The troupe was founded in January 1969 by Michael Mislove, who was performing regularly with Saluga and Memmoli at The Bitter End Cafe on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village, and Budd & Silver Friedman's Improvisation Cafe (later known as The Improv). Mislove also invited Deutsch, who was appearing at The Upstairs at the Downstairs Cabaret at the Plaza Hotel, and Willard, who was performing in Jules Feiffer's black comedy play Little Murders, directed by and co-starring Alan Arkin, at the Circle in the Square Theatre's Bleecker Street location.[2][3]
The name Ace Trucking Company was chosen because one of their regular characters, played by George Memmoli, worked for a fictional Ace Trucking Company.[3] Fred Willard recollected that the name Ace Trucking Company was intended to sound very generic, and they were amused by the idea of a very generic name for a comedy group.[4][5]
Before they even had named the group, Ace Trucking Company was recruited to performed on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson,[6] which they performed on dozens of times between 1969 and 1975.[4][3] They performed their first paid engagement as a group on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson on April 24, 1969.[7]
In 1970, Ace Trucking Company released an album of mostly improvised sketches on RCA Victor records.[8][9][2][10] The album consists of 12 tracks, two of which, Paqua Velva and The Electric Chair, were existing set pieces. The other 10 tracks were fully improvised in a single 5-hour session in the recording studio, running from 11:00 p.m. until 4:00 a.m. the next morning.[8]
A second album was announced but ultimately was never made.[10]
In the fall of 1972, Ace Trucking Company were featured on the 13-episode PBS series The Just Generation, hosted by University of California law professor Howard Miller, that aired on more than 200 public television stations nationally. On the series, Miller would introduce a legal topic, which Ace Trucking Company would then perform a comedic skit about, followed by a discussion with high school students, moderated by Miller.[12][13]
Ace Trucking Company also created a syndicated radio show, The News Cavalcade of the Airwaves, which was a 2.5 minute daily segment spoofing the news. 65 episodes of the 2.5-minute show were created, produced by the Dick Orkin team, and distributed by the Chicago Radio Syndicate.[14]
Group member Bill Saluga (1937-2023) became known for the rest of his life for his comedy routine as character Raymond J. Johnson Jr., which started as an Ace Trucking Company skit.[15][16] In a 1982 interview, Saluga recollected that the character "really started when I was with the improv-group The Ace Trucking Company. But the roots of it go back to my days in the navy."[17] The character Raymond J. Johnson, Jr. is referenced in multiple episodes of The Simpsons, with Saluga appearing as himself in the 2002 episode "The Old Man and the Key".[18] The character is also the focus of a subplot in a 2010 episode of King of the Hill, in which Bobby struggles to understand why the routine is funny, and with Saluga contributing voice acting talent to the episode.[19][better source needed]
Ace Trucking Company toured and performed widely, typically staying in residence at a venue for a week or two at a time. Below are some of their known tour dates and locations, based on newspaper reports:
August 16-26, 1971 - The Glass Frogg, Clearwater Beach, Florida.[7]
June 22-27, 1976 - The Plantation Dinner Theater, St. Louis, Missouri.[20]
Week of October 13, 1978 - Buffalo Roadhouse, Tampa, Florida[21]
^ abc"Ace Trucking Tour in High". Billboard. Billboard. May 23, 1970. p. 24.
^ abcdefInman, David M. (2005). Television Variety Shows: Histories and Episode Guides to 57 Programs (Illustrated ed.). McFarland. p. 427. ISBN978-0786421985.
^"New Law Series Bows on Public Television". ABA Journal. 58. American Bar Association: 1297. December 1972.