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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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FRISCO, Joe: Difference between revisions

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               dances out alone on the canvas platform.
               dances out alone on the canvas platform.
   
   
[[Image:frisco3.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Joe Frisco became a popular Hollywood star.]]In 1917, he broke into Ziegfeld’s Midnight Frolic, which he continued to play, along with the Follies, Earl Carol’s Vanities, and Big Time vaudeville into the early 1930s. One of the highlights of this act was the dialogue he began to introduce. Despite the stuttering (or perhaps because of it) he developed a reputation as a great wit.
[[Image:frisco3.jpg|left|thumb|250px|]]In 1917, he broke into Ziegfeld’s Midnight Frolic, which he continued to play, along with the Follies, Earl Carol’s Vanities, and Big Time vaudeville into the early 1930s. One of the highlights of this act was the dialogue he began to introduce. Despite the stuttering (or perhaps because of it) he developed a reputation as a great wit.


Once, when Bert Lahr was bragging at the Friar’s Club about taking numerous curtain calls after a show in Kansas City (a town notoroius for its unresponsive audiences), Lahr wrapped up his story with an offer to buy the drinks:
Once, when Bert Lahr was bragging at the Friar’s Club about taking numerous curtain calls after a show in Kansas City (a town notoroius for its unresponsive audiences), Lahr wrapped up his story with an offer to buy the drinks:

Revision as of 05:04, 30 January 2012

Joe Frisco became a popular Hollywood star.

FRISCO, Joe. (Rock Island, IL, 1890-Hollywood, CA, Feb. 12, 1958). Frisco, actually a Dubuque resident named Louis Joseph, developed celebrity status in Broadway vaudeville and later MOTION PICTURES by making the most of his pronounced stutter and his flashy jazz dancing.

Joe was barely into adolescence when he hit the road, hopping a freight train and winding up in Milwaukee where he was part of an act called "Coffee and Doughnuts." Joe was Doughnuts. Moving to New York, he claimed to be the “World’s First Jazz Dancer”, and “the Frisco dance” or “Frisco shuffle” became the most widely imitated dance in the country.




The great American novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald, mentioned him in The Great Gatsby when describing one of Jay Gatsby's parties:

            "Suddenly one of these gypsies in trembling opal 
             seizes a cocktail out of the air, dumps it down 
             for courage and moving her hands like Frisco 
             dances out alone on the canvas platform.

Frisco3.jpg

In 1917, he broke into Ziegfeld’s Midnight Frolic, which he continued to play, along with the Follies, Earl Carol’s Vanities, and Big Time vaudeville into the early 1930s. One of the highlights of this act was the dialogue he began to introduce. Despite the stuttering (or perhaps because of it) he developed a reputation as a great wit.

Once, when Bert Lahr was bragging at the Friar’s Club about taking numerous curtain calls after a show in Kansas City (a town notoroius for its unresponsive audiences), Lahr wrapped up his story with an offer to buy the drinks:

“What would you like, Joe?”

“I’d l-l-like to see your act!”

On another occasion, while waiting in the wings at a benefit show for found himself standing next to Enrico Caruso, the great opera singer. He turned to the famous tenor and said, “Hey, Caruso, don’t do ‘Darktown Strutters Ball’. That’s my number and I follow you.”

One of his remarks, “Don’t applaud, folks, just throw money” continues to be used by comedians.

In 1932 Frisco earned an estimated $4,000 weekly while making the movie The Gorilla. He last appeared in Sweet Smell of Success in 1957 with Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis.

Despite his salary, Frisco's overdue bills, bets at the track, and income tax troubles were well known among his friends in the film industry. Although needing frequent loans from friends, an estimated twelve hundred well-wishers attended a testimonial dinner in his honor just weeks before his death.

Frisco's earliest performances are believed to have been in front of the Grand Theater in Dubuque where, during the early 1900s, he tap-danced hoping to attract attention.

<youtube>AgXLrmUjcj0</youtube>

<youtube>WlZaoL3P3f8</youtube>

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Source:

Lowry, Ed and Foy, Charlie. Joe Frisco: Comic, Jazz Dancer and Railbird.Online: www.jazzscript.co.uk/books/dancefrisco.htm

Joe Frisco. YouTube user: AgXLrmUjcj0

Joe Frisco. YouTube user: WlZaoL3P3f8

Stars of Vaudeville #127: Joe Frisco « Travalanche travsd.wordpress.com/2010/03/.../stars-olf-vaudeville-127-joe-frisco/