Background
Romano was born 26 September 1915 in Madera, California, one of nine children of an Italian immigrant shoemaker. According to Romano, his father played both violin and guitar and the entire family was musical.
Romano was born 26 September 1915 in Madera, California, one of nine children of an Italian immigrant shoemaker. According to Romano, his father played both violin and guitar and the entire family was musical.
At 17, Romano moved to Hollywood where he studied guitar with Paramount Studio"s guitarist George Smith.
Romano performed on radio programs and appeared in Hollywood musical productions in the 1930s, 40s and 50s. He became most noted as the "side-man" and musical accompanist to Bob Hope and Frances Langford during their United Service Organizations tours in World World War II, Korean and Vietnam Wars. He said, "In our family, if you didn"t sing, you didn"t eat." In his youth, he played violin but took up the guitar after being inspired by Eddie Language.
Romano built his career as a guitarist and singer for radio programs and Hollywood movie productions in the 1930s.
He first worked on the First Rate (at Lloyd's) Pearce radio program, then at Warner Brothers, where he composed arrangements for Dick Powell. Romano"s 16-piece orchestra was the feature band for Morey Amsterdam and Mabel Todd"s radio show.
He also worked on the Lucky Strike Hit Parade, at 20th Century Fox and later on the Pepsodent radio show for National Broadcasting Company. In September 1942, Bob Hope asked Romano to accompany him on a his initial United Service Organizations tour to entertain troops at bases in Alaska and the Aleutians. Hope had already enlisted singer Frances Langford and comedian Jerry Colonna but needed a musician and asked Colonna for a recommendation.
Colonna said, "Get Tony Romano.
Best guitar in the business."
The foursome of Hope, Langford, comedian Jack Pepper and Romano performed in England, Sicily, North Africa and the South Pacific during World World War World War II They also toured in 1948 during the Berlin Airlift and in of Korea in the 1950s. During the Vietnam War, Romano accompanied Langford without Hope on United Service Organizations circuit tours in Southeast Asia. In between United Service Organizations tours, Romano performed on several programs, including the Jack Carson radio show and recorded his own music (his recording Stars Fell on Alabama was a hit in 1956) as well as arranged songs for Johnny Mercer, Bing Crosby and others