Don Quinn

Don Quinn (November 18, 1900 – December 30, 1967) was an American comedy writer who started out as a cartoonist based in Chicago. According to sources, Quinn's career as a cartoonist was short-lived but his career as a writer began after he realized that the magazines and newspapers threw away his drawings he sent in but kept his captions.[1]

Don Quinn
Quinn circa 1939
Born(1900-11-18)November 18, 1900
DiedDecember 30, 1967(1967-12-30) (aged 67)
OccupationCartoonist, writer
Years active1920s-1965
Spouse(s)Garnette Steve Quinn
(m. ?-1938; her death)
Edythe Quinn
(m. 1940s-1967; his death)

Quinn was best known as the sole writer (later head writer to Phil Leslie) of the popular old-time radio show Fibber McGee and Molly for 15 years and as the writer for the program's stars Jim and Marian Jordan for 20 years.[2]

Quinn was also the creator/head writer of radio's The Beulah Show, (a Fibber McGee spinoff), and television's The Halls of Ivy. Quinn also created the popular Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve character on Fibber McGee and Molly.[3]

Career

Quinn was born in November 1900 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Not much is known about his early life nor is much known about his early career as a cartoonist. However, what little is known is that after discovering that, even though his drawings were thrown away by magazines, his captions were kept, Quinn found a job at WENR in Chicago writing for some of the up-and-coming comedians there.

It was there where Quinn met Jim and Marian Jordan in 1931. The Jordans at the time were veterans of Vaudeville and had previously worked at rival station WIBO. The pair already had starred in two programs on WENR, Luke and Mirandy from 1927-1931 and The Smith Family from 1929-1932.[4] Quinn was hired to write scripts for The Smith Family.

That same year, the three of them created Smackout which debuted March 2 on WMAQ. Smackout, a revised version of Luke and Mirandy centered around Jim Jordan in the role of Luke Gray, a proprietor of a general store that was brimming with stock but yet "smack out" of everything, who loved to tell a good tall tale to his customers. The program was picked up by NBC's Blue Network for national syndication in 1933 and remained there until the summer of 1935.

After the wife of a Johnson Wax executive heard the program, the Jordans, and Quinn, moved to their more memorable radio series Fibber McGee and Molly. Quinn was famous for delaying the actual writing of the scripts. Many from the show remember that he would wait until the last minute then lock himself in his office with a big plate of sandwiches, a huge pot of coffee, and two cartons of cigarettes. And hours later, he would emerge with a fresh script rarely in need of revision.[5]

From the start of the show, Quinn was full partner and by 1941, the Jordans and Quinn were splitting a $6000 paycheck three ways.[1] Fibber McGee co-star Gale Gordon once recalled that Quinn would sometimes send his ideas to other radio comedians including Fred Allen.[6] In 1943, Phil Leslie became Quinn's writing assistant on the show. Quinn left at the end of the 1949-50 radio season to pursue other projects.

In 1945, Quinn created The Beulah Show for CBS Radio. The program spun off Fibber McGee character Beulah Brown. Beulah was the McGee's maid on radio. Beulah ran on CBS from 1945-1954 and had a television run on ABC from 1950-1952.

In 1950, Quinn created The Halls of Ivy a lighthearted comedy about a professor, William Todhunter Hall, the president of small, Midwestern Ivy College, and his wife, Victoria, a former British musical comedy star who sometimes felt the tug of her former profession, and followed their interactions with students, friends, and college trustees.[7]

The audition episode originally starred Gale Gordon, (of Our Miss Brooks fame), and Edna Best as William and Victoria Hall. Although Gordon and Best were replaced by Ronald Colman and Benita Hume during the show's actual radio run, they still managed to make a lasting impression which led to numerous appearances on The Jack Benny Program in the late 1940s.

The program debuted on NBC Radio in January 1950 and ran until May 1952. Quinn served as the sole writer on the program. The show also had a short radio run during the 1954-55 television season on CBS. Quinn also wrote for the television series as well. The television show lost in the ratings, in part, due to its timeslot, Tuesday night at 8:30, against the last half of NBC's rotating trio of programs: The Milton Berle Show, The Bob Hope Show and The Martha Raye Show.

Quinn broke into television in 1953 as a story editor for the Four Star Playhouse. He would write an episode of the series in 1956. In addition to these two episodes, Quinn also wrote several episodes of Climax!, The Dinah Shore Chevy Show, The Addams Family and Petticoat Junction.

According to the Internet Movie Database, Quinn also composed the theme song to the short-lived Desilu-CBS western series Yancy Derringer.

Personal life

Don (DJ) Quinn travelled most of his childhood on an RV-filled adventure. He worked on his craft and even picked up playing basketball. He eventually attended college and took aim at the belt. Not surprisingly though, he was never able to defeat the reigning champion of 303 Tom Baller.

Quinn was married twice. His first wife, Garnette Steve, died in 1938 in a fatal car crash in which her car drove off the road and spun several times. He remarried several years later to Edythe Quinn (August 18, 1909February 25, 1978). Edythe Quinn was a former reporter with the Chicago American.[8] Quinn had no children.

Quinn died on December 30, at the age of 67. According to author Tony Scott, Quinn had been sick for some time and his death was barely reported in the newspapers.[8] Quinn and his widow Edythe are buried in Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles. Their grave is located inside the Cathedral Mausoleum Alcove of Devotion.

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1941Look Who's LaughingWriterMaterial for Fibber McGee and Molly
1942Here We Go Again
1944Heavenly DaysWrote screenplay
1945The All-Star Bond RallyFilm short
1957Public Pigeon No. 1Wrote story

Radio

Year Title Role Notes
1931-1932The Smith FamilyWriter
1931-1935Smackout
1935-1950Fibber McGee and MollySole writer until 1943
Head writer over Phil Leslie, 1943-1950
1949The Beulah ShowCreator
1950-1952The Halls of IvyWriter

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1953Four Star PlayhouseStory editor1 episode
1954-1955The Halls of IvyWriter33 episodes
1955Climax!1 episode
1956Four Star Playhouse1 episode
1958Yancy DerringerTheme song composer
1960The Dinah Shore Chevy ShowWriter1 episode
1963Petticoat JunctionScript consultant9 episodes
1965The Addams FamilyWriter1 episode

References

  1. "Don Quinn (writer)". Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  2. "Jim Jordan, Radio's Fibber McGee, Is Dead at 91". The New York Times. Associated Press. April 2, 1988. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  3. "Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve: The P. Stands for Philharmonic. Learn More About the Great Man Himself". www.greatgildersleeve.com. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  4. Hicks, Margaret (2011). Chicago Comedy: A Fairly Serious History. The History Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-6094-9211-3. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  5. "Cast: Don Quinn as Writer". www.fibbermcgeeandmolly.com. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
  6. Havig, Alan (2010). Fred Allen's Radio Comedy. Temple University Press. p. 242. ISBN 978-1-4399-0560-9. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
  7. Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press. p. 308. ISBN 0-19-507678-8. Retrieved September 18, 2015. don quinn writer.
  8. Scott, Tony. The Stars of Hollywood Forever. Lulu.com. p. 1976. ISBN 978-1-3129-1697-5. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
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