1936 Texas Centennial, The Three Stooges Unframed Print
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The Three Stooges were an American vaudeville and comedy
team active from 1922 until 1970, best remembered for their 190 short subject
films by Columbia Pictures. Their hallmark styles were physical farce and
slapstick. Six Stooges appeared over the act's run (with only three active at
any given time): Moe Howard (born Moses Horwitz) and Larry Fine (born Louis
Feinberg) were mainstays throughout the ensemble's nearly 50-year run; the
pivotal "third stooge" was played by (in order of appearance) Shemp
Howard (born Samuel Horwitz), Curly Howard (born Jerome Horwitz), Shemp Howard
again, Joe Besser, and "Curly Joe" DeRita.
The act began in the early 1920s as part of a vaudeville
comedy act billed as "Ted Healy and His Stooges", consisting
originally of Ted Healy and Moe Howard. Over time, they were joined by Moe's
brother, Shemp Howard, and then Larry Fine. The four appeared in one feature
film, Soup to Nuts, before Shemp left to pursue a solo career. He was replaced
by his and Moe's younger brother, Jerome "Curly" Howard, in 1932. Two
years later, after appearing in several movies, the trio left Healy and signed
on to appear in their own short-subject comedies for Columbia Pictures, now
billed as "The Three Stooges". From 1934 to 1946, Moe, Larry and
Curly produced over 90 short films for Columbia, bringing them their peak
popularity.
Curly suffered a debilitating stroke in May 1946. Shemp
returned, reconstituting the original lineup, until his death of a heart attack
on November 22, 1955, three years and ten months after Curly's death of a
cerebral hemorrhage on January 18, 1952. Film actor Joe Palma stood in (shot
from behind to obscure his face) to complete four Shemp-era shorts under
contract. This procedure—disguising one actor as another, outside of stunt
shots—became known as the "fake Shemp". Columbia contract player Joe
Besser joined as the third Stooge for two years (1956–57), departing in 1958 to
nurse his ill wife after Columbia terminated its shorts division. The studio
then released all the shorts via Screen Gems, Columbia's television studio and
distribution unit. Screen Gems then syndicated the shorts to television,
whereupon the Stooges became one of the most popular comedy acts of the early
1960s.
Comic actor Joe DeRita became "Curly Joe" in 1958,
replacing Besser for a new series of full-length theatrical films. With intense
television exposure in the United States, the act regained momentum throughout
the 1960s as popular kids' fare, until Larry's paralyzing stroke in the midst
of filming a pilot for a Three Stooges TV series in January 1970. He died in
January 1975 after a further series of strokes. Unsuccessful attempts were made
in 1970 and 1975 to revive the act with longtime supporting actor Emil Sitka in
Fine's role, but they were cut short by Moe Howard's death on May 4, 1975.
History
Ted Healy and His Stooges (1922–1934)
The Three Stooges began in 1922 as part of a raucous
vaudeville act called "Ted Healy and His Stooges"
("stooges" being show-business slang for on-stage assistants). The
act was also known as "Ted Healy and His Southern Gentlemen" and
"Ted Healy and His Racketeers". Moe Howard (born Moses Harry Horwitz)
joined Healy's act in 1922, and his brother Shemp Howard (Samuel Horwitz) came
aboard a few months later. After several shifts and changes in the Stooges
membership, violinist-comedian Larry Fine (Louis Feinberg) also joined the
group sometime between 1925 and 1928. In the act, lead comedian Healy would
attempt to sing or tell jokes while his noisy assistants would keep
interrupting him, causing Healy to retaliate with verbal and physical abuse.
In 1930, Ted Healy and His Stooges (plus comedian Fred
Sanborn) appeared in Soup to Nuts, their first Hollywood feature film, released
by Fox Film Corporation. The film was not a critical success, but the Stooges'
performances were singled out as memorable, leading Fox to offer the trio a
contract, minus Healy. This enraged Healy, who told studio executives the
Stooges were his employees, whereupon the offer was withdrawn. Howard, Fine,
and Howard learned of the offer and subsequent withdrawal, and left Healy to
form their own act (billed as "Howard, Fine & Howard" or
"Three Lost Souls"). The act quickly took off with a tour of the
theater circuit. Healy attempted to stop the new act with legal action,
claiming that they were using his copyrighted material. There are accounts of
Healy threatening to bomb theaters if Howard, Fine and Howard ever performed
there, which worried Shemp so much that he almost left the act; reportedly,
only a pay raise kept him on board.
Healy tried to save his act by hiring replacement stooges,
but they were inexperienced and not as well-received as their predecessors.
Healy reached a new agreement with his former Stooges in 1932, with Moe now
acting as business manager, and they were booked in a production of Jacob J.
Shubert's The Passing Show of 1932. During rehearsals, Healy received a more
lucrative offer and found a loophole in his contract allowing him to leave the
production. Shemp, fed up with Healy's abrasiveness, bad temper, and heavy
drinking, decided to quit the act and toured in his own comedy revue for
several months.
Shemp had been working for the Vitaphone studio in Brooklyn,
New York since 1931. He first appeared in movie comedies playing small roles
and bits in the Roscoe Arbuckle shorts, and gradually worked his way up to star
comedian. Shemp stayed with Vitaphone through 1937.
With Shemp gone, Healy and the two remaining stooges (Moe
and Larry) needed a replacement, so Moe suggested his younger brother Jerry
Howard. Healy reportedly took one look at Jerry, who had long chestnut-red hair
and a handlebar mustache, and remarked that Jerry didn't look like he was
funny. Jerry left the room and returned a few minutes later with his head
shaved (although his mustache remained for a time), saying: "Boy, do I
look girly." Healy heard "Curly", and the name stuck. Other
accounts have been given for how the Curly character actually came about.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) signed Healy and his Stooges to a
movie contract in 1933. They appeared in feature films and short subjects
together, individually, or with various combinations of actors. The trio was
featured in a series of musical comedy shorts, beginning with Nertsery Rhymes.
It was one of a few shorts to be made with an early two-color Technicolor
process. These also included one featuring Curly without Healy or the other
Stooges, Roast Beef and Movies (1934), as well as the recently rediscovered
Technicolor short Hello Pop!. Jail Birds of Paradise (1934) was also shot in
Technicolor, but as of 2022 no print has been found. The short films were built
around recycled Technicolor film footage of production numbers cut from MGM
musicals, such as Children of Pleasure, Lord Byron of Broadway and the
unfinished March of Time (all 1930). The studio concluded the series with
standard, black-and-white two-reel subjects: Beer and Pretzels (1933) Plane
Nuts (1933), and The Big Idea (1934).
Healy and company also appeared in several MGM feature films
as comic relief, including:
Turn Back the
Clock (1933)
Meet the Baron
(1933)
Dancing Lady
(1933) (with Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, Fred Astaire and Robert Benchley)
Fugitive Lovers
(1934)
Hollywood Party
(1934).
Healy and the Stooges also appeared together in Myrt and
Marge for Universal Pictures.
In 1934, the team's contract expired with MGM, and the
Stooges' professional association with Healy came to an end. According to Moe
Howard's autobiography, the split was precipitated by Healy's alcoholism and
abrasiveness. Their final film with Healy was MGM's Hollywood Party (1934).
Both Healy and the Stooges went on to separate successes, with Healy dying
under mysterious circumstances in 1937.
Moe's face
In 1934, the trio—now officially named "The Three
Stooges"—contracted to Columbia Pictures for a series of two-reel comedy
short subjects. Moe wrote in his autobiography that they each received $600 per
week (equal to $12,154 today) on a one-year contract with a renewable option;
in the Ted Okuda–Edward Watz book The Columbia Comedy Shorts, the Stooges are
said to have received $1,000 among them for their first Columbia effort, Woman
Haters (1934), and then signed a term contract for $7,500 per film (equal to
$151,922 today), to be divided among the trio.
Within their first year at Columbia, theater bookings for
the Stooges films took off. Columbia Pictures president Harry Cohn was able to
use the Stooges as leverage, as the demand for their films was so great that he
eventually refused to supply exhibitors with the trio's shorts unless they also
agreed to book some of the studio's mediocre B movies. Cohn also saw to it that
the Stooges remained unaware of their popularity. During their 23 years at
Columbia, the Stooges were never completely aware of their amazing drawing
power. Their contracts with the studio included an open option that had to be
renewed yearly, and Cohn would tell them that the short subjects were in
decline, which was not a complete fabrication (Cohn's yearly mantra was
"the market for comedy shorts is dying out, fellas").
The Stooges thought that their days were numbered and would
sweat it out each year, with Cohn renewing their contract at the last moment.
This deception kept the insecure Stooges unaware of their true value, resulting
in them having second thoughts about asking for a better contract without a
yearly option. Cohn's scare tactics worked for all 23 years that the Stooges
were at Columbia; the team never once asked for a salary increase—nor were they
ever given one.
It was not until after they stopped making the shorts in
December 1957 that Moe learned of Cohn's tactics, what a valuable commodity the
Stooges had been for the studio, and how many millions more the act could have
earned. Columbia offered theater owners an entire program of two-reel comedies
(15–25 titles annually) featuring such stars as Buster Keaton, Andy Clyde,
Charley Chase and Hugh Herbert, but the Stooge shorts were the most popular of
all.
The Stooges' release schedule was eight short subjects per
year, filmed within a 40-week period; for the remaining 12 weeks, they were
free to pursue other employment, time that was either spent with their families
or touring the country with their live act. The Stooges appeared in 190 film
shorts and five features while at Columbia, outlasting every one of their
contemporaries employed in the short-film genre. Del Lord directed more than
three dozen Stooge films, Jules White directed dozens more and his brother Jack
White directed several under the pseudonym "Preston Black".
Silent-comedy star Charley Chase also shared directorial responsibilities with
Lord and White.
The Stooge films made between 1935 and 1941 captured the
team at their peak, according to film historians Ted Okuda and Edward Watz,
authors of The Columbia Comedy Shorts. Nearly every film produced became a
classic in its own right. Hoi Polloi (1935) adapted the premise of Pygmalion,
with a stuffy professor making a bet that he can transform the uncultured trio
into refined gentlemen; the plotline worked so well that it was reused twice,
as Half-Wits Holiday (1947) and Pies and Guys (1958). Three Little Beers (1935)
featured the Stooges running amok on a golf course to win prize money. Disorder
in the Court (1936) features the team as star witnesses in a murder trial.
Violent is the Word for Curly (1938) was a quality Chase-directed short that
featured the musical interlude "Swingin' the Alphabet".
In A Plumbing We Will Go (1940)—one of the team's
quintessential comedies—the Stooges are cast as plumbers who nearly destroy a
socialite's mansion, causing water to exit every appliance in the home,
including an early television set. This was remade twice, as Vagabond Loafers
and Scheming Schemers. Other entries of the era are considered among the team's
finest work, including Uncivil Warriors (1935), A Pain in the Pullman and False
Alarms (both 1936), Grips, Grunts and Groans, The Sitter Downers, Dizzy Doctors
(all 1937), Tassels in the Air (1938), We Want Our Mummy (1939), Nutty but Nice
(1940), and An Ache in Every Stake and In the Sweet Pie and Pie (both 1941).
With the onset of World War II, the Stooges released several
entries that poked fun at the rising Axis powers. You Nazty Spy! (1940) and its
sequel I'll Never Heil Again (1941) lampooned Hitler and the Nazis at a time
when America was still neutral. Moe was cast as "Moe Hailstone", an
Adolf Hitler-like character, with Curly playing a Hermann Göring character
(replete with medals) and Larry a Joachim von Ribbentrop-type ambassador. Moe,
Larry, and director Jules White considered You Nazty Spy! their best film. Yet,
these efforts indulged in a deliberately formless, non-sequitur style of verbal
humor that was not the Stooges' forte, according to Okuda and Watz.
Other wartime entries have their moments, such as They
Stooge to Conga (considered the most violent Stooge short), Higher Than a Kite,
Back From the Front (all 1943), Gents Without Cents (1944) and the
anti-Japanese The Yoke's on Me (also 1944). However, taken in bulk, the wartime
films are considered less funny than what preceded them. No Dough Boys (1944)
is often considered the best of these farces. The team, made up as Japanese
soldiers for a photo shoot, is mistaken for genuine saboteurs by a Nazi ringleader
(Vernon Dent, the Stooges' primary foil). The highlight of the film features
the Stooges engaging in nonsensical gymnastics (the real spies are renowned
acrobats) for a skeptical group of enemy agents.
Wartime also brought on rising production costs that
resulted in fewer elaborate gags and outdoor sequences, Del Lord's stock in
trade; as such, the quality of the team's films (particularly those directed by
Lord) began to slip after 1942. According to Okuda and Watz, entries such as
Loco Boy Makes Good, What's the Matador?, Sock-A-Bye Baby (all 1942), I Can
Hardly Wait and A Gem of a Jam (both 1943) are considered to be lesser quality
works than previous films. Spook Louder (1943), a remake of Mack Sennett's The
Great Pie Mystery (1931), is sometimes cited as the Stooges' worst film because
of its repetitious and rehashed jokes. Three Smart Saps (1942), a film
considered to be an improvement, features a reworking of a routine from Harold
Lloyd's The Freshman (1925), in which Curly's loosely basted suit begins to
come apart at the seams while he is on the dance floor.
The Stooges made occasional supporting appearances in
feature films, though generally they were restricted to their short subjects.
Most of the Stooges' peers had either made the transition from shorts to
feature films (Laurel and Hardy, The Ritz Brothers) or starred in their own
feature films from the onset (Marx Brothers, Abbott and Costello). However, Moe
believed that the team's slapstick style worked better in short form. In 1935,
Columbia proposed to star them in their own full-length feature, but Moe
rejected the idea saying, "It's a hard job inventing, rewriting, or
stealing gags for our two-reel comedies for Columbia Pictures without having to
make a seven-reeler (feature film). We can make short films out of material
needed for a starring feature, and then we wouldn't know whether it would be
funny enough to click."
Film critics have cited Curly as the most popular member of
the team. His childlike mannerisms and natural comedic charm (he had no
previous acting experience) made him a hit with audiences, particularly
children and women (the latter usually finding the trio's humor juvenile and
uncouth). Because Curly had to shave his head for the act, it led him to feel
unappealing to women. To mask his insecurities, he ate and drank to excess and
caroused whenever the Stooges made personal appearances, which was approximately
seven months of each year. His weight ballooned in the 1940s, and his blood
pressure became dangerously high. Curly's wild lifestyle and constant drinking
eventually caught up with him in 1945, and his performances suffered.
During a five-month hiatus from August 1945 through January
1946, the trio committed themselves to making a feature film at Monogram,
followed by a two-month-long live appearance gig in New York City, with
performances seven days a week. Curly also entered a disastrous third marriage
in October 1945, leading to a separation in January 1946 and divorce in July
1946. That unhappy union wrecked his already fragile health. Upon the Stooges'
return to Los Angeles in late November 1945, Curly was a shell of his former
self. They had two months to rest before reporting back to Columbia in late
January 1946, but Curly's condition was irreversible. They had only 24 days of
work over the next three months, but eight weeks of time off could not help the
situation. In those last six shorts, ranging from Monkey Businessmen (1946)
through Half-Wits Holiday (1947), Curly was seriously ill, struggling to get
through even the most basic scenes.
During the final day of filming Half-Wits Holiday (1947) on
May 6, 1946, Curly suffered a debilitating stroke on the set, ending his
14-year career. They hoped for a full recovery, but Curly never appeared in a
film again except for a single cameo appearance in the third film after Shemp
returned to the trio, Hold That Lion! (1947). It was the only film that
contained all four of the original Stooges (the three Howard brothers and
Larry) on screen simultaneously. According to Jules White, this anomaly came about
when Curly visited the set one day, and White had him do this bit for fun.
Curly's cameo appearance was recycled in the remake Booty and the Beast, 1953.
In 1949, Curly filmed a brief scene for Malice in the Palace
(1949) as the restaurant's cook, but it was not used. Jules White's copy of the
script contained the dialogue for this missing scene, and a production still of
Curly does exist, appearing on both the film's original one-sheet and lobby
card. Larry played the role of the cook in the final print.
Shemp's return (1946–1955)
Moe asked his older brother Shemp to take Curly's place, but
Shemp was hesitant to rejoin the Stooges as he was enjoying a successful solo
career. He realized, however, that not rejoining the Stooges would mean the end
of Moe's and Larry's film careers. Shemp wanted assurance that rejoining them
would be only temporary and that he could leave the Stooges once Curly
recovered. However, Curly's health continued to deteriorate, and it became
clear that he could not return. As a result, Shemp resumed being a Stooge
full-time for nearly a decade. Curly remained ill until his death of a cerebral
hemorrhage from additional strokes on January 18, 1952.
Shemp appeared with the Stooges in 76 shorts and a
low-budget Western comedy feature titled Gold Raiders (1951) in which the
screen time was evenly divided with cowboy hero George O'Brien. Shemp's return
improved the quality of the films, as the previous few had been marred by
Curly's sluggish performances. Entries such as Out West (1947), Squareheads of
the Round Table (1948) and Punchy Cowpunchers (1950) proved that Shemp could
hold his own. New director Edward Bernds, who joined the team in 1945 when Curly
was failing, sensed that routines and plotlines that worked well with Curly as
the comic focus did not fit Shemp's persona, and allowed the comedian to
develop his own Stooge character. Jules White, however, persisted in employing
the "living cartoon" style of comedy that reigned during the Curly
era. White would force either Shemp or Moe to perform similar gags and
mannerisms originated by Curly, resulting in what appeared to be lackluster
imitations. Most acutely, it created the "Curly vs. Shemp" debate
that overshadowed the act upon Curly's departure. The Stooges lost some of
their charm and inherent appeal to children after Curly retired, but some
excellent films were produced with Shemp, an accomplished solo comedian who
often performed best when allowed to improvise on his own.
The films from the Shemp era contrast sharply with those
from the Curly era, largely owing to the individual directing styles of Bernds
and White. From 1947 to 1952, Bernds hit a string of successes, including
Fright Night (1947), The Hot Scots, Mummy's Dummies, Crime on Their Hands (all
1948), A Snitch in Time (1950), Three Arabian Nuts (1951) and Gents in a Jam
(1952). Two of the team's finest efforts were directed by Bernds: Brideless
Groom (1947) and Who Done It? (1949). White also contributed a few fair
entries, such as Hold That Lion! (1947), Hokus Pokus (1949), Scrambled Brains
(1951), A Missed Fortune and Corny Casanovas (both 1952).
Another benefit from the Shemp era was that Larry was given
more time on screen. Throughout most of the Curly era, Larry was relegated to a
background role, but by the time that Shemp rejoined the Stooges, Larry was
allotted equal footage, even becoming the focus of several films, in particular
Fuelin' Around (1949) and He Cooked His Goose (1952).
The Shemp years also marked a major milestone: the Stooges'
first appearance on television. In 1948, they guest-starred on Milton Berle's
popular Texaco Star Theater and Morey Amsterdam's The Morey Amsterdam Show. By
1949, the team filmed a pilot for ABC-TV for their own weekly television
series, titled Jerks of All Trades. Columbia Pictures blocked the series from
going into production, but allowed the Stooges to make television guest
appearances. The team went on to appear on Camel Comedy Caravan (also known as
The Ed Wynn Show), The Kate Smith Hour, The Colgate Comedy Hour, The Frank
Sinatra Show and The Eddie Cantor Comedy Theatre, among others.
In 1952, the Stooges lost some key players at Columbia
Pictures. The studio decided to downsize its short-subject division, resulting
in producer Hugh McCollum being discharged and director Edward Bernds resigning
out of loyalty to McCollum. Screenwriter Elwood Ullman, who had worked closely
with Bernds, also resigned. Bernds had been contemplating his resignation for
some time, as he and Jules White were often at odds. Bernds's departure left
only White to direct the Stooges' remaining Columbia comedies. Not long after,
the quality of the team's output markedly declined, with producer-director
White now assuming complete control over production. DVD Talk critic Stuart
Galbraith IV commented that "the Stooges' shorts became increasingly
mechanical...and frequently substituted violent sight gags for story and
characterization." Production was also significantly faster, with the
former four-day filming schedules now tightened to two or three days. In
another cost-cutting measure, White would create a "new" Stooge short
by borrowing footage from old ones, setting it in a slightly different
storyline and filming a few new scenes, often with the same actors in the same
costumes. White was initially very subtle when recycling older footage: he
would reuse only a single sequence of old film, re-edited so cleverly that it
was not easy to detect. The later shorts were cheaper and the recycling more
obvious, with as much as 75% of the running time consisting of old footage.
White came to rely so much on older material that he could film the
"new" shorts in a single day. New footage filmed in order to link
older material suffered from White's heavy-handed directing style and penchant
for telling his actors how to act. Shemp, in particular, disliked working with
White after 1952.
Three years after Curly's death, Shemp Howard died of a
heart attack at age 60 on November 22, 1955, during a taxi ride home with a
friend after attending a boxing match. Moe was stunned and contemplated
disbanding the Stooges. However, Columbia had promised exhibitors eight Stooge
shorts for the year but only four had been completed, forcing producer Jules
White to manufacture four more shorts "with Shemp." Recycled footage
of Shemp, combined with new footage of Columbia supporting player Joe Palma
doubling for him (see also Fake Shemp), was used to complete the last four
films: Rumpus in the Harem, Hot Stuff, Scheming Schemers and Commotion on the
Ocean (all released in 1956).
Joe Besser replaces Shemp (1956–1958)
By 1956 Moe Howard and Larry Fine were carrying the
short-subject series as a two-man team, apart from third member Shemp, who was
seen entirely in older footage. Moe proposed that he and Larry could continue
working as a duo, "The Two Stooges." Columbia flatly refused, having
promoted the team as "The Three Stooges" for decades. Moe was forced
to recruit a third Stooge. Several comedians were considered, including
nightclub comic Buddy Hackett, burlesque comic (and former Ted Healy stooge)
Paul "Mousie" Garner, and noted African-American comedian Mantan
Moreland, but Columbia insisted on a comedian already under contract to the
studio. They agreed on Joe Besser, who appeared in the final 16 Stooge shorts
at Columbia. Besser had been starring in his own short-subject comedies for the
studio since 1949 and appeared in supporting roles in a variety of movies,
making his persona sufficiently well known.
Besser had observed how one side of Larry Fine's face
appeared "calloused", so he had a clause in his contract specifically
prohibiting him from being hit beyond an infrequent tap, though this
restriction was later lifted. "I usually played the kind of character who
would hit others back," Besser recalled.
Despite Besser's prolific film and stage career, Stooge
entries featuring him have often been considered the team's weakest. During his
tenure, the films were assailed as questionable models for youth, and in
response began to resemble television sitcoms. Sitcoms, however, were available
for free on television, making the short film a throwback to a bygone era.
Besser was a talented comic, and was quite popular as "Stinky" on The
Abbott and Costello Show. However, his whining mannerisms and the lack of slapstick
punishment against him did not quite blend with the Stooges' brand of humor.
His presence, though, did create verbal friction between Moe and Larry that
improved their mutually insulting banter.
Times had changed, and Besser was not solely to blame for
the quality of these final entries; the scripts were rehashes of earlier
efforts, the budgets were lower, and Moe's and Larry's advanced ages prohibited
them from performing as much of the physical comedy that was their trademark.
Besser had suggested that Moe and Larry comb their hair back to give them a
more gentlemanly appearance. Both Moe and Jules White approved of the idea, but
used it sparingly. Their other films—remakes of older comedies—required the
familiar Stooge haircuts to match the older footage.
Despite their lukewarm reception, the Besser shorts did have
their moments. In general, the remakes had the traditional Stooges knockabout,
such as 1958's Pies and Guys (a scene-for-scene remake of Half-Wits Holiday,
which itself was a reworking of the earlier Hoi Polloi), Guns a Poppin (1957),
Rusty Romeos (1957), and Triple Crossed (1959). In contrast, Hoofs and Goofs,
Horsing Around, and Muscle Up a Little Closer (all 1957) mostly resembled the
sitcoms of the era. A Merry Mix Up (also 1957) and Oil's Well That Ends Well
(1958) are also amusing, while the musical Sweet and Hot (1958) deserves some
credit for straying from the norm. The American science-fiction craze also led
to three entries focusing on space travel: Space Ship Sappy, Outer Space
Jitters (both 1957), and Flying Saucer Daffy (1958).
Columbia was the last studio still producing live-action
two-reel comedies (the Stooges' last live-action competition, the one-reel Joe
McDoakes series, had ended its run in 1956), and the market for such films had
all but ceased. As a result, Jules White told Columbia president Harry Cohn
that he was shutting down the two-reel-comedy department at the end of 1957.
The final comedy produced was Flying Saucer Daffy, filmed on December 19–20,
1957. Several days later, the Stooges were unceremoniously fired from Columbia
Pictures after 24 years of employment.
No formal goodbyes or congratulatory celebrations occurred
in recognition of their work and of the money that their comedies had earned
for the studio. Moe visited Columbia several weeks after the dismissal to say
goodbye to several executives. But without the current year's studio pass, Moe
was refused entry, later stating that it was a crushing blow to his pride.
The studio had enough completed Stooge films to be released
over the next 18 months, though not in the order in which they were produced.
The final Stooge release, Sappy Bull Fighters, did not reach theaters until
June 4, 1959. With no active contract in place, Moe and Larry discussed plans
for a personal appearance tour. In the meantime, Besser's wife suffered a minor
heart attack and he preferred to stay local, leading him to withdraw from the
act.
Comeback with Joe DeRita (1958–1970)
Larry, Moe and Curly Joe: the Stooges with Curly Joe DeRita
(left) in 1959
After Besser's departure, Moe and Larry began looking for
potential replacements. Larry suggested former Ted Healy stooge Paul
"Mousie" Garner, but based on his tryout performance, Moe later
remarked that he was "completely unacceptable." Weeks later, Larry
came across burlesque performer Joe DeRita, who had starred in his own series
of shorts at Columbia back in the 1940s, and thought he would be a good fit.
The early days of television provided movie studios a place
to unload a backlog of short films that they thought otherwise unmarketable,
and the Stooge films seemed perfect for the burgeoning genre. ABC had even
expressed interest as far back as 1949, purchasing exclusive rights to 30 of
the trio's shorts and commissioning a pilot for a potential series, Jerks of
All Trades. However, the success of television revivals for such names as
Laurel and Hardy, Woody Woodpecker, Popeye, Tom and Jerry and the Our Gang
series in the late 1950s led Columbia to cash in again on the Stooges. In
September 1958, Columbia's television subsidiary Screen Gems offered a package
consisting of 78 Stooge shorts (primarily from the Curly era), which were well
received.
An additional 40 shorts hit the market in April 1959. By
September 1959, all 190 Stooge shorts were airing regularly. With so many films
available for broadcast, daily television airings provided heavy exposure aimed
squarely at children. Parents who had grown up seeing the same films in the
theaters began to watch alongside their children and, before long, Howard,
Fine, and DeRita were in great demand. After it was discovered that the
Curly-era shorts were the most popular, Moe suggested that DeRita shave his
head to accentuate his slight resemblance to Curly Howard. He adopted first a
crew cut and later a completely shaven head, thus becoming "Curly
Joe."
This lineup, now frequently referred to as "Larry, Moe,
and Curly Joe," starred in six full-length feature films from 1959 to
1965: Have Rocket, Will Travel (1959), Snow White and the Three Stooges (1961),
The Three Stooges Meet Hercules (1962), The Three Stooges in Orbit (1962), The
Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze (1963) and The Outlaws IS Coming!
(1965). The films were aimed at the kiddie-matinee market, and most were
black-and-white farce outings in the Stooge tradition, with the exception of
Snow White and the Three Stooges, a children's fantasy in color.
They appeared in an extremely brief cameo in the film It's a
Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), appearing as firemen, which Larry, Moe, and
Shemp had earlier played in their first film, Rube Goldberg's Soup to Nuts in
1930 during their lengthy stint in "Ted Healy and His Stooges". They
appeared in a larger capacity in 1963 in 4 for Texas starring Frank Sinatra and
Dean Martin. Throughout the early 1960s, the Stooges were one of the most
popular and highest-paid live acts in America. They played theaters, summer
festivals, fairgrounds, and other venues, and twice performed as the featured
act at the Canadian National Exposition. In 1968, they toured Hawaii where they
starred in the International 3-Ring Circus at the Honolulu International
Center.
The Stooges also tried their hand at another weekly
television series in 1960 titled The Three Stooges Scrapbook, filmed in color
and with a laugh track. The first episode, "Home Cooking", featured
the boys rehearsing for a new television show. Like Jerks of All Trades in
1949, the pilot did not sell. However, Norman Maurer was able to reuse the
footage (reprocessed in black and white) for the first ten minutes of The Three
Stooges in Orbit.
The trio also filmed 41 short comedy skits for The New Three
Stooges in 1965, which features a series of 156 animated cartoons produced for
television. The Stooges appeared in live-action color footage, which preceded
and followed each animated adventure in which they voiced their respective
characters.
During this period, The Stooges appeared on numerous
television shows including The Steve Allen Show, Here's Hollywood, Masquerade
Party, The Ed Sullivan Show, Danny Thomas Meets the Comics, The Joey Bishop
Show, Off to See the Wizard and Truth or Consequences.
Final years (1970–1975)
In late 1969, Howard, Fine and DeRita began production on
another half-hour pilot, this time for a syndicated 39-episode TV series titled
Kook's Tour, a combination travelogue-sitcom that had the "retired"
Stooges traveling to various parts of the world with the episodes filmed on
location. On January 9, 1970, during production of the pilot, Larry suffered a
paralyzing stroke, ending his acting career along with plans for the television
series. The pilot was unfinished and several key shots were missing, but
producer Norman Maurer edited the available footage and made the pilot a
52-minute special that was released to the home-movie and Cartrivision
videocassette home video markets in 1973. It is the last film in which the
Stooges appeared and the last known performance of the team.
Following Larry Fine's stroke, plans were made for Emil
Sitka to replace him in a new feature film, written by Moe Howard's grandson,
Jeffrey Scott , titled Make Love, Not War. Moe Howard, Joe DeRita, and Emil
Sitka were cast as POWs in a World War II Japanese prison camp, plotting an
escape with fellow prisoners. The film would have been a departure from typical
Stooge fare, with dark-edged humor and scenes of war violence, but insufficient
funding prevented production from advancing beyond the script stage.
Also in 1970, Joe DeRita recruited vaudeville veterans Frank
Mitchell and Mousie Garner to tour as The New Three Stooges. Garner had worked
with Ted Healy as one of his "replacement stooges" decades earlier
and was briefly considered as Joe Besser's replacement in 1958. Mitchell had
also replaced Shemp as the "third stooge" in a 1929 Broadway play, A
Night in Venice, and appeared in two of the Stooges' short subjects in 1953.
The act fared poorly, with minimal bookings. By this time, Moe's wife had
prevailed on him to retire from performing slapstick due to his age. For the
next several years, Moe appeared regularly on talk shows and did speaking
engagements at colleges, while DeRita quietly retired.
Larry suffered another stroke in mid-December 1974, and four
weeks later an even more massive one. After slipping into a coma, he died a
week later from a cerebral hemorrhage on January 24, 1975.
Before Larry's death, the Stooges were scheduled to co-star
in the R-rated comedy Blazing Stewardesses, featuring Moe and Curly Joe with
Emil Sitka in the middle spot as Harry, Larry's brother. The team was signed
and publicity shots were taken, but one week prior to March's filming date, Moe
was diagnosed with lung cancer and the Stooges had to back out; he died on May
4, 1975. Producer Sam Sherman briefly considered having former Stooge Joe
Besser appear in his place, but ultimately decided against it. The Ritz
Brothers, Harry and Jimmy, replaced the Stooges and performed much of their own
schtick, including the precision dance routine first seen in Sing, Baby, Sing
(1936), co-starring original Stooge leader Ted Healy.
As for the remaining original replacement stooges, Joe
Besser died of heart failure on March 1, 1988, followed by Joe DeRita of
pneumonia on July 3, 1993. Emil Sitka was announced as a Stooge but never
performed as such; he died on January 16, 1998, six months after being disabled
by a stroke.
Legacy and perspective
Over 60 years since their last short film was released, the
Three Stooges remain popular. Their films have never left American television
since first appearing in 1958. They were a hard-working group of comedians who
were never critics' favorites; a durable act that endured several personnel
changes in careers that would have permanently sidelined a less persistent act.
They would not have lasted as long as they did as a unit without Moe Howard's
guiding hand.
Ted Okuda's and Edward Watz's book The Columbia Comedy
Shorts puts the Stooges' legacy in critical perspective:
Many scholarly
studies of motion picture comedy have overlooked the Three Stooges entirely –
and not without valid reasoning. Aesthetically, the Stooges violated every rule
that constitutes "good" comedic style. Their characters lacked the
emotional depth of Charlie Chaplin and Harry Langdon; they were never as witty
or subtle as Buster Keaton. They were not disciplined enough to sustain lengthy
comic sequences; far too often, they were willing to suspend what little
narrative structure their pictures possessed in order to insert a number of
gratuitous jokes. Nearly every premise they have employed (spoofs of westerns,
horror films, costume melodramas) has been done to better effect by other
comedians. And yet, in spite of the overwhelming artistic odds against them,
they were responsible for some of the finest comedies ever made. Their humor
was the most undistilled form of low comedy; they were not great innovators,
but as quick laugh practitioners, they place second to none. If public taste is
any criterion, the Stooges have been the reigning kings of comedy for over
fifty years.
Beginning in the 1980s, the Stooges finally began to receive
critical recognition. The release of nearly all their films on DVD by 2010
allowed critics of Joe Besser and Joe DeRita—often the recipients of
significant fan backlash—to appreciate both men's unique styles of comedy. The
DVD market has also allowed fans to view the entire Stooge film corpus as
distinct periods in their long career, rather than unfairly comparing one
Stooge to another (the Curly vs. Shemp debate continues to this day, with Joe
Besser not even mentioned in the same breath).
The team appeared in 220 films, but it is the durability of
the 190 short films they made at Columbia Pictures that is their enduring
legacy. In 1984, American television personality Steve Allen said,
"Although they never achieved widespread critical acclaim, they did
succeed in accomplishing what they had always intended to do: They made people
laugh."
The Three Stooges were among hundreds of artists whose
material was destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.
Social commentary, satire, and use of language
Although the Three Stooges' slapstick comedy was primarily
arranged around basic plots dealing with mundane issues of daily life, a number
of their shorts featured social commentary or satire. They were often
anti-heroical commentators on class divisions and economic hardships of the
Great Depression in the United States. They were usually under- or unemployed
and sometimes homeless or living in shanty towns.
The language used by the Three Stooges was more slang-laden
than that of typical feature films of the period and deliberately affected a
lower class status with use of crude terms, ethnic mannerisms and inside jokes.
An example is the use of the initials A.K. for big shots and
pretentious people. A.K. was an inside joke which stood for Alte Kocker (Lit:
elderly person who is defecating), a Yiddish idiom which means an old man or
woman of diminished capacity who can no longer do things they used to do.
Much of the seeming "gibberish" that the Stooges
sometimes spoke was actually the Yiddish language of their Jewish ancestry. The
most famous example occurs 15 minutes into the 1938 short Mutts to You. Moe and
Larry were impersonating Chinese laundrymen in an attempt to fool the local
cop. While being questioned Larry says "Ech Bin A China Boychic Frim
Slobatkya-Gebernya Hak Mir Nisht Ken Tshaynik And I Dont Mean Efsher".
This translates as "I'm a China boy from Slobatkya Gebernya so stop annoying me and I don't mean
maybe."
A third “in-Yiddish” joke is in the episode Pardon My Scotch
when the liquor supplier prepares to consume the Stooges' volatile concoction,
and they wish him well in a triad pattern saying "Over the river,"
"Skip the gutter," and concluding with "Ver geharget," a
Yiddish expression meaning "get killed" or "drop dead."
One important area of political commentary was in the area
of the rise of totalitarianism in Europe, notably in the directly satirical You
Nazty Spy! and I'll Never Heil Again, both released before United States' entry
into World War II despite an industry Production Code that advocated avoiding
social and political issues and the negative portrayal of foreign countries.
In their classic 1940 short “No Census, No Feelings”, the
Stooges refer to Will H. Hays and his position as Hollywood's censor, when Moe
tells Curly, “We have a job now, we’re working for the census”, and Curly
replies, “You mean Will Hays?”
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