Source: WV History Film Project
WEST VIRGINIA ROLL 9, 4/2/92, EARL
SUMMERS INTERVIEW
EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW, TAKE 1,
CAMERA ROLL 91, SOUND ROLL 9
Q: Earl, tell me the story of how Its Wheeling
Steel got started?
JJAE 0041
ES: Back in 1935, my dad and I and quite other
musicians around town were what we call
'free-lancing' at the radio station. We did commercial
broadcasts for like Richert Furniture Company and
the Keebends? Furniture Company and things like
that. We worked very closely with Walter Patterson,
who was the program director at WWVA at the time.
Mr. John Grimes from Wheeling Steel approached
Walter Patterson about the feasibility of having a
program sponsored by Wheeling Steel where they
could have an orchestra to accompany different
headliners from the factory. In other words, like if
they had a clarinet player or a vocalist or an
accordionist, they would feature them as a headliner
and they would have a weekly program. Dad and I
were both pretty active in the music scene back then.
We were both playing with the symphony, and I had a
dance band. We formed an orchestra; we picked out
people who could play both types of music. Primarily
it was a dance band, but we had five or six legitimate
players who could play the classical music too. We
formed -- I think back then we got sixteen or
seventeen men, something like that --
JJAE 0178
Q: Can I interrupt you a second? ...
EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW, TAKE 2, CAMERA ROLL 91, SOUND ROLL 9
Q: Earl, I want to back up just a little bit. It's
1936; it's the middle of the Depression. Why embark
on something -- why did Wheeling Steel want in on
something so extravagant as making a radio
show?
JJAE 0210
ES: When they first went into this, they didn't
anticipate going nationwide; it was just a sort of
employee relations thing that they wanted to give
some of the employees that had talent to show their
ware. So they got this idea a radio program where
they would be the headliners and they would be
accompanied by an orchestra which they would rarely
would have an opportunity to do without somebody
sponsoring it. John Grimes had approached Walter
Patterson about the feasibility of it. Walter talked to
my dad and I who at that time were free lancing at the
radio station on various commercial broadcasts and
asked us if we could get up an orchestra that could
play all types of music. They didn't want symphonic,
and they didn't want it strictly jazz. I had a band at
the time, and there was a band here. Nyles Carp? had
a band. We took actually the best musicians from
both orchestras, and then we added a few legitimate
people who played symphonic music, but still
understood the jazz. We started an orchestra then. At
the same time, they got a mixed quartet which was
similar to the quartets that were singing in churches at
that time. There was a tenor, a baritone, an alto, and
a soprano. They were more or less used as a variety
to support some of these home talent people that they
pulled out of the steel mills itself.
JJAE 0375
We broadcast for a year locally with that group.
They found out that they could produce a network
show for the same amount of money that they were
paying for a Saturday Evening Post ad once a week.
They pulled the Saturday Evening Post ad,
and they decided to go commercial the next year, not
nationwide but we started out on ...
Q: Can we stop a second and that pick up? ...
EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW, TAKE 3, CAMERA ROLL 91, SOUND ROLL 9
Q: Tell me how the people behind the show
realized that it could be more than just a local talent
show and what they did about that?
ES: As I said, they went into the cost of what they
could produce it for and they found out they could
have the show on a bigger scale than what they were
doing it simply by taking their ad out of the
Saturday Evening Post, which was a weekly
affair, and putting that money towards the program.
Now, when we first started to broadcast, the first year
we were just broadcasting on two stations -- that was
a station in Portsmouth, Ohio, and WWVA here in
Wheeling. Then the next year we went on Mutual
over WOR in Newark, New Jersey and we were on
five stations. We had the Portsmouth station,
WWVA, WLW, and I don't know what the other ones
were, but there were five stations. We stayed that
way until 1939, when they switched over the NBC
Blue Network. We were still on the Mutual when we
went to the World's Fair in 1939.
JJAE 0555
Q: I'm going to ask you about that in a few
minutes, but first what does it say about the musical
heritage of Wheeling that a national radio show can
just kind of be dreamed up out of thin air?
ES: Wheeling has always been a very musical city.
I'm the third generation of musicians that were in the
Summers family; my grandfather was a musician; my
father was; I am, and I have two boys who are both
musicians. My oldest boy graduated from Julliard,
and the other one from Penn State. My grandfather
played with the old opera house orchestra in the
1890's. Then, as I say, my dad and I were both
charter members of the Wheeling Symphony here.
This is one of the few small towns that even at that
time had a playable symphony.
JJAE 0626
Q: Do you have any idea why music and
Wheeling have gone together?
ES: I really don't know; I think music as a whole has
sort of disappeared everywhere, except for the rock
bands and what-have-you, although legitimate music
is making a comeback some way.
Q: I mean no more in the turn of the century and
in the past, how did music in Wheeling become so
intertwined? Was it industry brought it all different
kinds of music?
ES: Yes, that's right. The Welsh people are great
singers, and there was a lot of Welsh people in
Martin's Ferry working in the steel mills. Of course,
you had the Polish people, the Slavic? people, and
they all had different ethnic music. They all
supported music here, and we've had some very, very
fine musicians come out of Wheeling. Especially
when I was growing up in the 20's and the 30's, we
had some of the top guys in the industry came from
here.
JJAE 0728
Q: Getting back to the show, tell me about your
remembrance of the first broadcast?
ES: The first broadcast was from the studios of
WWVA up in the Holly Building, and it was real
dead. They had thick carpets on the floor, and it had
acoustical tile and everything. It didn't sound very
good, so after about two or three of those broadcasts
they came in and tore up all the carpet, put inlaid
linoleum down and just livened the studio up; it got
better. We used to do some jazz, some songs, and of
course there was the headliner; and then we'd do what
they call a 'capsule classic'. Maury Longfeller? who
they had brought in as an arranger used to arrange.
We did things like 'Meditation from Tia? East' and all
these kind of things. We usually one of those a
program. Of course the rest of it was sort of
popular-orientated.
Q: You've been in bands all your life from when
you were a boy. What was special about the
Wheeling Steel Radio Show?
JJAE 0854
ES: I think the main thing it was a very versatile
group; as I say, we brought people in that could play
both kinds of music. Then, as I say, they got the idea
of the family broadcast; and it wasn't very hard to do
because practically everybody in Wheeling either
worked for Wheeling Steel or had a father, mother,
uncle or aunt working for Wheeling Steel. They
promoted that to the utmost. I'd say from the time we
went on Mutual until the time we quit, it was strictly
a family broadcast. It was very similar to the
Lawrence Welk Show, which appealed the class of
people that Wheeling Steel wanted to reach. In fact,
Lou Davies, the arranger that they brought in after
Morey -- in fact Morey and Lou were both here at the
same time -- Lou Davies later set the format for the
Lawrence Welk Band. He arranged their first
arrangements at the ... champagne music. He set the
style of the Welk Band.
Q: Tell me how old you were when you first
started on the show, and tell me what kind of a feeling
it was like to be on the show?
JJAE 0965
ES: In '36, I was 19. It was a premier radio show,
although as I say I'd been working at the radio station
for a couple of years before that on various
commercial broadcasts. In fact, all the way through
the Steel Show, I had a commercial broadcast for the
Cleebins? Furniture Company here in town. We had
a string group.
Q: Wasn't that a special gig for you?
ES: Yes, it was.
Q: Tell me that again, tell me what was special
about it to a musician?
JJAE 1022
ES: It was the best job in town, and we got a lot of
exposure locally and nationally because even when
we were still on the Mutual ...
WEST VIRGINIA, ROLL 10, 4/2/92, EARL
SUMMERS INTERVIEW
TAKE 4, CAMERA ROLL 92, SOUND ROLL
10
Q: Earl, tell me from the inside your feelings
about being on the show, especially at such a young
age. It was different then, your gigs at some of the
ball rooms and places like that. Tell me about it.
JJAE 1060
ES: As I say, we were really the royalty of Wheeling
musicians at that time. We were treated very well by
the Steel Company; they had a place across the street
from the rehearsal hall where we could go after the
rehearsal and get sandwiches and beer, and Wheeling
Steel would pick up the tab and things like that. It
was just a good feeling. As I say we knew it was
being broadcast in New York and later on they go the
Donley? Network in California. We were coast to
coast even on the old Mutual before we went NBC. It
was a big thing.
Q: When you talked to each other about 'hey,
we're on national radio,' what did it feel like to be
--
ES: I don't know; we didn't think that much about it,
really. I mean, we enjoyed doing it; the band was
good. That was the main thing; we had ample time
for rehearsal. We went into this thing and played the
best that we could; it could on. People liked it, and
we were proud. Especially when we went to the
World's Fair and when we came back from the
World's Fair, they gave us a parade in town. They
put us on a flatbed truck and we went all through
town. It was like Lindbergh coming home from Paris,
more or less. We were just glad to be on it. Back in
those days it was good money, too. I mean, we didn't
make by today's standards. It wasn't that much, but I
can remember when we were playing at Wheeling
Park, we got four dollars a night. We played three
nights. We had more money than anybody in
town.
JJAE 1226
Q: While we're on the subject of going to the '39
World Fair, that reminds me of a story you told me
about the bus rides.
ES: That wasn't the world's fair. We went up to
world's fair on a train, but we played later on in
Cincinnati at the Taft Auditorium for a bond drive.
Then we broadcast from down there. We had a bus,
and of course we were allowed to drink beer; but we
had to drink it in cans on account of Wheeling Steel
cans. Every time the bus would go up a hill all the
beer cans would roll to the back of the bus; when we'd
go down a hill, they'd all roll to the front of the bus. It
just sounded like thunder, you know. Then we got
into Cincinnati and the mayor of the city and
everything were all lined up to greet us, to give us a
key to the city. The first guy off the bus was a
trombone player by the name of Mal? Stevens. He
got off the bus, took one step, and fell flat on his face.
That's how we entered Cincinnati. There were good
times.
JJAE 1330
Q: Tell me about the '39 World's Fair? What
was that like to go from Wheeling, West
Virginia.
ES: We went to New York; we stayed at the New
Yorker, and we rehearsed at the New Yorker in the
ball room. Then the Saturday before the broadcast
they had a West Virginia day at the fair, and we out
to the Court of Peace and played the program out
there. The governor of West Virginia, who at that
time was a fellow by the name of Kump was the
governor of West Virginia, he was there. He gave a
speech, and we played about four or five numbers and
entertained them. Then the next day we went back
and played the same place for the broadcast, and there
were around 10,000 people there for that broadcast.
It was the biggest crowd to ever witness a commercial
broadcast at that time.
Q: In the late 30's you were on the road
seldom?
JJAE 1417
ES: That's right. This was our first trip; in '39, that
was the first trip. After that, after the war started and
everything, we made a lot of bond trips. We went to
Cincinnati; we went to Clarksburg, Fairmont,
Morgantown, Parkersburg, Steubenville, places like
that.
Q: Tell me about how the war changed the
show?
ES: They took off practically all the commercial
broadcasts; in other words, it was like Lucky Strike
Green has gone to war. They said Wheeling Steel has
gone to the war; all we will do is to promote the
products that we make for the government and things
like that. So it become more or less of a flag waver
after that, after the war started.
Q: And it changed where you did the show and
who did it for, didn't it. You did the show more on
the road, didn't you?
JJAE 1491
ES: Yes, we took quite a few trips after that. Every
place we went we gave programs before and after the
broadcasts to raise bond money for the various bond
drives and things.
Q: When you look back on that eight years that
you were on the show, is there a highlight, is there a
day that really kind of sums it all up for you about
what it was about?
ES: Actually, the day I remember the best was the day
before Pearl Harbor and I did the Pearl Harbor
broadcast, which they say actually never went on the
air because although we did it and they taped it -- in
fact, I have a tape of it. They didn't tape it; they put it
on transcriptions. We put it on tape later. Then the
trip to the Great Lakes was quite a thrill. Up there
and all the soldiers, it was like a Bob Hope trip, you
know.
Q: Who was the most interesting star that might
have been looking over your music at, either because
of their talent or because of their looks? Was there
anybody like that?
JJAE 1608
ES: We had some pretty good ones. Paul Whiteman
conducted us on a program. Anna Nagel who was a
movie star came here and did a show with us. Those
are about the only ones I can remember right off
hand.
Q: What was the reaction of the town? What did
Wheeling think about its radio show?
ES: Again, up until that World's Fair thing, I don't
think we ever got the recognition that we thought we
deserved. After that, they supported it pretty well.
Although I don't think they even realized how big it
was until some of the national magazines and
everything started. All the music magazines and back
then it was Radio Guide, they wrote us up
quite a bit.
Q: When did you realize that was a big
deal?
JJAE 1697
ES: I think I realized it when we went to the World's
Fair. Up until then, it was just another job more or
less. We enjoyed playing because the band was good,
and then as I say we came into contact with a lot of
people after that. Even some of the name bands who
were our idols like Glenn Miller and some of those
bands, they used to send us arrangements. I
remember we did Freddie Martin's arrangement of
'Tonight We Love,' which is based on the
Tchaikovsky piano concerto. We had his original
arrangement. Glenn Miller sent his original
arrangement of 'Chattanooga Choo-Choo'. We did it
with the four,? Jean? and her Boyfriend? sang.
Q: You mentioned that night in Styfold? ? about
victory discs and being the Republican in charge?
Did you feel like you were contributing to the war
effort?
JJAE 1789
ES: Yes, sure. And then you know every summer
when the war was on, we played at Oglebay Park on
Saturday nights with the full band, the whole 25 piece
band. We played for dancing. Then at 11 o'clock
they picked us up on NBC on the national hook-up.
We promoted -- I remember there was one program
that I heard that we promoted -- everybody turn in
their old records. This is when they still had 78's so
they could send them to the boys overseas and things
like that. There was always something going for the
war effort on every program, even when we were
broadcasting from the Oglebay Park or the Pine
Room.
Q: How was it playing back up for the Evan
Sisters?
JJAE 1863
ES: Again, we backed up the Evan Sisters. We
backed up all the soloists and then we had a chorus
too. At that time when we started the chorus, there
was Jean and her Boyfriends and the Steel Sisters and
they had the Singing Millmen, they brought in Robert
Shaw who was the choral director with Fred Waring
at that time, who is now possible one of the most
foremost choral directors in the world. He coached us
for about a month, our chorus. They spared no
amount of money to make the program better; that's
one of the things. They bought our uniforms; we
never had to buy our uniforms. They did take our
eating privileges away. A couple of the guys went
over and I think one of the fellows ate six sandwiches
one night. That ruined a good thing.
Q: What about the mill itself, Wheeling Steel,
did they take notice of the show?
ES: Yes, especially the people who wanted to be on it.
They had auditions every week for headliners, and
they say they were just packed. We were never in
them, those auditions. Every week they'd have 50,
maybe 100 people auditioning for a headliner in this
thing.
JJAE 1995
Q: What about the last show, what do you
remember about that?
ES: All I know is we all ended up with a big lump in
our throats. I mean -- we? were out at the mansion?
when I played the finally and everything for the show,
I think.
Q: Let's go back to that day again. Tell me more. ... We'll pick that up. ...
WEST VIRGINIA 4/2/92 SOUND ROLL 11
EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW
EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW, TAKE 5, ROLL
93, SOUND 11
Q: Let's switch gears, we'll get back to what we
were talking about in a second. What was Wheeling
like during the Depression? The show started in
'36.
JJAF 0037
ES: Actually '36 was the end of the Depression. The
Depression itself was from about 1930 through '34.
When Roosevelt became president in '34, that's when
they repealed the 18th Amendment. From then on,
things went pretty good for awhile. Of course the war
came along and the economy and everything just
started to rise on account of the war effort and the
manufacture and everything.
Q: But when the show started, what are your
remembrances of what Wheeling was like? Was it a
town that had a cloud hanging over it like many
American towns?
ES: No, I don't think so because the steel mills had
been working. Things were tough financially, but
they had had the WPA here for awhile and the CCC --
the Civilian Conservation Corps -- and things like
that. Of course I was young; I really didn't realize
there was a Depression because my dad had been
working in the theaters and he worked for the WPA
for awhile. There were times when food things were
scarce. I remember my dad brought home a sack of
flour from the WPA that they'd handed out. I
remember we lived on pancakes and home made
bread and things like that for a couple of weeks from
that sack of flour. But outside of that I really don't
remember being deprived of anything. Of course I
was in high school at the time, and --
JJAF 0209
Q: Tell me a little bit about your father's
association with the show?
ES: As I say, Dad at that time was the associate
conductor of the symphony; and he'd played all the
theaters and everything. He and I had been working
at the radio station. I had taken over the dance band
in '34 because I knew all the kids. It was actually his
band. When I started working at the radio station,
we were the first ones that Walter approached because
we both had symphony experience and we also had
dance band experience. He was the first conductor of
the orchestra, from '36 until '39. Tommy Whitley
took over in September of '39. He was conductor for
four years, and Lou Davies was the conductor for the
last two years.
Q: Going forward a little bit now. What are
your remembrances of the town of Wheeling during
WWII? What kind of place was it then?
JJAF 0332
ES: It was a wide-open town. Bill Lias? who was one
of the big -- he's not Mafia -- but he was sort of an
underworld figure -- they had the numbers racket.
They'd go in -- they had a big nightclub down at
Zeller's Restaurant, upstairs of that, and every little
nightclub in town had a band. Everybody was
working. There was a protection going on with the
police, and so they never bothered them. They had a
regular casino with roulette and everything up at
Zeller's, which was Lias' place. All over town it was
wide open. I mean, even the red light districts, were
operating. I'd say through the war it was a pretty
booming little town.
Q: And people got to know Wheeling then
through the radio show?
JJAF 0412
ES: Right, right. Of course up at Bethany College
they had a V-2 program, where they were training
naval officers. Then of course there was a army
hospital out in Cambridge, Ohio. On weekends they'd
all converge on Wheeling. On Saturday night it was
-- Back on those days there was hardly any crime.
You could walk anyplace, and nobody ever bothered
you. Today, you can't even walk down around 15th
or 16th Street, down on Market Street; it's not
safe.
Q: When you were growing up in the '20's do
you remember being in vaudeville and burlesque ?
?
ES: Yes, yes. Dad opened the Capital here in 1927.
They had vaudeville and movies together. They had
five acts of vaudeville and then movies. I remember
when I graduated from high school in '34, the
Virginia Theater tried it once more. It lasted about
two months, and they folded. They had burlesque
here in -- I was about 14 years old -- so that would be
in 1930, '31, over where the Security National Bank,
there was this burlesque theater there. I remember
one of the emcees -- they'd bring in one of these what
they called 'tab' shows. They would put on a different
show every week. They'd stay here for a month or so.
One tab show had Red Skelton as a emcee. He was
just starting out; he was about 21 or 22 years old. I
was playing, and I was 14. I remember one Saturday
night they came up and arrested the whole cast, the
orchestra and everything. Took us down to the City
Building; when they found out I was only 14, I wasn't
allowed to play again. So that was my one experience
with burlesque.
Q: Did the town look differently then?
JJAF 0612
ES: Not a heck of a lot. There were more theaters in
town then; now there's no theaters in town. There was
the Rex Theater and the Liberty Theater, the Colonial
Theater, the Court Theater, the Virginia Theater, and
then the Capital Theater. So we had plenty of
theaters. The Virginia Theater was possibly the best
theater for acoustics and everything of any of the
theaters in town. They tore than down and made a
parking lot out of it.
Q: It's 1944 and the show's winding down, the
last show. Do you remember it?
ES: Yes, I do remember. Didn't hear it was winding
down until about three or four shows from the end,
and then they told us that they weren't going to renew
it. You just more or less took it with what was
happening. The war was still on of course. There
had been quite a bit of turnover in the cast through the
war years. We'd have to replace musicians and also
soloists, like Arden White? went? and some of our
band members went. We just sort of took it as one of
those things that was going to happen. We were sorry
to see it go because it was a lot of fun and at that time
it was very remunerated. It's just like anything else
that ends. Especially the last show, there's always a
nostalgia. At that time it wasn't a nostalgia, we were
just sorry to see it go.
JJAF 0776
Q: When you think back on your career, does the
radio show have a special place?
ES: Yes, it was one of the big moments in my life.
Back in those days I was playing mostly jazz. Of
course I played with the symphony here too, but then
after it went off the air I kept the Steel Band together
until '61. Then we sort of busted it up. From then on
up until 1980 I did mostly just classical music. I
played with Columbus. Started playing in Pittsburgh
and then of course here.
Q: Tell me a little bit more about why it was one
of the highlights of your life?
JJAF 0839
ES: I was young enough to appreciate then too. It
was just a good time. The cast were all like a family.
In other words, it gradually became a family
broadcast because we were just one big, happy
family. We had little spats here and there just like
any family. At that time we rehearsed three nights a
week and then Sunday morning. Then the show was
Sunday afternoon. Actually we saw more of each
other than we saw of our regular families at
home.
Q: What's this Strip? Edna? story?
ES: Ten? DeProspero? who is one of the legitimate
families of the orchestra, he played saxophone and he
played clarinet and he played oboe, his wife was a
soprano. She was a headliner on the program one
day. He was supposed to say, "Stick to script, Edna."
And he said, "Strip to the stick, Edna." And
everybody just roared. This was on the air when he
said this. That's the 'strip to the stick, Edna.' That's
the story on that. It was supposed to be 'stick to the
script'.
Q: Earl, why have you stayed in West
Virginia?
JJAF 0958
ES: The main reason -- I've had plenty of chances to
play -- in other words, I was concert master of the
Civic Light Opera in Pittsburgh and then I played the
ballet and the opera. I played with the Columbus
Symphony, and I played with the Wheeling
Symphony. I've always played some good jazz and
everything. Then I was a purchasing agent for Mail
Pouch Tobacco Company; I worked for them for 45
years. That was a base. Back in the thirties and even
in the forties you couldn't make a living in music
unless you were big time. I always had good a base
and I ...
Q: What we'll do now is to record a little silence
...
JJAF 1029
THIS IS EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW,
PRESENCE, EARL SUMMERS INTERVIEW
PRESENCE
.... THAT ENDS PRESENCE AT THE CAPITAL
MUSIC THEATER, EARL SUMMERS
INTERVIEW, PRESENCE END ...