Haversack said:A couple I would add:
Walter Winchell
John L. Lewis. (He had the market on eyebrows cornered)
Marla said:Should Jack Benny have a place on the '47 list? It strikes me that if he had a 20 year run on radio then he was well-known and well-liked by the American public.
Dexter'sDame said:. In my mom's Midwestern town, people weren't interested in emulating Marilyn yet. In fact, in her town, poor Marilyn was considered somewhat of a dirty joke that people didn't understand until later.
A lot of people also don't realize she was a cartoon spinoff of real life Clara Bow, and was originally a dog, a french poodle. Max Fleischer, the Betty Boop creator, didn't humanize her for a couple of years.Betty Boop. Even though she is really only a popular image now. A lot of people don't know that she's been around since the 30's.
A couple of days ago I heard on NPR that Eddie Fisher was the main threat to Sinatra, so much so that Sinatra attempted suicide by slashing his wrists.I thought Sinatra might be one of those figures who'd endure -- certainly anyone over 40 today would know who he was. But would the average 30-year-old recognize a photo of him, instantly and without prodding? Given how completely unaware of any pre-rock-era pop culture most young people today are, I kind of doubt it.
Sinatra as a performer in 1947 was becoming kind of a pop-culture joke. He was still visible on radio -- he was the star of Your Hit Parade every Saturday night -- but the bobby-soxers had moved on to Vaughn Monroe and Frankie Laine, and the records he was making were cheesy inconsequential pop tunes. Everyone would have instantly known who he was, but he would have been a punch line to many people rather than a respectable artist.
Sinatra as a performer in 1947 was becoming kind of a pop-culture joke. He was still visible on radio -- he was the star of Your Hit Parade every Saturday night -- but the bobby-soxers had moved on to Vaughn Monroe and Frankie Laine, and the records he was making were cheesy inconsequential pop tunes...
For the 1930s
The Marx Brothers
Three Stooges
Cab Calloway
Jean Harlow
Dillinger
Al Capone
I thought Sinatra might be one of those figures who'd endure -- certainly anyone over 40 today would know who he was. But would the average 30-year-old recognize a photo of him, instantly and without prodding? Given how completely unaware of any pre-rock-era pop culture most young people today are, I kind of doubt it.
Widebrim, I think you have it backwards. Alot of that stuff - like Disney artists designing nose art or cartoon characters selling war bonds - was done because of the general mood of we're-gonna-do-our-part! by the creators/producers, not because somebody in authority decided, "These characters are popular/iconic and folks will recognize them, so let's use 'em to sell bonds." It was a much simpler, and less calculating, media world back then.
Having said that, the last thing I would ever want to do is denigrate Bugs Bunny! He was indeed very popular in the forties, as his guts and self-confidence made him the perfect hero for the war years. Of course, he was BRAND NEW at the time, not a revered figure from sixty years ago with hundreds of films on his resume.
And I think Lizzie's point on the Stooges is valid. Aside from the Frank Capra features, Columbia was mostly a purveyor of low-budget programming that was widely perceived as junk, and likely didn't play in a lot of the better venues. Sure, folks would recognize the Stooges, but they weren't BELOVED like they are now.
Funny how one generation's insignificant slapstick timewasters become a brilliant body of work to later generations, isn't it?