Jack smith the game
The trio earned choral jobs in such movies as Walking on Air (1936), in which they sang "My Heart Wants to Dance" and appeared on the popular radio programs of the day including "The Philip Morris Show," "Your Hit Parade" and "The Kate Smith Hour." The trio broke up in 1939 and Jack, a strong baritone with a tenor lilt, went solo. The group clicked and managed to find consistent work in swanky hotels and clubs from San Francisco to New York. They went on to call themselves The Three Ambassadors. However, at age 15, he earned a job singing lead in a trio at the Los Angeles Ambassador Hotel's famed Cocoanut Grove, replacing Bing Crosby's trio, The Rhythm Boys, who had just been fired. Jack's younger brother, Walter Reed Smith II, later known as Walter Reed, became a well-respected character actor and occasional leading man.įollowing his parents' divorce at age 11, Jack, a good student, decided to study to be an architect, following in the path of three of his uncles. Jack was named after the fort they were stationed at the time, Fort Ward. His father, Walter Reed Smith, was the captain of the naval destroyer USS Dixie. He was born Jack Ward Smith on November 16, 1913, on Bainbridge Island, across Puget Sound from Seattle, Washington. Radio crooner "Smilin' Jack Smith" was a popular 40s and 50s personality.