The Road to Comedy: The Films of Bob Hope
By (Author) Donald McCaffrey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th December 2004
United States
General
Non Fiction
Films, cinema
791.43028092
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
482g
Although Bob Hope has been the subject of many biographies, no book has yet fully explored the comic persona which he created in vaudeville and radio, was brought to fruition in dozens of films, and had a lasting influence on comedians from Woody Allen to Conan O'Brien. Now, in The Road to Comedy, noted film comedy authority Donald W. McCaffrey finally places Hope in his well-deserved position among the top film comedians of his era. Drawing on archival materials and interviews with collaborators, McCaffrey analyses each major film in depth, with due attention to particular sequences that reveal how Hope created a unique comic personality that lasted over dozens of very popular films, from the "Road movies" with Bing Crosby to such underrated classics as Son of Paleface, Monsieur Beaucaire, and Casanova's Big Night. McCaffrey introduces readers to a Bob Hope now overshadowed by his own reputation. We see here that Hope's significance has been greater than any appearance entertaining the troops, or on a television special might suggest. Because many of these movies have recently been made available on DVD - the first time in decades that they have been easily available to the general public - the volume will also serve as an excellent introduction for those seeing these films for the first time.
[D]oes justice to Bob Hope's 70-year, 52-feature film career. Drawing on interviews with Hope's frequent collaborator Edmund Hartmann, McCaffrey cites illuminating evidence from the films and offers a thoughtful definition of Hope's acting styles and how he reflected the mood of his time. In so doing, McCaffrey comes closer to offering Hope the serious consideration he deserves as a major American icon....Highly recommended; all levels.-Choice
Many biographies have been written about Bob Hope; but no book yet has focused on the extent of the comic persona he created in film, vaudeville and radio alike - not until Donald W. McCaffrey's The Road To Comedy: The Films Of Bob Hope. Noted comedy film critic McCaffrey blends archival materials with critical surveys and interviews with Bob Hope's contemporaries and collaborators to analyze each major film in depth.-MBR Internet Bookwatch/The Bookwatch
"Does justice to Bob Hope's 70-year, 52-feature film career. Drawing on interviews with Hope's frequent collaborator Edmund Hartmann, McCaffrey cites illuminating evidence from the films and offers a thoughtful definition of Hope's acting styles and how he reflected the mood of his time. In so doing, McCaffrey comes closer to offering Hope the serious consideration he deserves as a major American icon....Highly recommended; all levels."-Choice
"[D]oes justice to Bob Hope's 70-year, 52-feature film career. Drawing on interviews with Hope's frequent collaborator Edmund Hartmann, McCaffrey cites illuminating evidence from the films and offers a thoughtful definition of Hope's acting styles and how he reflected the mood of his time. In so doing, McCaffrey comes closer to offering Hope the serious consideration he deserves as a major American icon....Highly recommended; all levels."-Choice
"Many biographies have been written about Bob Hope; but no book yet has focused on the extent of the comic persona he created in film, vaudeville and radio alike - not until Donald W. McCaffrey's The Road To Comedy: The Films Of Bob Hope. Noted comedy film critic McCaffrey blends archival materials with critical surveys and interviews with Bob Hope's contemporaries and collaborators to analyze each major film in depth."-MBR Internet Bookwatch/The Bookwatch
Donald W. McCaffrey is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English at the University of North Dakota, where he taught cinema, theatre, and literature for nearly 30 years.