Jane Ace Explained

Jane Ace
Image Upright:0.9
Birth Name:Jane Epstein
Birth Date:1897 10, mf=yes
Birth Place:Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
Death Place:New York City, U.S.
Show:Easy Aces (radio and television)
mr. ace and JANE
Jane Ace, Disk Jockey
Monitor
Weekday
Station:KMBC
Network:CBS
DuMont
NBC
Spouse(S):Goodman Ace

Jane Ace (born Jane Epstein; October 12, 1897 – November 11, 1974) was the high-voiced, malaprop-mastering wife on the legendary, low-keyed American radio comedy Easy Aces (1930–45). Playing herself opposite her real-life husband and the show's creator-writer, Goodman Ace (1899–1982), she delivered clever malapropisms over the air in each episode of the urbane serial comedy, and many became part of the American vernacular.[1]

Early years

Born as Jane Epstein in Kansas City, Missouri, she met Goodman Ace while both attended the same Kansas City high school and Goodman, hoping to make a writing career, edited the school newspaper.[2] In due course, he became a movie critic and columnist for the Kansas City Journal-Post.

After Goodman became a newspaper reporter, he was able to get passes for various shows. Jane wanted to attend Al Jolson's Kansas City show, but none of her boyfriends could get tickets to the sold-out performance. Ace got his first date with Jane because of his press pass; it enabled him to take Jane to the sold out Jolson show.[3] Jane's father, Jacob Epstein, a Kansas City clothing store owner, had hoped for a son-in-law who would be an asset to his business; after learning that Ace was in the newspaper business, his comment was, "Where's your newsstand?"[4]

The couple married in 1922; soon after they were married, Ace lost his reporter's job. The Aces found they could forget their worries when playing bridge. Ace was hired by the Kansas City Journal-Post as its drama critic.[3] They caught their big break a few years later, while Goodman gave his witty reviews once a week on Kansas City radio station KMBC as well. One night in 1930, the show following his slot failed to feed, and Ace had to fill the 15 minutes' air time. He invited Jane—who'd accompanied him to the studio that night—to join him on the air chatting about a murder case that had broken locally and a bridge game they played the previous weekend. The couple's witty impromptu (Jane: "Would you like to shoot a game of bridge, dear?") provoked such a response that the station invited them to develop their own domestic comedy.[5] [6]

Radio days

Conceived and written by Goodman Ace, Easy Aces graduated within two years from a strictly local show to a network offering (first from Chicago, then from New York). When the program was still at KMBC on a local level, the couple was contacted by a sponsor offering to bring them to Chicago for a network show on a trial basis. If the ratings for the show were good, the sponsor promised to then begin paying them salaries. Ace thought it was a wonderful offer, but Jane did not, saying that if the sponsor considered their show good enough for a network, it was also good enough for a salary. She went on to say that they needed $500 per week for their services and no less; the sponsor honored all of Jane's demands.[3]

Goodman played himself as a put-upon realtor, and Jane played "his awfully-wedded wife" (and used the name Sherwood as her on-air character's maiden name) with an endearing mixture of sweet-natured meddlesomeness and language mangling. Her husband once swore that she was a natural malapropper, but in radio character Jane became the unchallenged mistress of the kind of malaprops that (unlike Gracie Allen's "illogical logic") substituted words in seemingly ordinary phrasing and still made perverse sense, after a fashion.[7] Hysterical laughter invariably ensued.[8] [9] The Aces signed with Educational Pictures to make Easy Aces two reel comedies in 1934.[10] Dumb Luck made its debut January 18, 1935, with the couple on the screen in their radio roles.[11] [12]

Many years after Easy Aces ended, Goodman Ace revealed his wife had never had acting experience before the show.[13] The Aces tried a short-lived, expanded revival on CBS Radio in 1948, known as mr. ace and JANE, before trying a television version of the original Easy Aces style on the DuMont Television Network from December 1949 to June 1950.[14]

While doing Easy Aces, Jane was offered other radio roles in addition to the one on the couple's show. A radio producer wanted her to play the lead in a production of Dulcy, but she declined, reportedly believing she was unable to play other roles, because she did not consider the radio work she did as acting.[3] [15] Jane Ace sought no further acting work after the show ended at last, mostly retiring to a quiet life, except for a brief spell as what her husband described (in a 1952 essay) as "a comedienne now making her come-down as a disc jockey."[16] Jane came out of retirement to join her husband as an NBC Radio Monitor "Communicator" when the show premiered in 1955. The Aces were hired for the spot just after Dave Garroway's participation in the program was announced.[17] [18]

The couple was also part of the NBC Radio Weekday show which made its debut not long after Monitor. It aired Monday through Friday, and was intended to reach female radio listeners.[19] [20] They also began writing and performing in commercials.[21] [22] [23] [24] [25] Husband Goodman continued a second career as a radio and television writer and regular essayist for Saturday Review, and his writings for that magazine frequently referenced Jane's doings, undoings, sayings, and unsayings.

Death

Jane Ace died in New York City in 1974 from cancer, aged 77.[26] [27] Goodman Ace composed a eulogy in a Saturday Review column:

Now alone at a funeral home ... the questions ... the softly spoken suggestions ... repeated, and repeated ... because... because during all the arrangements, through my mind there ran a constant rerun, a line she spoke on radio ... on the brotherhood of man ... in her casual, malapropian style ... "we are all cremated equal" ... they kept urging for an answer ... a wooden casket?... a metal casket?... it's the name of their game ... a tisket, a casket ... and then transporting it to Kansas City, Missouri ... the plane ride ... "smoking or non-smoking section?" somebody asked... the non-thinking section was what I wanted ... a soft sprinkle of snow as we huddled around her ... the first of the season, they told me ... lasted only through the short service ... snow stopped the instant the last words were spoken. He had the grace to celebrate her arrival with a handful of His confetti ...

That eulogy provoked hundreds of letters from current readers and old radio fans alike.[28] With several hundred episodes of Easy Aces now circulating among old-time radio collectors (episodes the Aces syndicated through the Frederick W. Ziv Company in 1945), Jane Ace has been discovered by fans who weren't even alive before her own death.[29] The National Radio Hall of Fame helped make sure of that, inducting Easy Aces and its co-stars in 1990.[30]

Jane-isms

External links

Listen

Notes and References

  1. Book: Encyclopedia of Radio 3-Volume Set. Sterling. Christopher H.. Routledge. 1696. 2003. 1-57958-249-4. March 1, 2011.
  2. News: Win With A Wife!. March 30, 1941. The Milwaukee Journal.
  3. News: A Couple of Aces. Jacobs, Mary. 25 June 1939. The Milwaukee Journal.
  4. Book: Dictionary of Missouri Biography. Christensen. Lawrence O.. Foley. William E.. Kremer. Gary R.. Winn. Kenneth H.. University of Missouri. 1999. 848. 0826212220. 1 March 2011.
  5. Book: Singer. Mark. Mr. Personality: Profiles and Talk Pieces from The New Yorker. 432. 2005. Mariner Books. 0-618-19726-5. September 22, 2010.
  6. News: Goodman's Gamble in Radio Wins Fortune on 'Aces Up'. December 28, 1939. The Milwaukee Journal.
  7. Book: Queens of comedy: Lucille Ball, Phyllis Diller, Carol Burnett, Joan Rivers, and the New Generation of Funny Women (Studies in Humor and Gender, volume 2). Horowitz. Susan. Routledge. 1997. 184. 2-88449-244-5. March 1, 2010.
  8. Book: On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Dunning, John. 1998. 840. Oxford University Press USA. 0-345-49773-2. June 26, 2010.
  9. Book: Radio Goes to War: The Cultural Politics of Propaganda during World War I. Horten. Gerd. University of California Press. 2003. 232. 0-520-24061-8. March 1, 2011.
  10. News: Easy Aces On Screen. December 13, 1934. Reading Eagle. November 27, 2010.
  11. Web site: Dumb Luck. January 18, 1935. Internet Movie Database. November 27, 2010.
  12. Web site: Educational Pictures Film List. Internet Movie Database. November 27, 2010.
  13. Book: Mixed Nuts: America's Love Affair With Comedy Teams From Burns And Allen To Belushi And Aykroyd. Epstein. Lawrence J.. PublicAffairs. 2004. 320. 1-58648-190-8. March 1, 2011.
  14. News: Show Within A Show Is Basis For Easy Aces TV Program. March 12, 1950. 88. The Courier Journal. October 2, 2017. Newspapers.com.
  15. News: 'Easy Aces' Lend Their Talents To Heroes' Phone Campaign. 1. February 1, 1945. Sosin, Milt. The Miami News. May 7, 2011. Newspapers.com.
  16. News: 'Jane Ace, Disk Jockey' premieres tonight. 4. October 27, 1951. The Miami News. September 23, 2010. Newspapers.com.
  17. Book: Monitor: The Last Great Radio Show. Hart. Dennis. 254. iUniverse, Inc.. 0-595-21395-2. 2002. September 19, 2010.
  18. Book: Say Goodnight Gracie: The Last Years of Network Radio. Cox. Jim. 224. McFarland and Company. 2002. 0-7864-1168-6. September 16, 2010.
  19. News: 'Weekday' (5 Times) NBC's Latest. Miller, Leo. November 6, 1955. Sunday Herald. January 14, 2011.
  20. Web site: Radio:Woman's Home Companion. https://web.archive.org/web/20081215063008/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,861682,00.html. dead. December 15, 2008. November 28, 1955. Time. January 14, 2011.
  21. News: Instant Brew By Real Ace. 24. Grace, Arthur. February 18, 1959. The Miami News. September 23, 2010. Newspapers.com.
  22. News: Jane Ace Takes It Easy. 10. January 9, 1959. The Miami News. September 23, 2010. Newspapers.com.
  23. News: A TV Commercial Steals Show. Danzig, Fred. December 16, 1959. Beaver Valley Times. September 23, 2010.
  24. News: Former Radio Comic Now Writes Perry Como Show. Danzig, Fred. March 25, 1958. Middlesboro Daily News. November 2, 2010.
  25. News: 'Electronic Deceits' To Be Eliminated From TV Shows. Lowry, Cynthia. December 14, 1959. Times Daily. November 27, 2010.
  26. News: Radio Star Jane Ace Is Dead. November 13, 1974. Ellensburg Daily Record. November 10, 2010.
  27. News: Gatsby is Great. March 21, 1974. O'Brian, Jack. Herald-Journal. May 7, 2011.
  28. Web site: Easy Aces: Radio's Original Comedy Couple. Beaupre, Walter. Old Time Radio. November 17, 2010.
  29. Web site: Aces Up. https://web.archive.org/web/20080504171700/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,804192,00.html. dead. May 4, 2008. September 8, 1947. Time. January 14, 2011. (subscription required)
  30. Web site: Goodman and Jane Ace-Easy Aces . Radio Hall of Fame . July 20, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110526100311/http://www.radiohof.org/comedy/goodjane.html . May 26, 2011 .
  31. News: Jane Ace Is Dead at 74; Noted for Malapropisms . . 12 November 1974 . Page 42, columns 2-4 . 30 December 2023.
  32. Book: Do Unto Others ... Then Run: A Little Book of Twisted Proverbs . De Ley . Gerd . Potter . David . 2002 . . 192 . 0-7407-2738-9 . . December 12, 2011.
  33. Book: Raised on Radio . Nachman . Gerald . . 544 . 2000 . 0-520-22303-9 . Google Books . December 12, 2011.
  34. Book: Google Books . Gabay's Copywriters' Compendium . 2012 . Gabay . Jonathan . . 522 . 978-0750683203 . 4 October 2012.