickly, and soon the
Irish troubadour got equal billing with the Paul Whiteman band. The band and
Downey went across the Atlantic several times on the S.S. Leviathan, and then
Downey toured with Whiteman during the thrilling days of the “Rhapsody in Blue.”
Soon, Downey was really on his
own, a star in his own right, singing in the smartest clubs and hotels of this
country and Europe. His first Hollywood appearance was with Fred Waring and his
band in one of the first cinema musicals, “Syncopation.” After another
seven-month tour of continental night clubs, Downey returned to New York to
open his own Delmonico Club, the scene of his first Untied States radio
broadcasting.
In the past sixteen years, Downey
has sung over every major network in this country and many in Europe; he has traveled
more in foreign countries than any other American singer. Those requests for
special songs have come from more than 10,000 people, including the late
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the Duke of Windsor.
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