Duffy's Tavern 1948 05 05 (284) Guest Gregory Peck (afrs #173, 2nd Half Only)
# Duffy's Tavern - May 5, 1948
Step into the smoky back room of a New York saloon where the lights are low, the whiskey flows, and trouble always seems to find its way through the swinging doors. On this spring evening in 1948, the regulars at Duffy's Tavern are in for a treat when Hollywood's newest golden boy, Gregory Peck, stumbles into the establishment fresh from the silver screen. Listeners will be treated to the signature rapid-fire banter and comedic chaos that made this show a national institution, as the dapper leading man finds himself caught in the tavern's delightful web of misadventure. Whether dodging the sharp-tongued waitress Rosie or tangling with the tavern's ever-scheming denizens, Peck's presence promises an evening of witty repartee, physical comedy rendered through sound alone, and the kind of spontaneous humor that only live radio could deliver. This is the second half of the broadcast—the real action, where the evening's storylines reach their climax.
*Duffy's Tavern* was appointment radio for millions throughout the 1940s, a show that perfected the art of urban comedy during an era when live broadcasts meant anything could happen. Created by Ed Gardner, who also starred as the tavern's affable proprietor, the show captured the authentic rhythms of New York working-class life with surprising warmth beneath its cynical wisecracks. Guest stars were drawn from Hollywood's elite, creating a unique intersection of radio comedy and movie glamour that audiences craved during the postwar years.
Don't miss this delightful snapshot of Golden Age radio, when a major film star could drop by a tavern full of comic misfits for an evening of improvisational mayhem. Tune in now and discover why *Duffy's Tavern* kept America laughing through the night.