Hope hosted theAcademy Awards show 19 times, more than any other host. He also appeared in many stage productions and television roles and wrote 14 books. The song "Thanks for the Memory" was his signature tune. He was praised for his comedic timing, specializing in one-liners and rapid-fire delivery of jokes that were often self-deprecating. Between 1941 and 1991, he made 57 tours for theUnited Service Organizations (USO), entertaining military personnel around the world. In 1997, Congress passed a bill that made him an honorary veteran of the Armed Forces.[2]
Hope was born in theEltham district of southeastLondon. He arrived in the United States with his family at the age of four, and grew up nearCleveland, Ohio. He became a boxer in the 1910s but moved into show business in the early 1920s, initially as a comedian anddancer on the vaudeville circuit before acting onBroadway. He began appearing on radio and in films starting in 1934. Hope retired from public life in 1999 and died in 2003, at 100.
Leslie Townes Hope was born on May 29, 1903, inEltham,County of London[1] (now part of theRoyal Borough of Greenwich), in a terraced house at 44 Craigton Road inWell Hall,[3][4] where there is now a British Film Institute 'Centenary of British Cinema' commemorative plaque in his memory.[5] He was the fifth of seven sons of William Henry Hope, a stonemason fromWeston-super-Mare, Somerset, and Welsh mother Avis (née Townes), a light opera singer fromBarry, Vale of Glamorgan,[6] who later worked as a cleaner. William and Avis married in April 1891 and lived at 12 Greenwood Street in Barry before moving toWhitehall, Bristol, and then toSt George, Bristol. The family emigrated to the United States aboard theSSPhiladelphia, passing throughEllis Island, New York on March 30, 1908, before moving on toCleveland, Ohio.[7]
From age 12, Hope earned pocket money by singing, dancing, and performing comedy on the street.[8] He entered numerous dancing and amateur talent contests as Lester Hope, and won a prize in 1915 for his impersonation ofCharlie Chaplin.[9] For a time, he attended theBoys' Industrial School inLancaster, Ohio, and as an adult donated sizable sums of money to the institution.[10] He had a brief career as a boxer in 1919, fighting under the name Packy East. He had three wins and one loss, and he participated in a few staged charity bouts later in life.[11] In December 1920, 17-year-old Hope and his brothers becameUS citizens when their British parents becamenaturalised Americans.[12]
In 1921, while working as alineman for a power company, Hope was assisting his brother Jim in clearing trees when a tree crashed to the ground, crushing his face; the accident required reconstructive surgery, which contributed to his later distinctive appearance.[13] In his teens, he had also worked as a butcher's assistant as well as a brief stint at Cleveland'sChandler Motor Car Company in his early 20s.
Hope and his girlfriend later signed up for dancing lessons, encouraged after they performed in a three-day engagement at a club. Hope then formed a partnership with Lloyd Durbin, a friend from the dancing school.[14] Silent film comedianFatty Arbuckle saw them perform in 1925 and found them work with a touring troupe called Hurley's Jolly Follies. Within a year, Hope had formed an act called the "Dancemedians" with George Byrne and theHilton Sisters, conjoined twins who performed a tap-dancing routine on the vaudeville circuit. Hope and Byrne also had an act asSiamese twins; they sang and danced while wearing blackface until friends advised Hope that he was funnier by himself.[15]
In 1929, Hope informally changed his first name to "Bob". In one version of the story, he named himself after racecar driverBob Burman.[16] In another, he said that he chose the name because he wanted a name with a "friendly 'Hiya, fellas!' sound" to it.[17] In a 1942 legal document, his legal name appears as Lester Townes Hope; it is unknown if this reflects a legal name change from Leslie.[18] After five years on the vaudeville circuit, Hope was "surprised and humbled" when he failed a 1930 screen test for theRKO-Pathé short-subject studio atCulver City, California.[19]
He began performing on the radio in 1934 mostly withNBC radio, and switched totelevision when that medium became popular in the 1950s. He started hosting regular TV specials in 1954,[24] and hosted theAcademy Awards nineteen times from 1939 through 1977.[25] Overlapping with this was his movie career, spanning 1934 to 1972, and hisUSO tours, which he conducted from 1941 to 1991.[26][27]
Hope signed a contract withEducational Pictures of New York for six short comedies. The first was a comedy,Going Spanish (1934). He was not happy with it, and told newspaper columnistWalter Winchell, "When they catch [bank robber]Dillinger, they're going to make him sit through it twice."[28] Educational Pictures took umbrage at the remark and canceled Hope's contract after only the one film. He soon signed with theVitaphone short-subject studio inBrooklyn, New York, making musical and comedy shorts during the day and performing in Broadway shows in the evenings.[29]
Hope moved toHollywood whenParamount Pictures signed him for the 1938 filmThe Big Broadcast of 1938, also starringW. C. Fields. The song "Thanks for the Memory", which later became his trademark, was introduced in the film as a duet withShirley Ross, accompanied byShep Fields and his orchestra.[30] The sentimental, fluid nature of the music allowed Hope's writers—he depended heavily upon joke writers throughout his career[31]—to later create variations of the song to fit specific circumstances, such as bidding farewell to troops while on tour or mentioning the names of towns in which he was performing.[32]
As a film star, Hope was best known for such comedies asMy Favorite Brunette and the highly successful "Road" movies in which he starred withBing Crosby andDorothy Lamour. The series consists of seven films made between 1940 and 1962:Road to Singapore (1940),Road to Zanzibar (1941),Road to Morocco (1942),Road to Utopia (1946),Road to Rio (1947),Road to Bali (1952), andThe Road to Hong Kong (1962). At the outset, Paramount executives were amazed at how relaxed and compatible Hope and Crosby were as a team. What the executives didn't know was that Hope and Crosby had already worked together (on the vaudeville stage in 1932), and that working so easily in the "Road" pictures was just an extension of their old stage act.
Hope had seen Lamour performing as a nightclub singer in New York,[33] and invited her to work on hisUnited Service Organizations (USO) tours of military facilities. Lamour sometimes arrived for filming prepared with her lines, only to be baffled by completely rewritten scripts or ad-libbed dialogue between Hope and Crosby.[34] Hope and Lamour were lifelong friends, and she remains the actress most associated with his film career although he made movies with dozens ofleading ladies, includingKatharine Hepburn,Paulette Goddard,Hedy Lamarr,Lucille Ball,Rosemary Clooney,Jane Russell, andElke Sommer.[35]
Hope and Crosby teamed not only for the "Road" pictures, but for many stage, radio, and television appearances and many brief movie appearances together over the decades[36] until Crosby died in 1977. Although the two invested together in oil leases and other business ventures, worked together frequently, and lived near each other, they rarely saw each other socially.[37] After the release ofRoad to Singapore (1940), Hope's screen career took off, and he had a long and successful run. After an 11-year hiatus from the "Road" genre, he and Crosby reteamed forThe Road to Hong Kong (1962), starring the 28-year-oldJoan Collins in place of Lamour, whom Crosby thought was too old for the part.[38] They had planned one more movie together in 1977,The Road to the Fountain of Youth, but filming was postponed when Crosby was injured in a fall, and the production was canceled when he suddenly died of heart failure that October.[39]
Hope starred in 54 theatrical features between 1938 and 1972,[40] as well as cameos and short films. Most of his later movies failed to match the success of his 1940s efforts. He was disappointed with his appearance inCancel My Reservation (1972), his last starring film; critics and filmgoers panned the movie.[41] Though his career as a film star effectively ended in 1972, he did make a few cameo film appearances into the 1980s.
Hope'scareer in broadcasting began on radio in 1934. His first regular series forNBC Radio was theWoodbury Soap Hour in 1937, on a 26-week contract. Serving as the master of ceremonies for theseRippling Rhythm Revue radio broadcasts, Hope collaborated with the big band leaderShep Fields during this period of transition from vaudeville to radio.[42][43][44] A year later,The Pepsodent Show Starring Bob Hope began, and Hope signed a ten-year contract with the show's sponsor,Lever Brothers. He hired eight writers and paid them out of his salary of $2,500 a week. The original staff includedMel Shavelson,Norman Panama,Jack Rose,Sherwood Schwartz, and Schwartz's brotherAl. The writing staff eventually grew to fifteen.[45] The show became the top radio program in the country. Regulars on the series includedJerry Colonna andBarbara Jo Allen as spinster Vera Vague. Hope continued his lucrative career in radio into the 1950s, when radio's popularity began being overshadowed by the upstart television medium.[46][47]
Hope (right) with his brotherJack (seated), who produced his early 1950s show, with comedianJack Benny
Hope did many specials for the NBC television network in the following decades, beginning in April 1950. He was one of the first people to usecue cards. The shows often were sponsored byFrigidaire (early 1950s),General Motors (1955–61),Chrysler (1963–73), andTexaco (1975–85).[48] Hope's Christmas specials were popular favorites and often featured a performance of "Silver Bells"—from his 1951 filmThe Lemon Drop Kid—done as a duet with an often much younger female guest star such asBarbara Mandrell,Olivia Newton-John,Barbara Eden, andBrooke Shields,[49] or with his wife Dolores, a former singer with whom he dueted on two specials.
On April 26, 1970,CBS released theRaquel Welch television specialRaquel!; in it Hope appears as a guest.[50] Hope's 1970 and 1971 Christmas specials for NBC—filmed inVietnam in front of military audiences at the height of the war—are on the list of theTop 46 U.S. network prime-time telecasts. Both were seen by more than 60 percent of the U.S. households watching television.[51] Likely the most unusual of his television specials wasJoys!, a parody of murder mystery narratives, where the audience discovers at the end of the broadcast that Johnny Carson was the villain.[52][53]
Beginning in early 1950, Hope licensed rights to publish acelebrity comic book titledThe Adventures of Bob Hope to National Periodical Publications, aliasDC Comics. The comic, originally featuring publicity stills of Hope on the cover, was entirely made up of fictional stories, eventually including fictitious relatives, a high school taught by movie monsters, and a superhero calledSuper-Hip. It was published intermittently and continued publication through issue #109 in 1969. Illustrators includedBob Oksner and (for the last four issues)Neal Adams.[citation needed] Hope reprised his role as Huck Haines in a 1958 production ofRoberta atThe Muny Theater inForest Park inSt. Louis, Missouri.[54] Additionally, Hope rescued theEltham Little Theatre in England from closure by providing funds to buy the property. He continued his interest and support, and regularly visited the facility when in London. The theater was renamed in his honor in 1982.[55]
Hope made a guest appearance onThe Golden Girls, season 4, episode 17 (aired February 25, 1989) called "You Gotta Have Hope" in which Rose is convinced Bob Hope is her father. In 1992, Hope made a guest appearance as himself on the animated Fox seriesThe Simpsons in the episode "Lisa the Beauty Queen" (season 4, episode 4).[56] His 90th birthday television celebration in May 1993,Bob Hope: The First 90 Years, won anEmmy Award for Outstanding Variety, Music Or Comedy Special.[57] Toward the end of his career, worsening vision problems rendered him unable to read his cue cards.[58] In October 1996, he announced he was ending his 60-year contract with NBC, joking that he "decided to become a free agent".[59] His final television special,Laughing with the Presidents, was broadcast in November 1996, with hostTony Danza helping him present a personal retrospective ofpresidents of the United States known to Hope, a frequent White House visitor over the years.[60] The special, though different from his usual specials, received high praise fromVariety,[60] as well as other reviews.[61] Following a brief appearance at the 50th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1997, Hope made his last TV appearance in a 1997 commercial about the introduction ofBig Kmart, directed byPenny Marshall.[62]
Hope continued an active entertainment career past his 90th birthday, concentrating on his television specials and USO tours. Although he had given up starring in feature films afterCancel My Reservation, he made several cameos in various films and co-starred withDon Ameche in the 1986television filmA Masterpiece of Murder.[63] A television special created for his 80th birthday in 1983 at theKennedy Center in Washington, D.C., featured President Ronald Reagan, actress Lucille Ball, comedian-actor-writerGeorge Burns, and many others.[64] In 1985 he was presented with the Life Achievement Award at theKennedy Center Honors,[65] and in 1998 he was appointed an honorary Knight Commander of the Most ExcellentOrder of the British Empire (KBE) by QueenElizabeth II. Upon accepting the appointment, Hope quipped, "I'm speechless. 70 years of ad lib material and I'm speechless."[66]
Hope washost of the Academy Awards ceremony 19 times between 1939 and 1977. His supposedly-feigned desire for an Oscar became part of his act.[67] While introducing the 1968 telecast, he quipped, "Welcome to the Academy Awards, or, as it's known at my house,Passover."[68] Although he was never nominated for an Oscar, theAcademy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honored him with four honorary awards, and in 1960 presented him with theJean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, given each year as part of the Oscars ceremony.
While aboardRMS Queen Mary when World War II began in September 1939, Hope volunteered to perform a special show for the passengers, during which he sang "Thanks for the Memory" with rewritten lyrics.[69] He performed his first USO show on May 6, 1941, atMarch Field in California,[70] and continued to travel and entertain troops for the rest of World War II, later during theKorean War, the Vietnam War, the third phase of theLebanon Civil War, the latter years of theIran–Iraq War, and thePersian Gulf War.[27] His USO career lasted a half-century during which he headlined 57 times.[27]
He had a deep respect for the men and women who served in the armed forces, and this was reflected in his willingness to go anywhere to entertain them.[71] However, during the highly controversialVietnam War, Hope had trouble convincing some performers to join him on tour, but he was accompanied on at least one USO tour byAnn-Margret.Anti-war sentiment was high, and his pro-troop stance made him a target of criticism from some quarters. Some shows were drowned out by boos; others were listened to in silence.[72]
The tours were funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, Hope's television sponsors, and byNBC, the network that broadcast the television specials created after each tour from footage shot on location. However, the footage and shows were owned by Hope's own production company, which made them very lucrative ventures for him, as outlined by writerRichard Zoglin in his 2014 biographyHope: Entertainer of the Century.
Hope sometimes recruited his own family members for USO travel. His wife, Dolores, sang from atop an armored vehicle during the Desert Storm tour, and granddaughter Miranda appeared alongside him on an aircraft carrier in the Indian Ocean.[71] Of Hope's USO shows in World War II, novelistJohn Steinbeck, who then was working as a war correspondent, wrote in 1943:
When the time for recognition of service to the nation in wartime comes to be considered, Bob Hope should be high on the list. This man drives himself and is driven. It is impossible to see how he can do so much, can cover so much ground, can work so hard, and can be so effective. He works month after month at a pace that would kill most people.[73]
Along with his best friend Bing Crosby, Hope was offered a commission in the United States Navy as lieutenant commander during World War II, but FDR intervened, believing it would be better for troop morale if they kept doing what they were doing by playing forall branches of military service.[74]
For his service to his nation through the USO, he was awarded theSylvanus Thayer Award by theUnited States Military Academy at West Point in 1968, the first entertainer to receive the award.[75][76] A 1997 act ofCongress signed by PresidentBill Clinton named Hope an "Honorary Veteran". He remarked, "I've been given many awards in my lifetime, but to be numbered among the men and women I admire most is the greatest honor I have ever received."[77] In an homage to Hope, comedian/TV hostStephen Colbert carried a golf club on stage during the week of USO performances he taped for his TV showThe Colbert Report during the 2009 season.[78]
Dear Bob...: Bob Hope's Wartime Correspondence with the G.I.s of World War II, written by Martha Bolton (first woman staff writer for Bob Hope) and Linda Hope (his eldest daughter), is a collection of some of his letter to the troops.[79]
In an interview onNPR,Terry Gross said, "Woody Allen andConan O'Brien are two of the people who have referred to Bob Hope as influences. And I think influences in part on their own personas as not being this suave, handsome, macho guy." Hope biographer Zoglin agreed saying, "Woody continually said, this was the guy who influenced me more than anyone else. And that character - that kind of scared character, the guy talk - nervous, talking his way through, you know, bad times and scary times. That was Woody Allen's character inSleeper (1973) andLove and Death (1975). He always said that he andDiane Keaton in those films were basically like Hope andCrosby".[82]
Conan O'Brien also cited Hope as an influence saying, "I loved Woody Allen. And Woody Allen says, oh, I love Bob Hope really influenced me. And I thought, what are you talking about? How did Bob Hope influence you in any way?...Then I went back and I started looking at seeing some of the movies. And you see it, you see that that the character that Woody Allen does is a character that I think was really, to a large extent invented by Bob Hope."[83]
Hope helped establish modern Americanstand-up comedy.[20] He was widely praised for his comedic timing and his specialization in the use ofone-liners and rapid-fire delivery of jokes. He was known for his style of self-deprecating jokes, first building himself up and then tearing himself down. He performed hundreds of times per year.[84] Such early films asThe Cat and the Canary (1939) andThe Paleface (1948) were financially successful and praised by critics,[85] and by the mid-1940s, with his radio program getting good ratings as well, he was one of the most popular entertainers in the United States.[86] When Paramount threatened to stop production of the "Road" pictures in 1945, they received 75,000 letters of protest.[87]
Hope and his comic sidekick,Jerry Colonna, sporting his trademark handlebar mustache in 1940
Hope had no faith in his skills as a dramatic actor, and his performances of that type were not as well received.[88] He had been well known in radio until the late 1940s; however, as his ratings began to slip in the 1950s, he switched to television and became an early pioneer of that medium.[49][89] He published several books, notably dictating toghostwriters about his wartime experiences.[86]
Although Hope made an effort to keep his material up to date, he never adapted his comic persona or his routines to any great degree. As Hollywood began to transition to the "New Hollywood" era in the 1960s, he reacted negatively, such as when he hosted the40th Academy Awards in 1968 and voiced his contempt by mocking the show's delay because of the assassination ofMartin Luther King Jr. and condescendingly greeted attending younger actors on stage—such asDustin Hoffman, who was 30 at the time—as children.[90] By the 1970s, his popularity was beginning to wane with military personnel and with the movie-going public in general.[91] However, he continued doing USO tours into the 1980s[92] and continued to appear on television into the 1990s. Former First LadyNancy Reagan, a close friend and frequent host to him at the White House, called Hope "America's most honored citizen and our favorite clown".[93]
Hope, a golf fan, putting a golf ball into an ashtray held by PresidentRichard Nixon in theOval Office in 1973
Hope was well known as an avid golfer, playing in as many as 150 charity tournaments a year.[94] Introduced to the game in the 1930s while performing inWinnipeg, Canada,[95] he eventually played to a fourhandicap. His love for the game—and the humor he could find in it—made him a sought-afterfoursome member. He once remarked that PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower gave up golf for painting: "Fewer strokes, you know."[96] He also was quoted as saying, "It's wonderful how you can start out with three strangers in the morning, play 18 holes, and by the time the day is over you have three solid enemies."[97]
A golf club became an integralprop for Hope during the standup segments of his television specials and USO shows. In 1978 he putted against the then-two-year-oldTiger Woods in a television appearance with the actorJimmy Stewart onThe Mike Douglas Show.[98]
TheBob Hope Classic, founded in 1960, made history in 1995 when Hope teed up for the opening round in a foursome that included PresidentsGerald Ford,George H. W. Bush, andBill Clinton, the only time three U.S. presidents played in the same golf foursome.[99] The event, now known as the CareerBuilder Challenge, was one of the fewPGA Tour tournaments that took place over five rounds, until the 2012 tournament when it was cut back to the conventional four.[100]
Hope had a heavy interest in sports beyond golf and his brief fling as a professional boxer in his youth. In 1946, he bought a small stake in theCleveland Indians professional baseball team[101] and held it for most of the rest of his life.[102] He appeared on the June 3, 1963, cover ofSports Illustrated magazine wearing an Indians uniform,[103] and sang a special version of "Thanks for the Memory" after the Indians' last game atCleveland Stadium on October 3, 1993.[104] He also bought a share with Bing Crosby of theLos Angeles Rams football team in 1947, but sold it in 1962.[105] He frequently used his television specials to promote the annual APCollege Football All-America Team. The players would come onstage one by one and introduce themselves, then Hope, often dressed in a football uniform, would give a one-liner about the player or his school.[106]
Hope and his wife Dolores onCapitol Hill as he received an award in 1978
Hope was awarded more than 2,000 honors and awards, including 54 honorary university doctorates. In 1963 PresidentJohn F. Kennedy awarded him theCongressional Gold Medal for service to his country.[107] PresidentLyndon Johnson bestowed thePresidential Medal of Freedom in 1969 for his service to the armed forces through theUSO.[108] In 1982 he received the S. Roger Horchow Award for Greatest Public Service by a Private Citizen, an honor given annually byJefferson Awards.[109] He was presented with theNational Medal of Arts in 1995[110] and received theRonald Reagan Freedom Award in 1997.[111] On June 10, 1980, he became the 64th—and only civilian—recipient of the United States Air ForceOrder of the Sword which recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to the enlisted corps.[112]
In 1978, Hope was invited todot the "i" in theOhio State University Marching Band's "Script Ohio" formation, an honor only given to non-band members on 14 occasions from 1936 through 2016.[120]Woody Allen wrote and narrated a documentary honoring him,My Favorite Comedian, shown atLincoln Center.[121] In Hope's hometown ofCleveland, the refurbishedLorain-Carnegie Bridge was renamed the Hope Memorial Bridge in 1983, though differing claims have been made as to whether the bridge honors Hope himself, his entire family, or his stonemason father who helped in the bridge's construction. Also, East 14th Street nearPlayhouse Square in Cleveland's theater district was renamed Memory Lane-Bob Hope Way in 2003 in honor of the entertainer's 100th birthday.[122]
In 1992, Hope was honored with the "Lombardi Award of Excellence" from the Vince Lombardi Cancer Foundation. The award was created to honor the football coach's legacy, and is awarded annually to an individual who exemplifies his spirit. He was also inducted intoOmicron Delta Kappa, the National Leadership Honor Society, in 1992 atFerris State University. On May 28, 2003, PresidentGeorge W. Bush established theBob Hope American Patriot Award.[123]
13th Academy Awards (1940): Special Award in recognition of his unselfish services to the motion picture industry
17th Academy Awards (1944): Special Award for his many services to the academy
25th Academy Awards (1952): Honorary Award for his contribution to the laughter of the world, his service to the motion picture industry, and his devotion to the American premise
The Hope family; Back, from left: Tony, Dolores, and Linda; Front, from left: Kelly, Bob, and Nora
Hope was briefly married to vaudeville partner Grace Louise Troxell (1912–1992), a secretary from Chicago, Illinois, who was the daughter of Edward and Mary (née McGinnes) Troxell. They were married on January 25, 1933, in Erie, Pennsylvania.[125] They divorced in November 1934.[126]
The couple had shared headliner status with Joe Howard at the Palace Theatre in April 1931, performing "Keep Smiling" and the "Antics of 1931".[127] They worked together at the RKO Albee, performing the "Antics of 1933" along with Ann Gillens and Johnny Peters in June of that year.[128] The following month, singerDolores Reade joined Hope's vaudeville troupe and was performing with him at Loew's Metropolitan Theater. She was described as a "formerZiegfeld beauty and one of society's favorite nightclub entertainers, having appeared at many private social functions at New York, Palm Beach, and Southampton".[129]
His marriage to Reade was fraught with ambiguities. AsRichard Zoglin wrote in his 2014 biographyHope: Entertainer of the Century,
Bob and Dolores always claimed that they married in February 1934 in Erie, Pennsylvania. But at that time, he was secretly married to his vaudeville partner Louise Troxell, after three years together on and off. I found divorce papers for Bob and Louise dated November 1934, so either Bob Hope was a bigamist, or he lied about marrying Dolores in February that year. He had actually married Louise in January 1933 in Erie when they were traveling on the vaudeville circuit. When he claimed he had married Dolores in Erie he was miles away in New York, on Broadway. More intriguing, there is no record anywhere of his marriage to Dolores, if it happened. And there are no wedding photos, either. But he never forgot Louise and quietly sent her money in her later years.[126]
Dolores had been one of Hope's co-stars on Broadway inRoberta. The couple adopted four children: Linda (in 1939), Anthony "Tony" (1940–2004),[130] Kelly (1946), and Eleanora "Nora" (1946).[131] Bob and Dolores were also the legal guardians of Tracey, the youngest daughter of famous New York City bar ownerBernard "Toots" Shor and his wife, Marion "Baby" Shor.[132] In 1935, the couple lived in Manhattan. In 1937, they moved to 10346 Moorpark Street in theToluca Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles, where they would reside until their respective deaths.[133][134]
Hope had a reputation as a womanizer and continued to see other women throughout his marriage.[135] Zoglin wrote that Hope had several "affairs with chorus girls, beauty queens, singers and showbiz wannabes". Women who have claimed to have been romantically linked to Hope includeBarbara Payton,Marilyn Maxwell, andRosemarie Frankland.[136][137][138][139][139][140]
In an interview with Hope biographer Richard Zoglin onNPR he stated that "Bob Hope was the establishment. Bob Hope was friends withNixon. Bob Hope was speaking in favor of theVietnam War. Bob Hope was expressing that kind of backward, suburban,WASP view of minorities,homosexuals, thewomen's movement."[146] Hope's beliefs and attitudes of the social issues are a part of the plot of the 2020 filmMisbehaviour, which follows theWomen's Liberation protests at theMiss World 1970 competition that Hope hosted;Greg Kinnear plays Hope.[147]
After the shootings of President Ronald Reagan andPope John Paul II in 1981, Hope advocated for gun control. Hope toldTom Shales ofThe Washington Post, “I’m for gun registration. I don’t think any jerk that’s coked up or anything should be allowed to walk in a store and buy a gun and turn around and shoot 19 people, you know? … And what the hell, hunters can have their guns, they’re registered. I’ve got a gun in each house for a warning thing; that can be registered … They gotta tell me what’s wrong with having them registered. That’s all I wanna hear.”[148] When Hope shared these views during anABC Radio interview, he quickly realized the repercussions. Vice PresidentGeorge H.W. Bush, who was visitingWest Point the same day Hope taped a special there, had declined to meet with him. Additionally, at a luncheon in Washington that same week, Hope had planned to sit with Nancy Reagan, but she canceled at the last minute.[149]
Hope’s views on the gay community also evolved. At the height ofAnita Bryant’s campaign to reverse the progress of gay rights and anti-discrimination legislation in Florida in 1977, he, as well as many other comedians, ridiculed her in their routines, but also expressed his disagreement with Bryant: “We’re all entitled to our own sexual habits [and] I believe what these people do behind closed doors is their business … Most of us today are aware of Anita Bryant’s stand [but] I still think jobs should be based on talent, not whether a person is homosexual or heterosexual.”[150] However, Texaco and Chrysler, sponsors for many of his TV specials, asked him to refrain from making further jokes about the subject.[151] In February 1986, he joinedElizabeth Taylor, to cohost a benefit for American Foundation for AIDS Research and the Arizona AIDS Fund Trust inScottsdale, AZ.[152] Though expressing these supportive views, he occasionally used epithets and told jokes at the expense of the community yet showed remorse when called on it. During a performance atLiberty Weekend in 1986, Hope remarked, “I just heard that the Statue of Liberty has AIDS, but she doesn't know if she got it from the mouth of the Hudson or the Staten Island Ferry.”[153] Two months later, Hope took responsibility for telling the joke and apologized, explaining that he overheard the joke and thought it was funny.[154] When Hope used the word “fag” on a 1988Tonight Show appearance,GLAAD asked for a statement apologizing for the slur. He agreed to tape an public service announcement opposing "bigotry" on their behalf[155]
Hope, who suffered from vision problems for much of his adult life, served as an active honorary chairman on the board ofFight for Sight, a nonprofit organization in the United States which funds medical research in vision and ophthalmology. He hosted itsLights On telecast in 1960 and donated $100,000 ($1.04M in 2024) to establish the Bob Hope Fight for Sight Fund.[156] Hope recruited numerous top celebrities for the annual "Lights On" fundraiser. As an example, he hosted boxing championJoe Frazier, actressYvonne De Carlo, and singer-actorSergio Franchi as headliners for the April 25, 1971, show at Philharmonic Hall inMilwaukee.[157]
Hope'sModernist 23,366-square-foot (2,171 m2)home, built to resemble a volcano, was designed in 1973 byJohn Lautner. It is located abovePalm Springs, with panoramic views of theCoachella Valley and theSan Jacinto Mountains. It was put on the market for the first time in February 2013 with an asking price of $50 million.[158] Hope also owned a home which had been custom built for him in 1939 on an 87,000-square-foot (8,083 m2) lot in Toluca Lake. That house was put on the market in late 2012.[159] The Palm Springs house sold in November 2016 for $13 million to investorRon Burkle, far below its 2013 asking price.[160]
In July 1997 at age 94, he attended the funeral ofJimmy Stewart, where many pointed out his frail appearance.[161] At the age of 95, Hope made an appearance at the 50th anniversary of thePrimetime Emmy Awards withMilton Berle andSid Caesar. ContemporariesFay Wray andGloria Stuart were also present.[162] Two years later, he was present at the opening of the Bob Hope Gallery of American Entertainment at theLibrary of Congress. The Library of Congress has presented two major exhibitions about Hope's life: "Hope for America: Performers, Politics and Pop Culture" and "Bob Hope and American Variety".[163][164] He last made an appearance at the Hope Classic in 2000, where he hugged Swedish golferJesper Parnevik.[165] In August 2001, Hope was hospitalized forpneumonia.[166]
Graves of Bob and Dolores Hope, on the grounds of the Mission San Fernando Rey de España
Hope celebrated his 100th birthday on May 29, 2003.[167] To mark this event, the intersection ofHollywood and Vine in Los Angeles was named "Bob Hope Square" and his centennial was declared "Bob Hope Day" in 35 states. Even at 100, Hope maintained his self-deprecating sense of humor, quipping, "I'm so old, they've canceled myblood type."[168]
In 1998, five years before his death, a prepared obituary written bythe Associated Press was inadvertently released, resulting in Hope's death being announced on the floor of theU.S. House of Representatives.[171][172] However, Hope remained in relatively good health until late in his old age, though he became somewhat frail in his last few years.[173] In June 2000 at age 97, he spent nearly a week in a California hospital being treated forgastrointestinal bleeding.[174] In August 2001 at age 98, he spent close to two weeks in a hospital recovering frompneumonia.[175]
On the morning of July 27, 2003, Hope died of pneumonia at his home inToluca Lake, California, two months after his 100th birthday.[168] His grandson Zach Hope told TV interviewerSoledad O'Brien that, when asked on his deathbed where he wanted to be buried, Hope is alleged to have told his wife, Dolores, "Surprise me."[176] His remains were temporarily placed in a mausoleum vault at theSan Fernando Mission Cemetery before the construction of the Bob Hope Memorial Garden at theSan Fernando Mission, located next door to the cemetery, in Los Angeles. Dolores died four months after her 102nd birthday in 2011.[177][178] After his death, newspaper cartoonists worldwide paid tribute to his work for the USO, and some featured drawings ofBing Crosby, who had died in 1977, welcoming Hope to Heaven.[179]
^"Bob Hope". Boxing-scoop.com.Archived from the original on July 23, 2012. RetrievedApril 11, 2012.
^Thompson, Charles (1981).Bob Hope: The Road from Eltham. Thames Methuen. p. 57.ISBN9780423000405.he had been naturalized along with his parents and brothers on 20 December 1920
^Mary Claire Campbell, "Bob Hope and His Ladies of Hope: His Mother, Wife and Our Lady of Hope Made All the Difference in His Life", October 19, 2011,[2]Archived June 17, 2018, at theWayback Machine. Retrieved July 14, 2015.
Perret, Gene and Bolton, Martha (1998)Talk About Hope, California, Jester Press, ISBN 978-1-8886-8802-3
Mills, Robert L. (2009).The Laugh Makers: A Behind the Scenes Tribute to Bob Hope's Incredible Gag Writers. Albany, GA: Bear Manor Media.ISBN978-1-59393-323-4.
Young, Jordan R. (1999).The Laugh Crafters: Comedy Writing in Radio and TV's Golden Age. Beverly Hills, CA: Past Times Publishing.ISBN978-0-940410-37-4.
Bolton, Martha (2021), Hope, Linda (2021)Dear Bob... Bob Hope's Wartime Correspondence with the G.I.s of WW2, Mississippi, University Press of Mississippi, ISBN 978-1-4968-3265-8