"I ain't got no money but I got a lot of fun."
So sang the incomparable songwriter Benny Bell,
and a new book about his wacky life & career
explores the truth behind the sentiment.
The up-and-down-and-up-and-down career of the man behind "Shaving Cream" and other novelty classics
was full of humor and drama, merriment and pain.
If
Benny Bell were still alive during today's economic crisis, chances are
he'd do his part for American sanity by writing some insanely uplifting
songs about the joys of being poor. After all, that's what he did
throughout his career, with such records as "One Dollar Blues," "I Had
But Fifty Cents" and "Misfortune, What Do You Want?"
A
new book about Bell, one of the funniest, quirkiest and hardest working
entertainers ever to come out of the vaudeville and Borscht Belt eras,
has just been published by BearManor Media called "Grandpa Had a Long
One: Personal Notes on the Life, Career & Legacy of Benny Bell."
Although never very famous, and never rich, Bell is revealed in the
book, written by his grandson, journalist Joel Samberg, to have had
quite a notable career and a life that was immensely rich in humor,
drama, and unceasing optimism.
The
reasons behind Bell's up-and-down career are explored, along with
intriguing stories that illustrate why author Samberg was both amazed
and confounded by his remarkable and unpredictable grandfather.
Part
showbiz bio and part author memoir, "Grandpa Had a Long One" is a
fascinating look into the world of an extremely funny man who believed
in his own hype far more than he believed in the integrity and honesty
of the entertainment industry. A genuine entrepreneur, Ben wrote,
arranged, sung, recorded, packaged and promoted most of his records
himself-more than 120 of them, including such novelty and
double-entendre song classics as "Shaving Cream," "Everybody Wants My
Fanny" "Pincus the Peddler," "Take a Ship for Yourself," "Grandpa Had a
Long One," "Yum Yum Yum (I Ain't Got No Money but I Got a Lot of Fun)"
and many others.
At
times, Benny Bell came so close to broad popularity that he was able to
sense what stardom must be like. But he was always so far away from it
that he could never depend on his celebrity for the next rent check.
Why was that? And what must it have been like to be so close and yet so
far? Samberg explores those topics, and others, in "Grandpa Had a Long
One," while also recreating his grandfather's career with all its
erratic changes, early successes, meetings with industry pros, 67-year
love affair with his wife Molly, disastrous partnerships with record
companies, get-rich schemes, misguided plans, TV and stage appearances
and much more.
Ben's
greatest popularity was in the 1940s and early 50s, though in the
mid-1970s "Shaving Cream" was re-released and became a Top-40 hit. In
New York City, "Shaving Cream" was so popular that the program director
of WNBC radio wrote an article for Billboard describing the incredible
and sudden marketing madness it created.
"Grandpa
Had a Long One" also includes lyrics to more than 25 classic Benny Bell
songs and over 40 photographs from the entertainer's long life and
career. Bell died in 1999 at the age of 93. Just two years earlier he
was performing on MTV, singing "Ikey & Mikey" and discussing his
early days as a ‘professional amateur' on vaudeville stages.