May 30, 2009

  • Laughing is Good For You!
    bobndolores

    Dolores Hope turned 100 years old this week…. Wow!  Her
    entertainer husband Bob also lived to be 100, (although he actually
    passed away about 6 years ago.)  Isn’t that amazing!? You know I think it really must be the
    laughter that makes a person live longer. (I recall George Burns lived
    to be 100 also even though he constantly smoked cigars!) It makes
    sense… take a look at what Proverbs says about a “merry heart”:

    Proverbs 15:13

    “A merry heart makes a cheerful countenance, But by sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken.”




    Proverbs 15:15


    “All the days of the afflicted are evil, But he who is of a merry heart has a continual feast.”




    Proverbs 17:22


    “A merry heart does good, like medicine, But a broken spirit dries the bones.”



    Here are a few news excerpts concerning Dolores Hope’s birthday and the life she has lived.

    Love, Bee

    Bob Hope’s Widow Turns 100, Reveals Aging Secrets
    NEW YORK (Wireless Flash – FlashNews) – Bob Hope lived to be 100 and
    his widow, Dolores Hope, turns 100 today (May 27), so what’s their
    aging secret?

    According to Dolores, there are three main reasons for her and her hubby’s long lives: Massage, golf, and humor.

    The couple married in 1934 and Dolores says their wellness rituals
    always included relaxing massages and quality time on the golf course.  She says humor also prolongs life and since there was never a shortage
    of laughter in their home, Bob was able to live an entire century and
    she’s still truckin’.

    The birthday girl has kept just as busy as her late husband. Dolores
    has been singing in clubs since the ’30s, which is how she met Bob in
    the first place. She entertained U.S. troops overseas alongside Bob for
    decades, and recorded her first album – Dolores Hope: Now And Then – at
    age 83.”

    From the Palm Springs Desert Sun:

    “The Hopes arrived in Palm Springs when Dolores was in her 40s, and just before the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    They bought a getaway home on Buena Vista Drive just before Bob went
    off to entertain the troops. Dolores stayed home to raise their two
    adopted children, Linda and Tony. They adopted two more in 1946, a son,
    Kelly, and daughter, Nora.

    The shuttled back and forth between Palm Springs and Toluca Lake with an army of pet dogs in tow.

    “I had a dog and my sister had a dog and my brother had a dog, my
    grandmother had a dog,” recalled Linda. “When we traveled it was the
    caravan. They would all come with us. At one point, my mother decided
    there were so many dogs, she would bring a trainer in to train all the
    dogs. Well, it was just a disaster. But she loves the companionship of
    the dogs.”
    It was actually Bob and Dolores’ love of dogs that brought them together.

    It’s a well-known story that Bob and Dolores met in New York when Bob
    was co-starring in the Broadway hit “Roberta” while Dolores was singing
    in a nightclub. Bob’s co-star, George Murphy, who would later become a
    U.S. senator from California, asked Bob if he wanted to hear a pretty
    girl named Dolores Reade sing.

    “Dad was always interested in hearing pretty girls sing,” said Linda,
    “so he went there and, as he used to tell it, it was love at first
    song. He heard her singing ‘It’s Only A Paper Moon’ at this Vogue Club
    in New York. He said to her, ‘Why don’t you bring your mother and come
    to one of the matinees and see the show I’m doing?’ My mother thought
    he was a chorus boy. When they went, she was so embarrassed because he
    was one of the co-stars.”

    Dolores told a writer for Modern Screen in 1943 she decided she liked
    Bob after dancing with him that first night at a club called
    (naturally) The Haw Haw.
    She went back to see Bob in “Roberta” many times, but Bob apparently
    wasn’t convinced Dolores was the girl for him until his dog, Huck, gave
    her his seal of approval.

    “My dad had a little Scottie puppy,” Linda said. “I think he got it as
    sort of a come-on for all the chorus girls. It was a good magnet. But
    the little dog growled at everybody that came near it. So, Dad knew my
    mother was the one because she immediately had a rapport with the dog.
    She was very solicitous and the dog fell in love with her.

    “We’ve had dogs in the family ever since. Right now, she has a little
    Chihuahua that was given to her just before my dad died. He’s been a
    real little godsend and a great companion for her.”

    “She is amazingly sharp for 100,” said her daughter, Linda, from her
    Toluca Lake office. “She’s on top of all the stuff going on at the
    estate and the business and the disposition of Dad’s memorabilia.”

    http://www.mydesert.com/article/20090524/LIFESTYLES01/905240310/-1/lifestylesfront/Dolores+Hope+springs+eternal++

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