Thomas Breneman Smith (June 18, 1900 – April 28, 1948)[1][2] was an American radio personality. For most of his career, he was based in Southern California, in Los Angeles and Hollywood. His radio program was such a success that he established the eponymous Tom Breneman's Restaurant in Hollywood, which attracted many actors, musicians and others.
Early years
Breneman was born in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania.[3] His father worked in a sand mine, and Breneman was one of six children. Breneman graduated from the public schools in Waynesboro and attended Columbia University.[2]
Radio
Breneman began broadcasting in 1927. In 1930, he was program director at KFVD in Culver City, California.[4] In 1931–32, appearing as Tom Brennie, he had a program, Laugh Club of the Air in New York City, an early audience participation show.[2]
Returning to the West Coast, he hosted a morning variety show for Fels-Naptha soap from KFRC, San Francisco, to the CBS-Don Lee network circa 1935.[5]
In 1937, Breneman was host of Secret Ambition, which was produced at KNX radio in Los Angeles, California, and was carried on CBS' newly formed Pacific Coast network.[6]
Breneman's program began using its best-known title Breakfast in Hollywood in 1945. By the mid-1940s, Breneman had ten million listeners. The popularity of the radio program was such that he developed spin-off enterprises in media and other areas. He founded his own magazine.
In 1945, he opened his own establishment, Tom Breneman's Restaurant, located on Vine Street off Sunset Boulevard.[7] The opening on March 26, 1945, had "a gala crowd of Hollywoodites in attendance, including distinguished members of the radio industry, a number of famed screen and air personalities, and representatives of the press."[8] He broadcast episodes of his program from his restaurant; entertainers included Korla Pandit, a purported Indian immigrant who was creating a sensation with a daily, all-music program on television and maintained this persona to his death in 1998, though an article in Los Angeles Magazine revealed that he was an African-American musician from Missouri, who had created a new persona and great success in Hollywood and TV.[citation needed]
Family
Breneman married former actress Billie Dunn. They had two children, Gloria Anne, and Tom Jr.[2]
^The draft registration card for Thomas Brenaman Smith of Waynesboro, Pennsylvania gives his birth date as June 18, 1900. The 1910 U.S. census conducted in April 1910 gives the age of 9 for Thomas Brenneman Smith of Waynesboro, Pennsylvania. This matches a birth date of June 1900.