Mel Allen was a sportscaster. During the peak of his career in
the 1940s and '50s, Allen was arguably the most prominent member of his
profession, his voice familiar to millions. In his later years, he gained a second professional
life as the first host of This
Week in Baseball.
To this day -- years after his death -- he is still identified as the
Voice of the Yankees, for his long tenure as the New
York Yankees' principal play-by-play
announcer.
Allen was born Melvin Allen Israel in Birmingham, Alabama. He
was educated as a lawyer, but a boyhood love for baseball led him to
become first a sports columnist and then a radio announcer. He attended
the University of Alabama where he was a member of Zeta Beta Tau
Fraternity as an undergraduate. He went on to earn a law degree from the
University as well. His first broadcast was not a baseball game but a
football game, between Tulane University and the University of Alabama.
In 1937 Allen was invited to join the CBS Radio Network as a staff
announcer, and often did non-sports announcing such as big band remotes or
game show announcements. Among the game shows, he did Truth or
Consequences.
In 1939 Allen started doing play-by-play for both the New York Yankees
and the then-New York Giants.
Ultimately he became the main broadcaster for Yankees' games, though he
also did Giant games until 1943. He was known for his signature
catchphrases following Yankee home runs: "Going, going, gone!"
and, "How about that?"
In 1943 (in World War II) he entered the United States Army, and while
in the service changed his name legally to Mel Allen; he broadcast on The
Army Hour and Armed Forces Radio Service programs.
After returning to civilian life, Allen resumed baseball announcing,
doing 24 All-Star Game broadcasts for Major League Baseball as well as
Yankee games (including World Series broadcasts when the Yankees were in
it, which was most of the years, a total of 20 World Series).
He also did a number of college football bowl games: 14 Rose Bowls, 2
Orange Bowls, and 2 Sugar Bowls. For many years Allen also provided
voiceover narration for Fox Movietone newsreels.
Allen also served as play-by-play announcer of New York Football Giants
games on WCBS Radio in 1960 --with some of the games also being carried by
the CBS Radio Network. Allen was behind the WCBS mike when Philadelphia
Eagles linebacker Chuck Bednarik levelled Giants running back Frank
Gifford during a clash at Yankee
Stadium.
Allen continued to broadcast Yankee games until 1964, when he was fired
for reasons that the ballclub has not explained to this day. In 1965 and
1968 he
worked Milwaukee
Braves and Cleveland
Indians games, respectively. Eventually, the Yankees allowed him to
again perform at special Yankee Stadium ceremonies, including Old Timers'
Day.
Allen was welcomed back to the Yankees' on-air family in 1976 and
joined the crew of SportsChannel (now Fox Sports Net New York) to announce
Yankees cable telecasts along with the regular crew of Phil Rizzuto, Bill
White, Frank Messer, and occasionally Fran Healy.
Among the memorable moments he called in that stretch were Yankee
outfielder Reggie Jackson's 400th home run in 1980, and Yankee pitcher
Dave Righetti's no-hitter on July 4, 1983.
In his later years, Allen was exposed to a new audience as the host of
the syndicated highlights show This
Week in Baseball, which he hosted from its inception in 1977 until
his death. Between his Major League Baseball assignments and his
announcing duties for the Yankees, Allen again became the embodiment of
the national pastime's spirit. The only quibble some critics (including
the New York Post's Leonard Shechter) had about Allen would be with his
loquaciousness, both on the air and in one-on-one conversations.
Mel Allen reached yet another generation of fans in 1994 when he
recorded the play-by-play for two computer baseball games, Tony La Russa
Baseball and Old Time Baseball, which were published by Stormfront
Studios. The games included his signature "How about that?!"
home run call, which he had established almost fifty years before.
Although he completed the work only about a year before his death,
producer Don Daglow said in a 1995 interview with Computer Gaming World
that "Allen was a dream to work with. If something sounded the least
bit off he caught it himself and self-corrected before you even had a
chance to ask for another take. Sometimes he'd hear a problem live that we
would only have noticed later. When he was reading the long list of
numbers that would be spliced into sentences to announce batting averages
and so on he stopped suddenly and said 'That's not good.' Then he started
again and finished the list. When we checked the tape we heard that he had
just started to get a sing-song rhythm from repeating too many numbers in
a row, and he'd noticed before anyone else had."
In 1978 Allen was one of the first two winners of the Baseball Hall of
Fame's Ford
C. Frick Award. (The other was his old MLB and CBS Radio colleague Red
Barber, who for some time served alongside Allen as the Yankees'
announcer after making his name with the Brooklyn Dodgers.) Allen was
inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1988.
Upon his death in 1996, Allen was buried at Temple Beth El Cemetery in
Stamford, Connecticut. On July 25, 1998, the Yankees dedicated a plaque in
his memory for Monument Park at Yankee Stadium. The plaque calls him
"A Yankee institution, a national treasure" and includes his
signature line, "How about that?"
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--Patrick Mondout
HOW ABOUT THAT?
Those of us who grew up in the Super70s and Awesome80s remember Mel as the voice of This Week in Baseball.
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