Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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Who remembers their parents watching Guy Lombardo??
I just received a genealogy message on ancestry.com asking if I knew of a family member of ours that he married?? Don't have a clue. No one ever told me. We did have cousins who went to Canada. I'll have to inquire.... Below is a cute song , one of his favorites.......... I'm My Own Grandpa Guy Lombardo Now many many years ago when I was twenty-three I was married to a widow who was pretty as can be This widow had a grown-up daughter who had hair of red My father fell in love with her and soon they too were wed Oh I'm my own grandpa I'm my own granpa It sounds funny I know, But it really is so Oh I'm my own grandpa This made my dad my son-in-law and changed my very life My daughter was my mother 'cause she was my father's wife To complicate the matter even though it brought me joy I soon became the father of a bouncing baby boy My little baby then became a brother-in-law to Dad And so became my uncle, though it made me very sad For if he was my uncle, then that also made him br'ther Of the widow's grown-up daughter who was also my stepmother Father's wife then had a son who kept them on the run And he became my grandchild, for he was my daughter's son My wife is now my mother's mother and it makes me blue Because altho' she is my wife, she's my grandmother too Now if my wife is my grandmother, then I'm her grandchild And every time I think of it, it nearly drives me wild For now I have become the strangest case I ever saw As husband of my grandmother, I am my own grandpa |
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#2
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[QUOTE=senior citizen;489193]Who remembers their parents watching Guy Lombardo??
I not only remember my parents watching Guy Lombardo, I watched Guy Lombardo and the Royal Canadians every New Year's Eve. My mom and dad were married in 1940, and they remembered his band well. He joked that when he died, he was going to take New Year's Eve with him. |
#3
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I don't remember my parents, watching Guy Lombardo. We didn't have TV when I lived at home, but I remember him on the radio, not only NY eve, but at other times. My favorite was, "Enjoy Yourself, It's Later Than You Think". I have several of his tunes on my iPod, including Red Sails in the Sunset, Bell Bottom Trousers, Auld Lang Syne, Penny Serenade, etc. His sound was in the Paul Whiteman style. By the late 40's his sound was dated, but I liked his ricky tick.
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#4
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[quote=RichieB;489198]
Quote:
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Oldcoach Ed "You cannot direct the wind, but you can adjust the sails" "Be yourself - everyone else is taken" |
#5
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I remember watching Guy Lombardo & the Royal Canadians with my parents on New Year's Eve. It was a really big deal to be able to stay up and ring in the New Year with my parents and my 4 siblings. At midnight we'd run out and yell and bang old pots and pans and have a grand old time. Great memories.
In his later years on the air, I think we started watching other broadcasts that were a bit more contemporary, but the old days when we were children are the better memories.
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#6
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I am SO old that I remember listening to Guy Lombardo and Wayne King on the radio, before we got a TV, on Sunday after dinner. I'm sure my sister and I were doing other things rather than enjoying the music. We then watched him on TV and especially on New Years Eve.
Later on, my dad would lay claim to the TV every single Saturday night to watch Lawrence Welk. No discussion on any alternatvie shows. ![]() |
#7
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Opened in 1952 as the Jones Beach Marine Theater, the venue originally had 8,200 seats and hosted musicals. Moses had several boxes designated for his own use - Moses' friend Guy Lombardo performed often in the early years. The opening show was the operetta extravaganza "A Night in Venice" by Johann Strauss II, produced by film producer, Mike Todd, complete with floating gondolas and starring Enzo Stuarti, Norwood Smith and Nola Fairbanks.
![]() Lombardo's final show was the 1977 production of Finian's Rainbow, with Christoper Hewett in the title role. After Lombardo's death in 1977, the series resumed in 1978 with Annie Get Your Gun, starring Lucie Arnaz. The original design of the theater had a "moat" — the stage was actually on Zachs Bay and separated from the beach, and performers could be brought to the stage by boat (some scenes had floating scenery). The moat was covered or filled in during the first renovation and seats closer to the stage were installed. The Guy Lombardo Orchestra would pass through the "moat" on a yacht during the intermissions. The band would play tunes while floating in front of the audience.
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#8
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Jimbo.. did you google that information or did you actually go there??? I went there in the early 70's, drove all the way from Manhattan to Jones Beach just to see the shows. For the life of me, though, can't remember who I saw there? Afraid I'm suffering from CRS disease these days.
Good information, thanks for posting it.
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#9
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I remember my parents playing his records on the phonograph; they loved Guy Lombardo. My favorite song that he recorded was "After the Ball is Over," and now I can't get it out of my head. Thanks, Senior Citizen!
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#10
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Yes I looked it up but when I was a grasshopper my folks dragged me there, I recall he had a all wood motor boat that he made his entrance in, funny how I can remember that.
More recently we go to several concerts there every summer, a great venue.
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#11
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The same thing happened at our house.
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#12
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I loved his music.
He lived in the town next to us on Woodcleft Canal in Freeport, LI. He raced those sleek wooden boats in the 30s and 40s, I guess, and kept one or two tied up behind his house. His brother was named Derf, which was Fred spelled backwards. It was reported that he had a neighbor who was upset by the noise from frequent parties. When the noise became too much the neighbor would yell "Guy Lumbago" and throw things over the fence. Using the various channels It was easy to bring a boat from his place to Zach's Bay.
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#13
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![]() Quote:
We too watched him on New Year's Eve with our parents, etc. and then as a married couple up until he was replaced with the "new" generation of music. I recall my parents listening to the radio prior to the suppertime hour and Make Believe Ballroom (the show) often had his music. I was born in 1945, so can remember the end of the 40's when we got our first television set and the parents watched Milton Berl and Imogene Coca? I watched Farmer Grey and Farmer Brown (probably around age 4 ?) and of course all the World War II movies which abounded in 1950. Fighter pilots, etc. My husband's father BUILT HIS OWN T.V. and it was the first in their neighborhood. I guess that's when one could assemble a television with tubes, etc. My dad would change the tubes in the radios and t.v.'s. THANKS TO EVERYONE who is remembering along with me........... p.s. I do have Lombardo and Lombardi in the family tree......just can't make the connection to whom Guy Lombardo married. One branch of my father's family from Italy.....settled in Canada. |
#14
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Guy Lombardo also had a seafood restaurant in Freeport, called the East Point House. |
#15
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I am originally from Freeport, where Guy did indeed have a house.
It was on Grove Street, which since has become "Guy Lombardo Blvd". You could see his famous custom wooden boat in the boathouse in his backyard while cruising down the canal. |
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