Marlin Hurt

A saxophone player and vocalist, born in Du Quoin, Illinois, Hurt was a singer with the Vincent Lopez band and on records with Frank Trumbauer's jazz group before becoming part of a vocal trio with Bud and Gordon Vandover billed as "Tom, Dick, and Harry".

When the act was dissolved due to Bud Vandover's death in 1943, Hurt became a solo performer with a combination of saxophone and dialect humor.

[1] Hurt's inspiration for the Beulah voice was an African-American woman named Mary who cooked for his family.

While he was using this characterization on The Fred Brady Show, the summer 1943 replacement for The Bob Burns Show on NBC, Fibber McGee writer Don Quinn "discovered" Hurt for a widespread audience, and cast Hurt/Beulah as the McGees' maid on what was one of the highest-rated radio programs.

[2] (Beulah would continue, but after a brief stint with Bob Corley as the lead, actual black women starred in the title role from 1947 onward.

Marlin Hurt