Jimmy Durante
Biography
If any performer can truly be said to have carved out his own comedic turf, made a huge success out of it lasting over several decades, while completely owning that piece of turf lock, stock, and barrel, then that performer would have to be Jimmy Durante. There never has been — nor is there likely ever to be — a stylistic school of Durante; the man and his character are of one piece and ingrained in the national consciousness to the extreme. Anyone foolish enough to start appropriating any part of his act would be immediately branded as a slavish imitator — someone just merely "doing Durante" — while always being doomed to comparison with the one and only real-deal "Schnozzola" and again, falling well short of the mark. On the surface, Durante's mega-success defied all commonly understood show business laws. No one with such a gravelly voice should have been able to put over a song as well as he did. No one as ugly as him should have made as much profitable hay as he did about being that ugly, and parlaying those looks into a movie career at that. No one wore rumpled suits and a beat-up fedora (covering what little hair he had left), smoked a cheap cigar, and mangled the English language with more charm and hilarity than he. No one won the hearts of his audience by simply being himself — a comic Everyman from the poor side of town — than did one Jimmy Durante. He didn't sing good, he didn't look good, and he had the audacity to keep bringing it up, he dressed like a bum, and couldn't say a complete sentence without screwing up some (or all) of the words. Not much of a show business résumé on the surface of it, but Durante's uncloneable charm gathered its main strength from being just that; an average guy who — as one critic put it — "acted like a heckler from an audience who had finally decided he could do a better job himself and, upsetting all conventional show business decorum, had snuck into the spotlight." There was not one subtle thing about Jimmy Durante; whether it was wrecking a piano and throwing the resultant debris at the audience, singing a song like "I Know Darn Well I Can Do Without Broadway (But Can Broadway Do Without Me?)," or doing a complete about face and providing a brief glimpse of the wistful side of his character, he tapped the deepest of emotions every single time and did it at full bore.. If any performer can truly be said to have carved out his own comedic turf, made a huge success out of it lasting over several decades, while completely owning that piece of turf lock, stock, and barrel, then that performer would have to be Jimmy Durante. There never has been — nor is there likely ever to be — a stylistic school of Durante; the man and his character are of one piece and ingrained in the national consciousness to the extreme. Anyone foolish enough to start appropriating any part of his act would be immediately branded as a slavish imitator — someone just merely "doing Durante" — while always being doomed to comparison with the one and only real-deal "Schnozzola" and again, falling well short of the mark. On the surface, Durante's mega-success defied all commonly understood show business laws. No one with such a gravelly voice should have been able to put over a song as well as he did. No one as ugly as him should have made as much profitable hay as he did about being that ugly, and parlaying those looks into a movie career at that. No one wore rumpled suits and a beat-up fedora (covering what little hair he had left), smoked a cheap cigar, and mangled the English language with more charm and hilarity than he. No one won the hearts of his audience by simply being himself — a comic Everyman from the poor side of town — than did one Jimmy Durante. He didn't sing good, he didn't look good, and he had the audacity to keep bringing it up, he dressed like a bum, and couldn't say a complete sentence without screwing up some (or all) of the words. Not much of a show business résumé on the surface of it, but Durante's uncloneable charm gathered its main strength from being just that; an average guy who — as one critic put it — "acted like a heckler from an audience who had finally decided he could do a better job himself and, upsetting all conventional show business decorum, had snuck into the spotlight." There was not one subtle thing about Jimmy Durante; whether it was wrecking a piano and throwing the resultant debris at the audience, singing a song like "I Know Darn Well I Can Do Without Broadway (But Can Broadway Do Without Me?)," or doing a complete about face and providing a brief glimpse of the wistful side of his character, he tapped the deepest of emotions every single time and did it at full bore.
Top Albums |
1. As Time Goes..
| 2. The Very Bes..
| 3. Jimmy' Duran..
| 4. Inka Dinka D..
| 5. At the Movie..
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6. Club Durante
| 7. September So..
| 8. Jimmy Durant..
| 9. Songs for Su..
| 10. Inka Dinka D..
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11. One of Those..
| 12. Old Time Rad..
| 13. Jimmy Durant..
| 14. Essential Co..
| 15. At the Copac..
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16. Hello Young ..
| 17. Jimmy Durant..
| 18. Old Time Rad..
| 19. Star of Stag..
| 20. All American..
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Top Songs |
| Name | Album | Time | Price | |
1. | Make Someone Happy | As Time Goes By: The Best o.. | 1:51 | $1.29 | |
2. | Young At Heart | As Time Goes By: The Best o.. | 2:47 | $1.29 | |
3. | I'll Be Seeing You | Very Best of Song | 3:11 | $0.99 | |
4. | Smile (from "Modern Times") | As Time Goes By: The Best o.. | 2:57 | $1.29 | |
5. | As Time Goes By | As Time Goes By: The Best o.. | 2:28 | $1.29 | |
6. | Frosty the Snowman | There's No Place Like H.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
7. | Frosty the Snowman | Santa Claus Is Coming to To.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
8. | Frosty the Snowman | Little Drummer Boy: 30 Chri.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
9. | Frosty the Snowman | Silver Bells: The Very Best.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
10. | Frosty the Snowman | Winter Wonderland: The Perf.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
11. | Frosty the Snowman | Christmas Song (Chestnuts R.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
12. | Frosty the Snowman | It's the Most Wonderful.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
13. | Frosty the Snowman | Sleigh Ride: The Best Chris.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
14. | Frosty the Snowman | Have Yourself a Merry Littl.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
15. | Frosty the Snowman | It's Beginning to Look .. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
16. | Ink a Dink a Do | Guys and Dolls of the 1950&.. | 2:51 | $0.99 | |
17. | Frosty the Snowman | Frosty the Snowman: Fun Chr.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
18. | Frosty the Snowman | Christmas Past & Retro .. | 2:34 | $0.99 | |
19. | Frosty the Snowman | White Christmas: The 20 Bes.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
20. | Frosty the Snowman | Golden Oldies Christmas: Cl.. | 2:36 | $0.99 | |
21. | I'll Be Seeing You | Notebook (Original Motion P.. | 3:10 | Album Only | |
22. | Song's Gotta Come from the Heart.. | Retrospective Jule Styne, V.. | 4:44 | $0.99 | |
23. | A-Razz-A-Ma-Tazz | Special Magic of Jimmy Dura.. | 3:51 | $0.99 | |
24. | Inka-Dinka-Doo (feat. Chorus) | Two Girls and a Sailor | 2:55 | $0.99 | |
25. | Inka Dinka Doo | Original Music of World War.. | 2:55 | $0.99 | |