Classic Movie Travels: The Harris-Faye Collection

Hailing from the small town of Linton, Indiana…

If you don’t recognize Phil Harris by name, you’ll certainly recognize him by his voice. Hailing from the small town of Linton, Indiana, Harris developed a career as an established bandleader in the 1930s. Afterwards, he took a job as musical director for Jack Benny. There, he proved to be an excellent supporting comic, and quickly became a beloved character on The Jack Benny Program.

Phil Harris and Alice FayePhil Harris and Alice Faye

In 1941, Harris married actress Alice Faye. The couple hosted the Fitch Bandwagon Show from 1946 to 1948 and moved on to their own radio program, The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show, from 1948 to 1954. While Phil’s character was originally written as more of a philanderer on Benny’s program, he was very effectively revised as a devoted husband and father. The writers for Harris’ show played upon the ideas of Benny’s writers, and continued crafting Harris’ character around the same image. Harris played an egotistical bandleader, while Faye was his movie starlet-turned-wife, and they both shone in a comedy based upon domestic life.

Working two radio shows at the same time proved to be quite the juggling act. On the Jack Benny show, Harris would greet Benny with a throaty, “Hiya, Jackson!,” perform in a skit or song, and shout, “Bye, Jackson!” on the way out. He would only appear for the first half of the Jack Benny show. He’d then run down the block to the next studio, just in time to catch his own radio show with a “Hiya, Alice!” and continue on through the remainder of the program. In 1952, he was succeeded as Benny’s orchestra leader by Bob Crosby, younger brother of Bing Crosby.

Throughout his long show business career, Harris remained grateful to radio for the difference it made in his professional and personal life. “If it hadn’t been for radio,” he was quoted as saying, “I would still be a traveling orchestra leader. For 17 years I played one-night stands, sleeping on buses. I never even voted, because I didn’t have any residence.”

Phil Harris and Alice FayeAfter his radio show ended in 1954, he faded from Hollywood life and spent time as a businessman in Palm Springs, while becoming a spokesperson and benefactor for its golf courses. Additionally, he was a benefactor of his birthplace, Linton, and established scholarships in his honor for high school students, performed at the high school, and hosted a celebrity golf tournament at the Phil Harris Golf Course each year in the first week of June.

On May 5, 1979 (Faye’s birthday), the Phil Harris-Alice Faye Collection was dedicated in Linton, Indiana. It was an outgrowth of a tradition begun in 1979 in Linton, Harris’s boyhood home. “Weekend with Phil” was designed as a festival theme that would encompass sporting events and awards given out on behalf of the newly established Harris-Faye Scholarship Foundation.

the Phil Harris-Alice Faye Collection in Linton, Indiana.

the Phil Harris-Alice Faye Collection in Linton, Indiana.

Harris and Faye donated most of their show business memorabilia and papers to Linton’s Margaret Cooper Public Library in 1979 in connection with the first Phil Harris weekend at his golf course. This is one of the most important legacies Harris left to his hometown of Linton. Various clubs, along with church and school groups have visited the collection in Linton. According to a 1989 article from the Linton Daily Citizen, the annual Phil Harris Scholarship festival, highlighted by golf and other sporting events, has averaged 2,000 visitors per year, with a general 25% increase in local business. While Faye was often recognized in town, few people intruded upon her privacy. She was content to visit the various events, often in the company of her daughters and grandchildren, perform a song at the weekend celebrity dinner, and dutifully appear before local photographers, before returning to Rio Mirage.

the Phil Harris-Alice Faye Collection in Linton, Indiana., plaque

Since then, the collection has shifted around quite a bit. While the collection was originally located upstairs in the Margaret Cooper Public Library, in the spring of 1998, the collection was relocated to the basement of the current Regions Bank at 89 West Vincennes Street.

Sadly, the collection now includes memorabilia relating to Phil Harris’ death on August 11, 1995, at age 91, just a few weeks after he returned to his beloved Linton for his last Phil Harris Scholarship Festival. Harris’ remains now rest in California, but a large part of him and his life continues to live on in the Harris-Faye Collection in his hometown of Linton, Indiana.”

Today, Linton, Indiana is still a small town of roughly 5,800 people. It stands like a town that time forgot, with a very small one-stop downtown area, gravel roads, and trademark “You’ll Like Linton” signs.

the Phil Harris-Alice Faye Collection in Linton, Indiana.

Now, the Harris-Faye collection resides in the Carnegie Heritage and Arts Center of Greene County, located at 110 E. Vincennes St., Linton, IN 47441. The building is mostly a shop for local art, and the collection is tucked away in its own corner. Luckily it is free to view the Harris-Faye collection, and there is ample street parking available. The usual hours of operation are Thurs-Fri 12-4, Sat 12-4.

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–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek is an independent scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age and Travel Writer for Classic Movie Hub. You can read more about Annette’s Classic Movie Travels at Hometowns to Hollywood

 

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10 Responses to Classic Movie Travels: The Harris-Faye Collection

  1. John Grant says:

    Fascinating — many thanks!

  2. Vienna says:

    Very interesting. Must try and hear some of Phil and Alice on radio.

  3. W.G. Forrester says:

    I only discovered the radio show later in life but growing up with Baloo the Bear at least let me know who Phil Harris was, and, as I got older, I saw him on American Sportsman and loved the stories he would tell. Since finding OTR their show had become one of my favorites.

  4. Paul says:

    Thank you for this article. It is a fascinating read and such a touching reminder that Phil Harris and Alice Faye gave back to the communities that they came from.

    @Vienna – If you are interested in hearing some of the old Phil Harris radio shows, then the Old Time Radio Researchers Library have some for free download. You can find them here – http://otrrlibrary.org – I hope it’s OK to link that site here.

  5. A wonderful tribute to Alice Faye and Phil Harris. I always wondered how he juggled two radio shows back in the day, and what you described was a clever way to handle it. (I often listen to Jack Benny and the Alice/Phil shows on Sirius.) Thanks for sharing this with us!

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