
Wendell Niles
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wendell Niles (December 29, 1904 – March 28, 1994) was one of the great announcers of the American golden age of radio. He was an announcer on such shows as The Charlotte Greenwood Show, Hedda Hopper's Hollywood, The Adventures of Philip Marlowe,[2] The Man Called X,[3] The Bob Hope Show, The Burns & Allen Show, The Milton Berle Show and The Chase and Sanborn Hour . On February 15, 1950, Wendell starred in the radio pilot for The Adventures of the Scarlet Cloak along with Gerald Mohr.
He began in entertainment by touring in the 1920s with his own orchestra, playing with the Dorsey Brothers and Bix Beiderbecke.
Niles moved to Los Angeles, California, in 1935 to join George Burns and Gracie Allen.
He and his brother, Ken, developed one of the first radio dramas, which eventually became Theatre of the Mind.
-Los Angeles Magazine- How the intersection got its claim to fame
Q: Why is the intersection of Hollywood and Vine famous? There’s nothing there.
A: In May 1936, Wendell Niles from radio station KFWB brought a microphone to the corner and started a man-on-the-street program. “Niles was a big announcer on radio shows for Bob Hope and George Burns,” says L.A. vocal legend Gary Owens. Niles’s popularization of the corner as shorthand for Hollywood was copied by newspaper reporters and gossip columnists alike and even led to the (terrible) feature film Hollywood and Vine, which was released in 1945. The radio show is gone, but you can still watch celebrities through the glass at the online entertainment network BiteSize TV, whose studios are located in the W Hotel.
He toured with Bob Hope during World War II and narrated a 1936 Academy Award-winning short film on the life of tennis great Bill Tilden.
Among his film credits is Knute Rockne, All American with Ronald Reagan.
Wendell Niles was the announcer for "America's Show Of Surprises"..."It Could Be You", and the Hatos-Hall production "Your First Impression". Niles was also the original announcer for Let's Make a Deal during that show's first season in 1963 and 1964; he was later replaced by Jay Stewart.
Wendell and his brother Ken Niles are the first brothers to have stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
He died of cancer in his Toluca Lake home at the age of 89.
Gallery


Known For
Acting History
1963
Let's Make a Deal as Self - Announcer
1956Hollywood or Bust as Wendell Niles (uncredited)
1956Beyond a Reasonable Doubt as Announcer
1956A Strange Adventure as Newscaster (uncredited)
1955The Square Jungle
1955I Died a Thousand Times as Radio Announcer (uncredited)
1953The Hitch-Hiker as Wendell Niles
1948Street Corner as Wendell Niles
1945Swingin' on a Rainbow as Radio Announcer
1945Hitchhike to Happiness as Wendell Niles (uncredited)
1943Here Comes Elmer as Radio Announcer
1943The Masked Marvel as Newscaster
1942A Tragedy at Midnight as Show Announcer
1941Harmon of Michigan as Wendell Niles
1941A Man Betrayed as Radio Announcer (uncredited)
1940Fashion Horizons
1940Three Faces West as Man-on-the-Street Radio Announcer
1940Gaucho Serenade as Radio Announcer
1939Four Wives as Concert Radio Announcer (uncredited)
1939The Roaring Twenties as Self - Announcer (uncredited)
1939Espionage Agent as Radio Announcer Introducing Garrett
1939Indianapolis Speedway as First Radio Announcer
1938Cowboy from Brooklyn as Radio Announcer
1937Ever Since Eve as Monteray Police Announcer (uncredited)
1937Marked Woman as Radio News Commentator (voice) (uncredited)
1932The Crowd Roars as First Radio Announcer









