George Dewey Washington (1898–1954) was an American singer active in vaudeville and motion pictures from the 1920s through the 1940s. He was a baritone or bass-baritone who often appeared on stage in the guise of "The Gentleman Tramp". He was sometimes compared to Al Jolson.
Before he became a professional entertainer, Washington worked as a waiter in railroad dining cars, often singing amid noises of the train.[1]
Washington appeared in a number of short films for M-G-M and Paramount Pictures from 1928 to 1932, the early years of "talkies", including some of M-G-M's first musical shorts. At one point, he played three weeks in a row at the Paramount Theatre on Broadway. He was described at the time as a "hot favorite" with a "sympathetic voice [that] goes straight to the heart" and that is "well adapted for the talkies".[2][3]
In 1933, Washington performed on Broadway in Strike Me Pink,[4] which was "staged as an epic review of black history.[5] Night clubs in which Washington performed include the California Theatre Club in San Francisco[6] and the Club Casino in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[7] He also appeared on the bill with films in theaters including the Paramount Theater in Los Angeles.[8]
Washington recorded a number of 10-inch discs for Columbia Records between 1928 and 1930, all as a soloist with an orchestra or ensemble, including:[10]
"The Spell of the Blues"
"The Sun is at My Window (Throwing Kisses at Me)"
"I'll Never Ask for More"
"Lonely Vagabond"
"Poor Punchinello"
"(Step by Step — Mile by Mile) I'm Marching Home to You"
^"George Dewey Washington". Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. Archived from the original on February 21, 2020. Retrieved February 21, 2020.