John Tackaberry

John Tackaberry (October 9, 1912 - June 24, 1969) was a radio writer for The Jack Benny Show.

Early years

He was born in Adelaide, Australia and grew up in Oodnadatta, a small railroad stop in the Simpson Desert in the Australian State of South Australia. His father, Arthur Lee Tackaberry, a graduate of Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans, Louisiana, was, by birth, an East Texan and his mother, Myrtle Amelia Tackaberry (née Stace) was born and raised in Palmerston North, New Zealand. His father was the doctor for the Ghan Railroad which, at the time, ran from Adelaide to Alice Springs, Australia. In 1920 he moved with his parents and sister to Houston, Texas USA, his father's birth state. He grew to manhood in Houston and was briefly a student at the University of Texas School of Law. However, due to the financial considerations of The Great Depression, he dropped out of school and went to work in the Texas oil fields.

Writing career

About 1943 he was in Los Angeles writing briefly for Horace Heidt, Jack Carson and eventually landed a plum job with the Jack Benny radio show[1] which, at the time, was the number one show on the air. He wrote for Benny from about 1944 until approx 1958. In 1946 he wrote the lyrics for a song called Pickle In The Middle With The Mustard On Top. This song was written as part of a comedy routine on the Benny show. However, it became number one in the country for two weeks. He is also credited on the TV series Shower of Stars (1954) and Ford Star Jubilee (1955).

Personal life

John Tackaberry died at St. Joseph's Hospital in Burbank, California and is buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Glendale, California. He was married twice. The first time for seventeen years to Ellen Terry Tackaberry (née Newman) (deceased 1997) and the second time to Elizabeth Tackaberry (deceased 2004). He is the father of two children, Stace Tackaberry (1942-2017) and Terry Louise Tackaberry Norton (1943–2008).

gollark: There are unfathomable techniques of some kind to generate closed-form versions, yes.
gollark: You did a competition about doing recurrence relations really fast?
gollark: They're mental states/experiences of some kind vaguely related to these, but the English terms are fuzzy, broad and carry unwanted connotations.
gollark: I have no idea how you would actually run experiments on this, but there might be something I guess.
gollark: I think you're oversimplifying the things, umnikos.

References

  1. "George Balzer obituary". The Independent. 4 November 2006. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
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