Edward Bowes (born June 14, 1874, San Francisco—died June 14, 1946, Rumson, N.J., U.S.) was a pioneer American radio personality who was instrumental in launching many prominent entertainment careers on his variety radio program, the “Original Amateur Hour.” The show was presented from 1935 until his death in 1946 by the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). It gave aspiring performers—singers, comedians, impersonators, and others—a chance to perform for a nationwide radio audience. Contestants were chosen in advance of their appearances by traveling amateur shows that crisscrossed America looking for outstanding talent.
Bowes’s father died when the boy was six years old, and young Bowes worked as he could to augment the family income. After leaving grammar school he worked as an office boy and then went into the real estate business. Major Bowes (the title traces to an obscurely documented army reserve commission) entered one partnership owning theatres in New York and Boston, and then entered another to construct the Capitol Theatre in New York City. There in 1926, as a promotional device for the theatre, he launched the “Major Bowes Capitol Family,” a forerunner of the famous and long-running “Amateur Hour.” Artists introduced on the Major’s radio show included the comedian Bob Hope and the singer Frank Sinatra, who was appearing with a group called the Hoboken Four. After Bowes died, the program was revived for television with the title “The Ted Mack Original Amateur Hour.”