Jack Smith | |
---|---|
Born | Jack Ward Smith November 16, 1913 Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
Died | July 3, 2006 | (aged 92)
Other names | Smilin' Jack Smith |
Years active | 1933–1984 |
Spouse |
Victoria Stuart
(m. 1936–2002) |
Relatives | Walter Reed (brother) |
Jack Ward Smith (November 16, 1913 – July 3, 2006), known as Smilin' Jack Smith, was an American crooner, radio host and actor.
Born in Seattle, Washington, United States,[citation needed] by 1933 Smith was in a singing trio, The Three Ambassadors.[1] In 1939, he became a solo crooner with a voice described as a "strong baritone with a tenor lilt"; he was billed as "The Singer with a Smile in His Voice."[2] He also sang with the Phil Harris Orchestra,[1] recording "Here It is Only Monday".
Establishing a radio program, The Jack Smith Show,[1] in 1945, he went on to host such guests as Dinah Shore, Margaret Whiting, John Serry Sr. and Ginny Simms. In a 1945 poll of radio critics by Motion Picture Daily, Smith was voted radio's "most promising star of tomorrow."[3]
Following a guest appearance in the musical film Make Believe Ballroom (1949), Smith was offered the second lead in Warner Bros.' On Moonlight Bay (1951) opposite Doris Day.[1]
With the television's arrival, radio saw a decline in audiences, and Smith lost his show in 1952.[1] In 1953, Smith briefly hosted the NBC game show Place the Face,[4] only to be replaced by Jack Bailey, who in turn was followed by Bill Cullen. Smith became the host of You Asked For It in 1958,[4] staying with it in various roles until 1991. He also appeared as himself in the "Fearless Fonzarelli" episode of Happy Days, aired in 1975; in that episode, Smith hosted You Wanted To See It, a fictionalized version of his real show, bearing witness to Fonzie's feat of leaping 14 garbage cans on his motorcycle.[citation needed]
Jack Smith died in June 2006 in Westlake Village, California of leukemia, aged 92.[citation needed]