Harry Richman Net Worth

Harry Richman Net Worth is
$300,000

Harry Richman Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Harry Richman (August 10, 1895 – November 3, 1972) was an American entertainer. He was a singer, actor, dancer, comedian, pianist, songwriter, bandleader, and night club performer, at his most popular in the 1920s and 1930s.Richman was born as Harold Reichman in Cincinnati, Ohio to Russian Jewish parents. He changed his name to "Harry Richman" at age 18, by which time he was already a professional entertainer in vaudeville. He worked as a piano accompanist to such stars as Mae West and Nora Bayes. With Bayes' act he made his Broadway debut in 1922. He appeared in several editions of the George White's Scandals in the 1920s to acclaim. He appeared in the 1931 Ziegfeld Follies.He made his feature movie debut in Hollywood in 1930 with the film Puttin' on the Ritz, featuring the Irving Berlin song of the same title, which gave Richman a phonograph record hit that year. His film career was short lived due to his somewhat overpowering personality, and his limited acting skills. (Leonard Maltin wrote of Puttin' on the Ritz: "A songwriter drinks and goes blind - after seeing this you'll want to do the same".) This made little difference to his career as he remained a popular nightclub host and stage performer.His yacht Chevalier II exploded in July 1931.Richman was also an amateur aviator of some accomplishment, being the co-pilot in 1936, with famed flyer Henry Tindall "Dick" Merrill, of the first round-trip transatlantic flight in his own single-engine Vultee transport. Richman had filled much of the empty space of the aircraft with ping pong balls as a flotation aid in case they were forced down in the Atlantic, and after the successful flight he sold autographed ones until his death. They continue to turn up on eBay to this day.He also made regular radio broadcasts in the 1930s. He married Hazel Forbes, show girl and Ziegfeld Girl, in March 1938, in Palm Springs, California. He and Forbes shared a sumptuous home in Beechurst, Long Island. Shortly after their wedding Forbes contracted pneumonia and was saved, in part, through the use of the drug sulfanilamide. The couple considered adopting a baby. By 1942 Forbes was divorced from Richman.Richman largely retired in the 1940s, although he made irregular appearances, including on television, into the 1950s.His autobiography A Hell of a Life was published in 1966.Harry Richman died in Hollywood, California.

Date Of BirthAugust 10, 1895
Died1972-11-03
Place Of BirthCincinnati, Ohio, USA
Height5' 11" (1.8 m)
ProfessionSoundtrack, Actor, Music Department
Star SignLeo
#Quote
1[1970] Back in the old days, I could walk out of some of the best joints in New York with a beautiful broad on each arm. Nowadays, I walk out of the supermarket with a shopping bag on each arm.
#Fact
1He had a shot as host of The Milton Berle Show (1958) in the summer of 1948. Although it is remembered as Milton Berle's show today, NBC chose to test emcees throughout that summer. Other hosts included Morey Amsterdam, Georgie Price, Henny Youngman, Jack Carter and Peter Donald. Berle clicked with audiences and was chosen as the show's permanent star by September, 1948.
2Popular singer and occasional actor of the 1920s and 30s.
3Dateline 1936: "Famed aviator Henry Tindall "Dick" Merrill [Dick Merrill] was determined to make the first round-trip crossing of the Atlantic Ocean and heard a rumor that entertainer Harry Richman had just bought an ex-TWA single-engine Vultee transport. Richman was appearing in Miami Beach and during a break from his usual NY-Miami run, Dick decided it might be worthwhile to take in Richman's act. Richman spotted the celebrity flyer in the audience and immediately began to brag about his new baby, hangared out at Floyd Bennett Airport. Dick replied that he'd be happy to inspect the plane and made an offhand suggestion that they "take the plane to Europe... then we'll gas her up and fly her back. It's never been done." Out of this sprang the first round-trip trans-Atlantic flight, nicknamed Lady Peace. Co-pilot Richman would eventually dump about $360,000 of his own money, along with Eastern Airlines getting into the act by assisting in modifying Harry's Vultee, equipping it with a 1,000 HP Wright Cyclone G5 engine with a constant speed 2-blade prop on loan along with larger fuel tanks. Another one of Harry's contributions was to stuff some 40,000 ping-pong balls (which occasionally pop up for sale on eBay these days) into the wings and fuselage as flotation insurance. The historic September 1936 flight would nearly go down in disaster when Harry panicked, misinterpreting a statement made by Dick and dumped nearly all of the remaining fuel over the Atlantic on the return flight. The Vultee ended up in a wooded mountain slope in Port Jervis, NY, about 50 miles short of their Newark, NJ, destination. The crash caused relatively little damage, but the impact took out several of Merrill's front teeth. Upon arriving on scene, EAL honcho Eddie Rickenbacker had to literally pull Merrill off Richman at the scene of the crash. Many of the 10 passengers on board praised Merrill's flying skill, commenting they weren't even aware that the place had, in fact, crashed! Richman is little known today but he holds a strange place in aviation history as the co-pilot, principal financier and very nearly the destroyer of the first round-trip trans-Atlantic flight.

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
True Blood2009TV Series music - 1 episode
Doctor Who2007TV Series performer - 1 episode
The Blues2003TV Series documentary writer - 1 episode
Somebody or The Rise and Fall of Philosophy1989Short performer: "Puttin' on the Ritz"
Kelly and Me1957writer: "SINGING A VAGABOND SONG"
Rich, Young and Pretty1951writer: "There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie" - uncredited
Texaco Star Theatre1948TV Series performer - 1 episode
The Playboy1938performer: "You're What's The Matter With Me", "Mayfair Merry-Go-Round"
The Music Goes 'Round1936writer: "Rolling Along", "This Is Love", "Let's Go", "Suzannah", "There'll Be No South"
Betty Boop's Bizzy Bee1932Short music: "There Ought to Be a Moonlight Saving Time" - uncredited
Mr. Robinson Crusoe1932writer: "Singing a Vagabond Song" - uncredited
The Thirteenth Prisoner1930Short lyrics: "Ro-Ro-Rolling Along" - uncredited
Near the Rainbow's End1930writer: "Ro-Ro-Rollin' Along"
Clinching a Sale1930Short performer: "Buy a Bergman Broom", "Smiles" - uncredited
Puttin' on the Ritz1930performer: "With You" 1930, "There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie" 1930 uncredited, "Puttin' on the Ritz" 1930 / writer: "There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie" 1930, "Singing a Vagabond Song" 1930 - uncredited
Synthetic Sin1929music: "Muddy Water" - uncredited
The Larry Ceballos Revue1928Short writer: "Miss Annabelle Lee", "Muddy Water" - uncredited
Earl Burtnett and His Biltmore Hotel Orchestra1928/IShort writer: "Miss Annabelle Lee" - uncredited

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Playboy1938Harry
The Music Goes 'Round1936Harry Wallace
I Love a Parade/II1932ShortSinger
Clinching a Sale1930ShortSalesman
Puttin' on the Ritz1930Harry Raymond

Music Department

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Stars Over Arizona1937composer: song "Ro-Ro-Rollin' Along"
The Saddle Buster1932composer: song "Rollin' Along"

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Ed Sullivan Show1952-1963TV SeriesHimself
The Big Record1958TV SeriesHimself
The Jackie Gleason Show1952TV SeriesHimself - Guest Musical Composer
Texaco Star Theatre1948-1951TV SeriesHimself - Singer / Dancer / Himself - Comic / ...
Screen Snapshots Series 9, No. 111930ShortHimself
Hollywood Snapshots #111929Documentary shortHimself

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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