Bob Booker (born August 1, 1931) is an American writer and producer of television shows and record albums. He is best known for producing the 1962 album The First Family with Earle Doud. The album is a parody of President John F. Kennedy and his family, and it both remained at #1 on the Billboard 200 for 12 weeks and won a Grammy for Best Album of the Year in 1963.[1]

Bob Booker
Booker in 1986
Born (1931-08-01) August 1, 1931 (age 92)
OccupationTelevision producer
Years active1948–present
Known forThe First Family album
SpouseBarbara Noonan Booker
Children2

Early career edit

Booker was born in Jacksonville, Florida, and graduated from high school at age of 16. He was first employed as a local radio DJ.[2] A new television station began operation and Booker was hired at the age of 18, where he worked as a TV host, news anchor, weatherman, camera operator, set builder, film editor, program producer and director. He was later drafted into the army during the Korean conflict and was stationed at Ft. Bliss in El Paso. Because of his background in radio and television, he was placed on staff for the commanding general, doing PR for the base. Discharged after two years, he moonlighted as a talent manager and became station manager of WIVY in Jacksonville.[2]

In 1958, Booker was hired by Miami's WINZ AM radio for their afternoon drive slot.[3] He ingratiated himself with all the top entertainers who frequented the popular winter vacation spot through one-on-one interviews. Celebrities like Jack Benny, Nat Cole, Martha Ray, Andy Williams, Ray Charles, Mort Sahl, Ava Gardner, Gloria DeHaven, Sinatra - many became lifelong friends. He also did on-air work at two local TV stations, and hosted weekend shows. In 1960, he left Miami and relocated to New York City.[2]

New York City edit

Booker discovered it was not easy to start a career in the Big Apple, as an MCA agent got him exactly one TV pilot hosting job in one year. He made friends with local writers, including Pat McCormick (who later wrote for Johnny Carson) and Earle Doud. He and Doud began some writing projects, which included a series of gag record greeting cards, an article for Playboy magazine and their ultimate brainchild: a comedy album spoofing the President of the United States.

Booker and Doud cast Vaughn Meader, who they saw via the Talent Scouts TV show, as JFK and Naomi Brossart, a model and actress, as Jackie.[4] They cut a demo record and made their first pitch to Capitol Records. After hearing the demo, an executive and friend of Booker, said: “I wouldn’t touch it with a 10-foot pole!” Dejected, the two considered other labels and ended up at ABC Records who referred them to ABC President Leonard Goldenson. He passed, but suggested a small record label, Cadence Records, owned by Archie Bleyer. He liked the concept and signed the two writers to a record deal.

Cadence wanted to release the record in November, in time for the busy holiday season so the production moved along. Booker didn’t like the stock photos being offered for the album cover so he borrowed a Speed Graphic camera and flew to Washington DC to photograph the White House. He only had four negatives. His first shot of the North Portico had terrible backlighting. He then took a cab around the entire perimeter and attempted two more pictures, but those shots didn’t capture the essence of the building. Frustrated, he went back to the front fence, held the camera between the slats and without looking through the lens, pulled the trigger. The photograph would become iconic (later nominated for Best Album Cover by the Grammys).

The night before the recording, Booker and Dowd went to the Paris Theater on East 58th to catch a movie. Earle carried a copy of their script in a briefcase. As they waited for the film to begin, two women took their seats two rows in front of them. One was Jackie Kennedy. The two men were flabbergasted. Dowd immediately opened the briefcase and wanted to show the First Lady their script. He was dying to meet her. Booker kept him at bay and told him it was a crazy idea and could jeopardize their project. Dowd finally relented and they left the theater.

On October 22, 1962, The First Family was recorded at Fine Studios in New York City, ironically at the same moment that President Kennedy announced the naval blockade of Soviet Union ships traveling to Cuba, prompting the Cuban Missile Crisis. Because social media did not exist, the audience was unaware of the speech and the recording commenced and was a success. Unfortunately, Cadence Records owner Archie Bleyer felt “Kennedy’s going to war” and almost tossed the tapes in the trash. Bob and Earle felt the opposite and proceeded to finalize the production. Six days later the crisis was averted and Blyer gave the green light.

Booker and Doud devised a simple plan to market their record: radio airplay. Booker also worked part-time for 1010 WINS AM and when the first albums were delivered to Cadence, the two immediately drove to Columbus Circle and sought out one of the most popular DJs in the city, Stan Z. Burns at WINS. Burns loved the record and The First Family was the only record he played for his entire three-hour shift. The WINS switchboard lit up with callers — listeners, news outlets and competing radio stations — everyone wanted the new record. Booker and Doud, who came armed with a handful of records, took cabs around the city, dropping off albums to numerous radio stations. Booker remembered it best: “Lightning had struck...we were in the right place at the right time.” It would become the fastest selling album in record history.[2]

Arthur M Schlesinger Jr., Assistant to the President, nearly crashed his car when he first heard an album cut on the radio: Reporter: What do you think the chances are for a Jewish president? Meader: Well, I think they're pretty good. Let me say, I don't see why a person of the Jewish faith can't be President of the United States. I know as a Catholic I could never vote for him, but other than that...[5]

Booker got a call from White House UPI correspondent, Merriman Smith. The reporter told him about an ‘off the record’ experience with the President during a recent Cabinet meeting. Booker recalled Smith said, “The President came in, ran down the items on his agenda and then said, ‘But, before we begin -- and he opens up a record player, picks up a copy of your album and said ‘I’d like for you to hear my album." He told Booker the cabinet sat and listened to the entire record, laughing as the president laughed. Everyone applauded when the album was done. Astonished, Bob remembers Smith added, “I know there’s been some negativism from Pierre and Schlesinger and some of those guys but Jack doesn’t listen to them. You’ve made a human being out of him...he loves it.” [2]

Booker and Doud produced a second album, The First Family Volume Two, in the spring of 1963. After President Kennedy was assassinated that November, all unsold albums were pulled out of stores and destroyed. The producers did not want to appear to be profiting from the President's death.[2]

Later career edit

Booker continued to produce albums with George Foster, including the very successful 1965 album You Don't Have To Be Jewish and When You're In Love, the Whole World is Jewish. He produced 16 comedy albums from 1962 to 1977.[2]

Booker wrote for The Garry Moore Show during the late 1960s and also contributed to The Ed Sullivan Show, as well as other variety programs. When Hollywood came calling, he relocated to Los Angeles and worked in the motion picture industry for a few years. He returned to television and produced numerous TV shows from the 1970s to the 1990s, including The NBC Follies and Fifty Years of Country Music. He partnered with Burt Reynolds, producing two network pilot specials: Cotton Club '75 and The Wayne Newton Special. In 1977, Paramount hired him to create television specials to promote their feature film releases American Hot Wax, Foul Play and Grease. In 1987, Booker created the NBC teen fantasy sitcom Out of this World starring Maureen Flannigan and Donna Pescow.[6] He produced numerous “outtake” shows and established an extensive comedy videotape library for his shows Foul-Ups, Bleeps & Blunders with Don Rickles and Steve Lawrence, Comedy Break and The Hit Squad. He would continue to market the TV library globally for decades.

Personal life edit

Booker donated many of his personal television scripts to the Writers Guild Foundation Archive.[6] The original master tapes of his albums The First Family and The First Family Volume Two were donated to President John F. Kennedy's library in Boston at the request of Caroline Kennedy and are on display in the library, along with a Gold Album of the first album.[7]

He is now retired, living in Northern California with his wife of 52 years, Barbara Noonan Booker, who partnered and co-produced with her husband with programming on the four major networks and in syndication.[8] They have two children and four grandchildren.

Album work edit

A partial list of his album credits:

  • You Don't Have to be Jewish (1964)[2]
  • When You're in Love, the Whole World is Jewish (1965)[2]
  • Al Tijuana & His Jewish Brass (1966)[2]
  • The Yiddish are Coming! The Yiddish are Coming! (1967)[2]
  • Scream On Someone You Love Today (1967)[9]
  • The New First Family 1968: A Futuristic Fairy Tale (1968)[10]
  • Beware of Greeks Bearing Gifts (1968)[11]
  • The Handwriting On The Wall (The Sounds Of Graffiti) (1968)[12]
  • Pat McCormick Tells It Like It Is (1968)[13]
  • The Jewish American Princess (1971)[2]
  • Out of the Closet (1977)[14]

Television work edit

A partial list of his television credits:

  • The NBC Follies (1973)[15]
  • Cotton Club '75 (1974)[15]
  • Charo (1976)[15]
  • Fifty Years of Country Music (1978)[15]
  • Grease Day USA (1978)[15]
  • Waylon (1980)[15]
  • The Best Little Special in Texas (1982)[15]
  • The Funniest Commercial Goofs (1983)[15]
  • Foul-Ups, Bleeps & Blunders (1983-84)[15]
  • The Love Boat Fall Preview Special (1984)[15]
  • Anything for a Laugh (1985)[15]
  • Comedy Break (1985)[15]
  • Rickles on the Loose (1986)[15]
  • The Hit Squad (1987)[15]
  • Out of this World (1987)[15]

References edit

  1. ^ "5th Annual GRAMMY Awards". GRAMMY.com. 2017-11-28. Retrieved 2019-07-19.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Booker, Bob (November 1, 2015). Behind The Scenes In Hollywood. California: Bob Booker Productions, Inc. p. 280. ISBN 978-0615808338.
  3. ^ "Miami Herald Newspaper Archives, Jan 5, 1959, p. 70". newspaperarchive.com. 5 January 1959. Retrieved 2019-07-19.
  4. ^ Bob Booker and Earle Doud (October 1962) Album liner notes for The First Family. Cadence Records.
  5. ^ Jason1920 (2015-03-02), Vaughn Meader "The First Family" 1962 FULL ALBUM, retrieved 2019-07-19{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ a b "Bob Booker Collection". oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2019-07-19.
  7. ^ "Bob Booker Personal Papers | JFK Library".
  8. ^ "Barbara Booker". IMDb.
  9. ^ "scream-on-someone-you-love-today". AllMusic.
  10. ^ "The-New-First-Family-1968-A-Futuristic-Fairy-Tale". Discogs.
  11. ^ "Beware-Of-Greeks-Bearing-Gifts". Discogs.
  12. ^ "The-Handwriting-On-The-Wall-The-Sounds-Of-Graffiti". Discogs.
  13. ^ "Pat-McCormick-Tells-It-Like-It-Is". Discogs.
  14. ^ "Out of the Closet". Audiophileusa. Archived from the original on 2018-01-28. Retrieved 2022-12-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Internet Movie DataBase". IMDB. July 27, 2019.