Texaco Town 1937 08 29 (50) Shakespeare In Hollywood
# Texaco Town: Shakespeare in Hollywood
Step into the glittering chaos of 1937 Hollywood as Eddie Cantor takes the microphone with his trademark enthusiasm and infectious energy. In this delightful installment, "Shakespeare in Hollywood," Eddie and his supporting cast turn the Bard's timeless drama upside down, transplanting the tragic tales of the Renaissance to the soundstages and swimming pools of modern California. Expect rapid-fire one-liners, hilarious character sketches, and the kind of vaudeville zaniness that made Cantor a household name. As his distinctive voice cracks with barely-contained laughter, the orchestra swells behind him—music that punctuates every joke, every pratfall rendered in pure audio theater. You'll hear the genuine audience reaction, the spontaneous combustion of live performance that no studio recording could quite capture.
By 1937, *The Eddie Cantor Show*, sponsored by Texaco gasoline, had become a cultural institution, drawing millions of listeners each Sunday evening. Cantor himself was already a legend—a star of stage, silent film, and now radio's golden age—bringing his vaudeville sophistication to the intimate medium that filled American living rooms. His ability to blend literary mockery with slapstick comedy represented the era's unique fusion of entertainment: highbrow and lowbrow in perfect harmony, making Shakespeare accessible and hilarious to ordinary Americans who might never see a stage production.
Tune in and discover why Eddie Cantor remained one of radio's most beloved entertainers for over two decades. This episode captures the magic of live broadcast comedy at its finest—a moment frozen in time when a master showman could make millions laugh in unison across the nation. Don't miss this gem from radio's golden era.