Eddie Brandt

Eddie August Brandt (August 5, 1920 February 20, 2011[1]) was an American composer and songwriter and television writer and animator, but is best remembered for his North Los Angeles store, Eddie Brandt's Saturday Matinee,[2][3] which rents and sells videos and memorabilia.

Early life

Born in Chicago, the "teenage movie-theater usher" was able to collect film memorabilia.[1] One day, a man bought movie posters from him to decorate his bar, and Brandt realized there was a market for memorabilia.[1]

Music

While serving in the United States Navy during World War II as a "radar specialist" stationed in San Francisco,[1] the self-taught piano player formed a band, Eddie Brandt and the Hollywood Hicks.[2] "He composed music with Spike Jones, Spade Cooley, Eddie Cantor and George Motola in the 1940s, producing hit songs including "Heaven Knows," "None but the Lonely Heart," "There's No Place Like Hawaii," "I'm Drowning My Sorrows," "The Tears in Your Eyes," "High School Romance," "Shortnin' Bread Rock" and "Rock and Roll Wedding.""[2] After the war, he moved to Hollywood. In the early 1950s, he toured with trios and married a member of one of them, singer Ruthie James.[1] His first marriage ended in 1956.[1] He was also a bandleader for KLAC-TV Channel 13.[1]

Television

In the 1950s, he wrote for the television shows The Colgate Comedy Hour and The Spike Jones Show,[2][3] and both wrote for and performed on The Spade Cooley Show.[1] In the 1960s, he worked first as a cartoonist, writer (for a couple of episodes), composer and even voice performer for Bob Clampett on Beany and Cecil.[1][2] He later became a writer for Hanna-Barbera, where he met his second wife, an animator named Claire.[1] They married in 1968.

Eddie Brandt's Saturday Matinee

In 1967, the couple opened a memorabilia and thrift store in North Hollywood.[4] In the late 1970s, it became the first to rent videos in Los Angeles.[4] As of June 2011, it offers the largest selection of videos in one location in the country: 82,000 videos and 20,000 DVDs,[4] including many that are rare and out of print. There are also about two million photographs and tens of thousands of movie posters.[1] It is considered such a mecca for film buffs that Ben Mankiewicz taped a segment about the store for Turner Classic Movies.

Brandt suffered the first of a series of strokes and had to retire from the store. His wife Claire and their son Donovan now manage the business.

He died at the age of 90 of colon cancer.[1] He was survived by his wife, four daughters and two sons.

gollark: Yes, it's called SCP-682.
gollark: Some of them are just weird for reasons other than that, though.
gollark: 4703 somehow *does things* just because the law says it can, even though the law is just a human concept and only affects what humans do.
gollark: Really, one of the main things which makes (some) SCPs weird is that they take convenient abstractions/concepts and turn them into immutable physical laws, while our real universe just runs on... well, physics. 173 is affected by line of sight, even though this is just a thing humans do to reason about... looking at things. 005 is just a magic item which unlocks things, 048 is just a label we assign to things which somehow affects them.
gollark: Alternatively, the machine breaks, if it prefers simple changes - so I guess make it STUPIDLY redundant.

References

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