Texaco Town 1937 05 02 (33) On A Picnic
# Texaco Town – May 2, 1937: "On A Picnic"
Picture this: it's a warm spring evening in 1937, and Eddie Cantor is whisking you away on a countryside adventure filled with romantic mishaps and comedic chaos. In this delightful episode, Eddie and the gang pack their baskets for an idyllic picnic, but as anyone who's spent five minutes with Eddie knows, nothing ever goes quite according to plan. Between his trademark rapid-fire delivery, the onstage orchestra's perfectly timed musical interludes, and the sound effects team conjuring up the ambiance of rustling blankets and buzzing insects, listeners are treated to a masterclass in variety entertainment. You'll hear the chemistry between Eddie and his supporting cast as he tangles with amorous situations, pratfalls translated through pure vocal comedy, and enough comic timing to rival anything on Broadway—all conducted at breakneck speed that keeps you laughing and guessing what calamity awaits around every corner.
The Eddie Cantor Show was the gold standard of American radio comedy during the Depression and beyond, and by 1937, Eddie had refined his formula to perfection. Sponsored by Texaco, the program blended vaudeville sensibilities with the intimacy of the microphone, making Eddie's manic energy and infectious giggle as essential to millions of American homes as their morning coffee. This particular broadcast captures the show at its zenith—the writing sharp, the orchestra lush, and Eddie at the height of his powers, balancing sentimental moments with absurdist humor in ways that transcended the era.
Don't miss this window into a golden age of entertainment when comedy came alive through sound alone, when a simple picnic could become the stuff of broadcast legend, and when Eddie Cantor could make the entire nation laugh in unison. Tune in now and discover why families gathered around their radios every week for this extraordinary show.