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Perry Botkin Papers, 1920-1972

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Botkin, Perry
Title
Perry Botkin Papers
Dates
1920-1972 (inclusive)
Quantity
44.5 cubic ft. (81 Boxes: 32 F17, 10 DOC, 5 REC, 32 PRB, 2 PRL)
Collection Number
05998
Summary
Perry Botkin (1907-1973) was a musician and composer specializing in string instruments and popular music. He worked on numerous radio shows and was Bing Crosby’s music arranger and supervisor. He also scored the motion picture, “Murder by Contract.” In the 1960s he was the music composer for the Beverly Hillbillies television program. His collection contains his music scores, recordings, correspondence, financial records, and scripts, including ones for the Beverly Hillbillies from 1962 to1964.
Repository
American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming
American Heritage Center
University of Wyoming
1000 E. University Ave.
Dept. 3924
Laramie, WY
82071
Telephone: 3077663756
ahcref@uwyo.edu
Access Restrictions
Access Restrictions

There are no access restrictions on the materials for research purposes, and the collection is open to the public.

Languages
English
Sponsor
The creation of the EAD-version of this finding aid was made possible through a grant from the National Historic Publications and Records Commission.
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Historical Note

Perry Botkin (1907-1973) was a music composer, arranger, pianist, band leader, orchestra conductor, and string instrument musician. His musical career began at age fourteen when he started playing with Harry Frankel, “Singing Sam the Barbasol Man,” in Richmond, Indiana, Botkin’s home town. At the time, Botkin played the bass for the high school band, but Frankel needed a banjo player. Botkin learned to play the banjo, the guitar, ukulele, lute, and several other plectrum (string) instruments. Botkin moved to Hollywood in the 1920s and worked with radio orchestras such as Victor Young, Johnny Green (The Jack Benny Show), Red Nichols, Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Paul Whitman, John Scott Trotter, Roy Rogers, and the Sons of the Pioneers. He was part of the original Fibber McGee and Molly radio show and stayed there for fourteen years. He worked for Al Jolson for fourteen years and Eddie Cantor for twenty-five. In 1937, Botkin began working with Bing Crosby and continued that association for eighteen years. He was Crosby’s guitar accompanist and musical supervisor for radio, film, stage, and early television and appeared with Crosby in the 1941 “Birth of the Blues” motion picture.

Botkin went on to arrange music for television programs such as “Wyatt Earp,” “The Rifleman,” “Wells Fargo,” and the motion picture “Murder by Contract.” In 1962 Botkin became the music arranger and composer for “The Beverly Hillbillies” television series through 1964. Botkin hosted one or more of the Bohemian Grove Club’s political gatherings on the Russian River in upstate California. Botkin also spent time in Hawaii learning more about the native sounds of the ukulele, and he traveled to Japan to learn about Japanese string instruments and record music with Japanese musicians. He provided background music for a number of other radio, film, and television shows and commercials. In 1961 Jack Kramer, the tennis star, contracted Botkin to produce a musical score for a tennis tournament. They worked together for the song, “It’s Tennis,” and went on to produce an album of humorous music for tennis playing. Throughout his career, Botkin was recognized as the foremost guitar musician in Hollywood and the first musician to perform ukulele solos. Botkin primarily composed jazz, bluegrass, western, popular, and folk arrangements. He was also a business partner and president of Longridge Music in Hollywood.

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Content Description

The majority of this collection is Botkin’s music compositions, arrangements, and music recordings. Music scores are listed alphabetically by the name of the composition, whereas music recordings are most often listed by the artist’s name. Botkin worked closely with Bing Crosby and John Scott Trotter and much of the music scores and recordings are from these periods of his career. There are also several scripts Botkin used in early radio shows, such as Fibber McGee and Molly and Roy Rogers, in which he participated with lines to read or scripts he used to note when to provide background music, theme music, or accompaniment. Included in these scripts are those for the Burl Ives television specials, the Gary Crosby shows, and the one for the 1941 picture, “Birth of the Blues.” There are also over sixty scripts from the Beverly Hillbillies and multiple recordings that demonstrate Botkin’s use of different string instruments to further create persona for the Beverly Hillbillies characters. The collection includes Botkin’s recordings and scores at different stages of development for “The Executioner’s Theme” from “Murder by Contract.” The recordings in this collection are on reel to reel tape, audiofilm, and phonograph records.

In the collection’s General series, correspondence dates from 1924 to 1970 and includes four letters from Bing Crosby, Botkin’s partnership in Longridge Music, and his work with radio personalities and the musicians’ union in Hollywood. Financial records for Longridge Music and the musicians’ union are also included in the General series as are numerous photographs of Botkin, Bing Crosby, and several other radio, television, and screen stars. There are Botkin’s daily Pocket Planners from 1961 to 1965 in the General series that document his time working with Jack Kramer on “It’s Tennis,” and his years with the Beverly Hillbillies program.

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Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Use

Copyright Information

The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.

Preferred Citation

Preferred Citation

Item Description, Box Number, Folder Number, Perry Botkin Papers, 1920-1972, Collection Number 05998, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

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Administrative Information

Related Materials

Related Materials

There are no other known archival collections created by Perry Botkin as of the date of processing. Material regarding Perry Botkin may be found in the John Scott Trotter Papers, Accession Number 8424, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Acquisition Information

Acquisition Information

Papers received from Mrs. Perry Botkin in 1975 and Mr. Perry Botkin Jr. in 1991.

Processing Note

Processing Information

The collection was processed by Rita Burleson in December 2004.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

Container List

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Motion picture music.
  • Radio music.
  • Television music.

Personal Names

  • Crosby, Bing, 1904-1977.
  • Trotter, John Scott.

Form or Genre Terms

  • Audio tapes.
  • Radio scripts.
  • Screenplays.
  • Sheet music.
  • Television scripts.

Occupations

  • Arrangers (Musicians).
  • Composers.
  • Musicians.

Titles within the Collection

  • Beverly Hillbillies (Television program).
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