Premium Only Content

Duffys Tavern - 1949-04-13 Millionaire Bum
Duffy's Tavern was first heard in 1940 and became a regular feature. It was hailed from the start by critics and whole neighborhoods of working-class listeners alike…a duo that doesn't often see eye-to-eye!
Duffy's Tavern was a place on Third Avenue and 23rd St. in New York City, where the "elite meet to eat, Duffy ain't here, Archie the Manager speakin'…" Anyone who loved old time radio probably knows that phone patter by heart! Ed Gardner played Archie, the manager of Duffy's Tavern, and he was as "real" sounding as any character on radio, as he had grown up in the Big Apple. His use and abuse of language was "exempulary" - the same type of local "parlese" that made The Damon Runyan Theater a favorite with New Yorkers everywhere. Gardner was a theatrical veteran, whose wife, Shirley Booth, well-known stage and screen actress, began on the show with him.
Life with Luigi used a letter to Mama to start the show. Archie would always seem to get a phone call at the beginning of each Duffy's Tavern broadcast. The show might be a star vehicle, or a situation comedy of errors, or just a semi-sweet story about a regular that could almost tug on the heartstrings. Stars dropping in made sense, as Duffy's Tavern was in New York City, even if a little south and east of Broadway. Audience and music were used, but an intimate tavern atmosphere was always maintained. Archie was ever the understanding host in Duffy's absence.
Regulars on the show included Duffy's slightly feather-brained daughter, Miss Duffy, first played by Shirley Booth, and later a host of youngsters. Clifton Finnegan, the classic barstool jockey, was played by Charlie Cantor. Also featured were Eddie the waiter (Eddie Green) and Clancy the cop (Alan Reed.) You never knew who might drop by Duffy's for a quickie.
There was Boris Karloff, Shelley Winters, Cass Daley, Dinah Shore, Lucille Ball (radio's My Favorite Husband), Tito Guizar, Alan Ladd (of radio's Box 13), Gene Tierney, Monty Woolley, Adolphe Menjou, Mickey Rooney, Vincent Price (radio's The Saint), and believe it or not, even Marlene Dietrich. And lest we forget, Pierre the talking dog!
Great writing on the show was moonlighted by many of the top Broadway and TV veterans, including Abe Burrows, Larry Marks, Larry Gelbart, and Dick Martin - but Ed Gardner was final script editor. In fact, Gardner previously had radio director credits for several major old time radio shows, including Ripley's Believe It or Not, Burns and Allen, and the The Rudy Vallee Hour.
The show was done live in New York until 1949, when the sharp Gardner moved offshore for tax advantages, and the entire cast lived and worked in Puerto Rico recording the shows there! None of the estimated eight million listeners knew the difference, and, of course, now Duffy had a real excuse!
-
31:39
Michael Franzese
1 hour agoAmerica’s Human Trafficking Crisis EXPOSED by Former Mobster
9.4K4 -
LIVE
Barry Cunningham
5 hours agoPRESIDENT TRUMP NEEDS TO STAND FIRM AND SHUT THE GOVERNMENT DOWN IF HE HAS TO!
1,101 watching -
23:45
IsaacButterfield
12 hours ago $0.41 earnedThe Rise of Autism in Gen Z
7.61K11 -
LIVE
LFA TV
1 day agoBREAKING NEWS ALL DAY! | THURSDAY 9/25/25
1,274 watching -
1:59:20
The Quartering
7 hours agoCharlie Kirk Conspiracies Go TOO FAR, Youtube Re-Bans Everyone & Libs Dying From Tylenol
152K86 -
DVR
The Trish Regan Show
3 hours agoTrump SUES Disney Over Kimmel’s Return to ABC! Disney CEO, Kimmel BOTH OUT!?!
22.6K5 -
1:07:22
Dr. Drew
5 hours agoTargeted: Political Violence Began Long Before Charlie Kirk's Assassination – Leftist Influencers Like Hasan Piker Are Making It Worse w/ Dave Rubin & Jack Posobiec – Ask Dr. Drew
27.1K1 -
1:19:08
TheSaltyCracker
4 hours agoSaltCast 9-25-25
53.8K121 -
LIVE
StoneMountain64
3 hours agoBattlefield 6 News and Extraction Gaming
107 watching -
24:15
Stephen Gardner
3 hours agoCharlie Kirk Bombshell: Fresh Video Footage Shatters the Narrative!😱
48.5K121