The laughter dies

 

1957_0715_abbott_costello_hed

1957_0715_abbott_costello_pix
July 15, 1957

Los Angeles

They had been through triumph and tragedy, and spent more time together
than many married couples. But it was time for a change. The scripts
were lousy and getting worse. One of them wanted to keep working and
the other wanted to quit and raise thoroughbreds.

So Bud Abbott and Lou Costello split the act. Abbott, the straight man,
was going to retire to his ranch in Ojai. Costello, the pudgy comedian,
was going solo–he didn’t want to work with anyone else.

Soon it was Abbott vs. Costello in a $222,465 lawsuit over money from a
TV contract, although the men apparently remained friends.

And in less than two years, Costello was gone. He was hospitalized
after he collapsed in an apartment at 4222 Ethel Ave., where his
family was living while a home was being built at 3322 Longridge
Terrace, Van Nuys. At the time of his death, Costello had some TV dates
on Steve Allen’s show and was to appear at the Dunes in Las Vegas.

There are too many stories about Costello to repeat them all, but the
tragic death of Lou Costello Jr. shortly before his first birthday is
worth exploring.

In 1943, Costello and his family were living at 4124 Longridge Ave.,
in Sherman Oaks. On the afternoon of Nov. 4, 1943, while Costello was
at NBC rehearsing for his first radio show in a year, his wife, Anne,
had put their son, Lou "Butch" Costello Jr., in a playpen in the
backyard. Anne Costello said she looked out and saw Butch in his
playpen about 2:30 p.m. and when she looked out again a few moments
later, he was gone.

1957_0715_costello_butch
"Racing into the yard, she ran
to the swimming pool and found the child floating face-down in water a
foot and one-half deep," The Times said.

"She pulled him from the water and screamed for help. Two neighbors,
Mrs. Bert Gutterman and Mrs. William Holmes, rushed to her aid and Mrs.
Gutterman began giving artificial respiration. Mrs. Holmes called for
an inhalator and Firemen Alvin M. Hull and Paul S. Johnson worked over
the boy for more than an hour before Dr. Vincent Kovner pronounced him dead." 

Costello rushed home, arriving just as the firefighters were leaving.
"Grief-stricken, he wandered to the swimming pool and stood looking at
the pale blue waters for an hour until Dr. Kovner persuaded him to
enter the home and rest," The Times said.

Although Jimmy Durante, Bob Hope, Mickey Rooney and Red Skelton
volunteered to take his place, Costello insisted that
the show must go on. He returned to the studio and did the radio show
with Abbott and Lana Turner. At the end of the program, Costello rushed
from the stage, his face streaked with tears. Then Abbott announced
Butch Costello’s death.

Abbott received word of Lou Costello’s death as he was watching one of
their old pictures on TV. They were doing their trademark routine,
"Who’s on First?"

Costello was entombed in a crypt at Calvary Cemetery near his son. He was 52.

Bud Abbott died in 1974, virtually broke after he sold most of his assets to settle income tax claims by the IRS.

 

1957_0715_abbott_costell_1943
 Abbott and Costello, 1943

Note: Proof that IMDB is not always reliable. It says Costello died in
East L.A. He actually died at Doctor’s Hospital in Beverly Hills.

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About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times
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5 Responses to The laughter dies

  1. Me's avatar Me says:

    Why would he return to do the show? I have always been a huge Abbott and Costello fan, but when I read this I felt ashamed of Mr. Costello.
    Your son died, the show does not have to go on.
    Shame on you Lou. Rest in Peace.

    Like

  2. Rob Vellini's avatar Rob Vellini says:

    Actually, Lou told his wife to keep the baby up that night to see if he would recognize his father’s voice on the air. It was Lou’s first night back on his radio show with Bud after being away sick for several weeks with rheumatic fever. He went on the air to keep his promise…at the end of the program Bud told both the studio and national audience about the tragedy. Bud was also Butch’s godfather.

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  3. Rick Pennock's avatar Rick Pennock says:

    Thank you for posting this. I am a huge fan still to this day.

    Like

  4. Jason's avatar Jason says:

    I don’t understand the history of the home that was mentioned.
    The home was “being built” at 3322 Longridge Terrace, Van Nuys, in about the mid 1950’s. A brand new home owned by a famous celeb.
    Yet today on Google, the location is an older apartment building that is probably about 40 years old.
    So how did that likely very nice celeb house fade into the rubble of history so quickly? If the apartment building is about 40 years old, that meant that the celeb house was only about 20 years or so old when it was demolished?

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  5. Larry's avatar Larry says:

    Jason, try again. I just did a search and Google took me to the home.

    Like

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