George Burns

About George Burns

After several unsuccessful attempts at a vaudeville career, Burns's luck changed in 1923, when he formed the Burns and Allen duo with young comic Gracie Allen (he would marry her in 1926). Gracie at first played the "straight man", but her wacky descriptions of her large family managed to garner all the laughs and the team wisely reversed roles. Having become vaudeville stars, the team appeared in several short films, made their feature debut with "The Big Broadcast" (1932) and played in several, mostly forgettable, movies during the 1930s and 40s.

With their low-keyed comic banter, Burns and Allen became a successful radio team and then starred in their own TV series from 1950 until Allen's retirement in 1958 (she died six years later).

Burns continued his career as a solo comedian and made an outstanding film comeback in 1975 with his award-winning performance as a cantankerous old vaudevillian in "The Sunshine Boys". He subsequently appeared in several features, notably as the omniscient title character of Carl Reiner's "Oh, God!" (1977), and continued to smoke his trademark cigars, talk-sing his charming vaudeville-based patter songs, and wryly joke about his ageless virility and various other ups and downs about growing old. As he had promised for years, Burns did indeed make it to age 100 and his centennial birthday was celebrated nationally. Seven weeks later, Burns died in his sleep of natural causes on March 9, 1996.

Partners

Wife

Gracie Allen. Married Jan. 7, 1926 until her death Aug. 27, 1964 from heart ailment

Wife

Hannah Siegal. Burns' dance partner; he claimed marriage was annulled because it was never consummated

Career Milestones

1994

Final film, "Radioland Murders"

1976

Portrayed the Almighty in "Oh, God"; reprised role in two sequels

1975

Returned to screen in "The Sunshine Boys"; won Oscar as Best Supporting Actor

1964

Gracie Allen died

1958

Began performing as solo comedian after Gracie Allen retired

1950

"Burns and Allen" show premiered on TV

1939

Last film before 35-year break from screen, "Honolulu"

1932

Feature film debut, "The Big Broadcast"

1930

"Burns and Allen" show first premiered on radio

1929

Appeared with Allen in 10-minute short film "Lamb Chops", the first of over a dozen shorts for Paramount

1923

Teamed with Gracie Allen; performed on Keith and Orpheum vaudeville circuits

Worked as a trick roller-skater, a dance teacher and vaudeville performer from age 14

Formed a group of children singers called the Peewee Quartet at age eight