Thanks For the Memories
Air crews recall their service as roadies for Bob Hope's USO show.
- By Rebecca Maksel
- Air & Space magazine, January 2010
He starred in the Ziegfeld Follies with Fanny Brice and Josephine Baker in the 1930s, traveled the Vaudeville circuit as one half of a dancing team, and made more than 60 movies, including seven Road pictures with his pal Bing Crosby. But what most people remember about Bob Hope is that he entertained U.S. troops with annual USO tours in war zones all over the world.
"Along about September each year," Hope wrote in his 1966 memoir, Five Women I Love, "that tingle in the air is not the first sign of autumn in the San Fernando Valley. It's the annual stirring among my staff concerning where the Defense Department is sending us this year. Each summer the Joint Chiefs of Staff gather with the U.S.O. and commiserate, ‘He got back okay last Christmas…okay, let's try harder.' Then they drop little pieces of paper listing all the world's trouble spots into a hat, and humming choruses from Macbeth they stir gently."
Hope performed his first radio show for servicemen in March 1941 at an Army Air Corps base at March Field in Riverside, California, and for the next 50 years he took his show to some of the world's most dangerous places. He ducked air raids in Italy and Algeria during World War II. During a 1964 visit to Saigon, a Viet Cong truck bomb intended for Hope exploded 10 minutes before his troupe arrived at their hotel. "A funny thing happened as we arrived in Saigon," Hope later joked to the troops. "I met my hotel going the other way."
When he wasn't visiting bases or aircraft carriers, he was entertaining the war-wounded in hospitals. Over the years, under the auspices of the United Service Organizations, Hope reached hundreds of thousands.
But his trips required extensive planning, and they couldn't have been carried out without the help of pilots and navigators, wing duty officers and mechanics, crew chiefs, and many others. Here are a few of their stories.
Alaska, 1942
Retired Air Force Colonel Robert Gates flew Hope to Alaska and the Aleutians for the first-ever USO show. He also flew Hope to shows in Europe after World War II, and to Vietnam in the 1960s. Gates spent more than 30 years in the Army Air Forces and Air Force, serving in Europe during World War II as a troop transport pilot for the 101st and 82nd Airborne. In 1985, Gates and Hope helped establish the Bob Hope Village, a retirement community in Shalimar, Florida.
In 1942, we went down and checked out in the admiral's airplane—a Lockheed Lodestar C-60—in Kodiak, Alaska. And the general said to me, "You've got to go and pick up the admiral's airplane and go up to Fairbanks and pick up a USO show."
I said, "What's a USO show?"
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Comments (5)
I was stationed at Cam Rahn Bay Airbase in 1971. Having heard that Bob Hope wouldn't come to Cam Rahn, I didn't think of being able to see him. In December the base commander decided that all of the personnel that were being considered for the Airman Of The Month Award would be flown to Bien Hoa to see the Bob Hope Show at Long Binh. I was one of the Airmen under consideration so I was able to fly from Cam Rahn to Bien Hoa and enjoy the show. I didn't win the Airman Of The Month award, but the trip to see Bob Hope was worth much more to me than that.
Posted by Willard Brush on November 23,2009 | 03:44 PM
I was at Vinh Long in 1964 when Mr. Hope gave his show. Unfortunately I was one of the armed helicopters flying cover for him during the performance. I flew with the 114th Aviation Company Cobras, the armed platoon of the Knights of the Air. We did make it back for about the last 10 minutes of the show. I was thrilled to see those people. It made my day and I was proud to be able to protect MR. Hope. Thanks for the memories Bob, you will always be my hero.
Posted by Lane Ramsdell on February 3,2010 | 10:25 AM
I was the USAF detachment commander at Rota when the show diverted there in 1987. We provided en route support for MAC aircraft and served as liaison to the Navy. I got the call that the Bob Hope show was diverting and drove down to the Capt Smith's (USN) house to tell the CO what was happening. The next hours were a blur! The excitement was instant. First to get all the needed base support moving and then to get the word out quickly, when the show was set. The great attitude of the show entourage and the aircrew was amazing. Great memories. I was walking Mr Hope back to the aircraft the next day after their show and overnight stay. It was a pretty long walk. He looked at me, smiled, and said, "You guys don't drive a lot around here, do you?"
Posted by Steve Norris, USAF Retired on February 25,2010 | 11:29 AM
I believe it was Christmas Day 1970 that Bob Hope, Johnny Bench, Lola Falana, Dean Martin's Gold Diggers and Les Brown's band landed at Bien Hoa Air Base, enroute to do a big show at Long Binh--we didn't rate one. I worked nights as a Security Police air base defender but stayed up to watch the arrival. The base brass welcomed them as they prepared to convoy overland to Long Binh but we lucked out. Bob and several of the beautiful ladies on the tour came out on the ramp and mingled with us commoners for a few minutes, tossing jokes and letting the guys enjoy the "eye-candy". I have pictures if you would like me to email them your way. My mom got his autograph on a cross country plane ride some years later but I regret it's disappeared since she passed away. My last duty assignment prior to retiring from the Air Force after 36 years of service, was March Field, just down the street from his first USO radio show at our gym! Yes: thanks for the memories! And thanks for a great magazine and Museum!
Bob Phone 951 696-3916
Posted by Robert DeCubellis on April 30,2010 | 01:10 AM
I saw the show with Bob Hope, the Gold Diggers, Bobby Martin, Lola Falana,Johnny Bench and Miss World in
Long Binh in 1970. But then I had the privilege to go to the after show reception and got to meet them personally.
I will alway remember and cherish shaking his hand and having someone take a picture of that moment.
Posted by Frank Benfiglio on May 6,2010 | 04:36 PM