In 1941, Bob Hope was asked to perform his popular radio show at March Field, an Army Air Corps base in Riverside, California. As Hope wrote in his 1974 book The Last Christmas Show, the opportunity was too good to pass up. “A captive audience with military police guarding the gates so they can't get out? I said yes and it was one of the happiest yeses in my life.”
Hope would spend the next 49 years entertaining the troops, in the U.S. and overseas, reaching hundreds of thousands of people. His trips called for extensive planning, and required the help of hundreds of pilots and crew chiefs, mechanics, wing duty officers, and many others. We'd like to hear from veterans who helped take these USO shows on the road.
Got your own story about Bob Hope? Drop us a line using the comment form below.
Al Iller was a 34-year-old captain with the 62nd Aviation Company when Hope visited Vinh Long in 1964. Iller returned to Vietnam for a second tour of duty in 1967, and retired from the Army in 1978.
I was the executive officer of the 62nd Aviation Company. There were two aviation companies and attachments stationed at Vinh Long. We were told that Bob Hope and his troupe would arrive there on Christmas Day [1964], so naturally there was a lot of planning, security, and so forth.
The day was very bright and warm, and there were big billowy clouds in the sky. It was a perfect setting. Part of the security was to have some gunships aloft during the performance and through the departure of Bob Hope's troupe. Those gunship crews weren't able to see the show except from way up above.
These were armed UH-1 aircraft. They carried eight-shot rocket pods on each side, plus flexible machine guns, two of which were mounted on each side; the guns could be moved up and down, and right and left.
There were at least two aircraft airborne at all times. It was classified as top secret at the time for security reasons; it was very hush-hush.
Bob Hope worked a joke into the show referring to [Major] Tom Anderson. During Bob Hope's general banter with Janis Paige, Janis commented, “These guys are so lonely for girls that the MPs searched our aircraft for stowaways. They found two Marines and Major Anderson!” Naturally there were hoots and hollers from the crowd. Bob Hope replied, “Major Anderson is so due for a leave his oak leaves rustle!” (Major insignias are gold oak leaves.) Hope then turned to the crowd and said, “For colonels I say their eagles flap their wings.”
At the conclusion of the show, Anita Bryant sang “Silent Night,” and I don't think there was a dry eye in the crowd.
Gary Arney was a star-struck 19-year-old Private First Class when he served as security escort to comedienne Phyllis Diller on board the USS Bennington in 1966.
I heard about Bob Hope's visit the day before from a sergeant. He wanted to assign people [as security escorts] who weren't going to be on duty at the time. I happened to get Phyllis Diller, which was an honor. She was one heck of a nice woman.
She was really funny all the time, always cutting up. She treated everybody with a lot of respect. She was just great to be around. And that laugh of hers…I can't get over that.
I took her from the wardroom to the stage and then back to the room she was staying in, down in Officers' Country. I stood by in case she needed anything and to make sure no one bothered her.
When Bob Hope came out on the stage he saw the first two rows or so were officers. He looked down at them, and he told them to get up and get to the back, and for the enlisted men in the back to get in the front, and then he'd start the show.


Comments
I enjoyed the Bob Hope USO tour greatly. It caused me to retrieve my scrapbook from my USO trip. I was a young captain stationed at McChord AFB, WA, (six months after returning from a Viet Nam tour) in 1970 when that Wing was selected to fly the USO trip. I still don't know how or why I was selected but I was second in command to Major Mervil Kaiser for the trip. We flew east around the world. The troupe performed at West Point, Lakenheath AB, England, Rhein Main AB, Germany, on the carrier USS John F. Kennedy at Souda Bay, Crete, at various Viet Nam and Thailand bases, South Korea, and Elmendorf AFB, Alaska. In addition to Mr. Hope and Les Brown and the band, the performers included the Ding-a-Lings and the Golddiggers from the Dean Martin variety show, Johnny Bench, Ursula Andress, Lola Falana, Gloria Loring, Bobbi Martin, and Jennifer Hosten, Miss World that year. (Some names will mean nothing to your younger readers.) The rest of the crew included Captain Ernest W. Elston, Jr., Major Jack H. Greer, Captain Alan C. Ferner, TSGT Lawrence M. Nelthropp, TSGT Robert D. Miller, TSGT Gerald R. Vinson, MSGT Stanley B. McAvenia, SSGT Janes E. Young, and SSGT Bill J. Lamb.
Posted by GARY R WEAVER on November 22,2009 | 01:06PM
On Christmas Eve, 1987, we were on the USS Midway, in the Gulf of Oman, outside the Persian Gulf. We’d already spent many months at sea that year and had most recently departed our Japanese homes in mid-October. We would not return until April or May 1988, but Midway had an adventurous crew and their spirits were always quite good. This Christmas, Bob Hope was making a tour; I believe it was one of his last Christmas tours to a Navy warship deployed overseas. His show that year featured Barbara Eden as the leading lady and included several other attractive women. The stage was set up in hangar bay 1, forward, with the performers facing aft at an audience of several thousand appreciative sailors filling both hangar bays. There were a few unscheduled stops during the show, perhaps to adjust the sound or reload the cameras. During a long pause in the filming, a dozen or so junior officers in a group sitting together started an impromptu chorus singing Christmas carols - a cappella, since the band had also taken a break. There's always some talent in any group of people, and after they got going, those guys sounded surprisingly good. They stood up to sing, facing the entertainers. This drew the performers, most prominently Barbara Eden and the ladies, back to the edge of stage to watch and listen. You could see their smiles radiating; they'd come to entertain the troops, and instead, here they were themselves being serenaded – on Christmas Eve, eight thousand miles from home, by young aviators on an aircraft carrier at sea.
Posted by Dan Bagnell on November 22,2009 | 07:49PM
During the early years of the VietNam war I would religiously watch the Bob Hope Christmas TV specials. I just loved the support he gave to the troops and always wanted to be a part of one. In 1970 while stationed at Kunsan AB Korea we heard that the Hope show would appear at Osan AB about 86 air miles north of Kunsan. The Kunsan-based C-54 ferried interested airmen to Osan and back for the show. I and some other barracks-mates arrived at the show site and worked our way toward the stage. I ended up directly below the center camera stand and shot some great photos with a long lens camera. My mates worked their way to directly in front of the stage and had to aim their cameras up to get the photo. We debated for a couple of weeks who had the better photos. I bought a DVD of the Bob Hope Show at Osan and finally saw the edited show this year. Thank goodness for technology, I can relive the show any time.
Posted by Rob Teitsma on November 24,2009 | 09:28AM
I was an elisted man working in the Post Office of The U.S.S. Bennington CVS-20 when Bob Hope's Christmas Show came aboard in 1966. Being from a little town in South Carolina I had never seen a movie or tv star in person. I had watched Bob Hope on tv and really liked him but to have him give his time to entertain us is something I'll never forget. I still have many pictures I took that day. I looked at them for the first time in a long time. Thanks to all those entertainers who did what they did for the armed services then, and the ones continuing today. It means more than they may ever know.
Posted by wilson mcduffie on November 24,2009 | 02:25PM
I just want to say "Thanks for the memories" to Bob Hope, the USO and all the support crew, like Capt Gary Weaver who posted earlier, that brought some joy to us young guys away from our families for the 1st time at Christmas back in 1970 in SEA.
Posted by Bill Doyle on December 17,2009 | 01:17PM