Jack introduces cameraman Charlie Summers and his new wife from the audience; she asks why Charlie has never had a raise. Jack's guest is Stuart Canin, who, as a 10-year-old violin prodigy, could play the Bee better than Jack and did so on Fred Allen's show. He is now Professor of Violin at Oberlin. He plays Vida breve by Manuel de Falla on the Stradivarius. Don Wilson introduces a man with a rocket pack, radar, a telephone, a direction finder, and a record player who wants to be a State Farm agent. In the sketch, Jack plays the violin-maker Antonio Stradivari, whose wife complains that he could make more money by turning out his violins at a faster clip. Jack and Canin play the Bee in duet.
Name | Type | Role | |
---|---|---|---|
Sam Perrin | Writer | ||
George Balzer | Writer | ||
Al Gordon | Writer | ||
Hal Goldman | Writer | ||
Ned Miller | Guest Star | ||
Phil Arnold | Guest Star | ||
Stuart Canin | Guest Star | ||
Nate "Happy" Derman | Guest Star | ||
Benny Rubin | Guest Star | ||
Claire Carleton | Guest Star | ||
Danny Kulick | Guest Star | ||
Randy Blick | Guest Star | ||
Henry Beckman | Guest Star | ||
Keith Green | Guest Star | ||
Naomi Stevens | Guest Star | ||
Norman Abbott | Director |