Tag: Curly Howard

  • Stoogeum PA A Nyuk Nyuk Visit to 3 Stooges Heaven

    Stoogeum PA A Nyuk Nyuk Visit to 3 Stooges Heaven

    Spent the afternoon today visiting the Stoogeum in Ambler, PA, an eccentric institution, chock full of Three Stooges collectibles and memorabilia. I must say, there is more in there than you might suspect – yellowed newspapers, candid glossies, and theatrical broadsides share space with state-of-the-art touch screens (activated by poking an image of Curly in the eyes), pinball machines and video games, a “Hall of Shemp” (which endeared the place to me immediately), statues and sculptures of the team, costumes and posters from the films, a Joe Besser ceremonial banner (!), a gallery of autographed photos of Stooges associates and contemporaries (ranging from Mae Clarke, memorable recipient of Cagney’s grapefruit in “Public Enemy,” and Dick Powell, to Jimmy Durante and Hugh Herbert, to Lloyd Bridges and Adam West), salutes to Stooges regulars Christine McIntyre, Emil Sitka, and director Jules White, a sit-down movie theater that continuously runs Stooges shorts, and of course monitors all over the place.

    The third floor is crammed with Stooges art, storyboards from the cartoon series and floor-to-ceiling Stooges tributes – somebody actually managed convincing likenesses of Moe, Larry, Curly, and Shemp on four different Etch-a-Sketches, now preserved behind plexiglass (let’s hope there’s not an earthquake!); but perhaps most striking for those with long memories is a stained glass window by Stanley Livingston, who played Chip on “My Three Sons.” Bizarrely, there is no photography allowed in the museum (what are they trying to hide?), but if you Google it, you will find some images.

    If you’re interested in visiting – and it is worth the trip if you’re fascinated by the era – plan ahead and make a reservation, as the museum keeps very specific, roaming hours. You’ll be admitted with everyone else approved for the period (two hours) and then set loose to explore. I went with my former newspaper editor (now retired, but he can’t stop writing), Dan Aubrey, and one of his acquaintances. We passed the car trip recalling our favorite Stooges shorts and marveled at just how surreal they could be. For example, we rewatched “Idle Roomers” on one of the museum monitors – that’s the one where the boys get trapped in an elevator with a werewolf – which has one of the great WTF Stooges endings!

    Here’s the website. Have fun figuring it out. Nyuk nyuk nyuk…

    https://stoogeum.com/

  • Larry Fine The Stooge From Philly

    Larry Fine The Stooge From Philly

    Porcupine!

    Larry Fine was born on this date in 1902. It’s been scientifically proven that all men know who Larry Fine is. For the benefit of the rest of you, Larry Fine was the bushy-haired, reactive Stooge. You know, the guy who stood there and mostly underplayed as Moe slapped the hell out of Curly. Until he himself became collateral damage.

    Fine was born Louis Feinberg at 3rd and South Streets in Philadelphia. The son of a watch repairman and jewelry shop owner, he was encouraged to take up the violin to counteract the effects of an acid burn, which damaged the muscles in his forearm when he was boy. The acid had been used by his father to test jewelry for gold content. Young Larry was about to drink the stuff, when his father slapped it away.

    Larry showed such dedication to the violin that his parents wanted to send him to study the instrument at a conservatory in Europe, but with the outbreak of World War I, he remained in Philadelphia. He took up boxing to further strengthen his arm and won his only professional fight, before his father put a stop to it.

    Larry brought his violin to the vaudeville circuit. It was there that he met Shemp Howard and the problematic Ted Healy. Healy, who was a raging alcoholic and notoriously abusive, would eventually come to a bad end under mysterious circumstances, possibly at the hands of Wallace Beery (the original onscreen “Champ”). These days, Healy is remembered, if at all, as the man who introduced The Three Stooges.

    Shemp was looking to take a break from Healy’s act for a few months, so he asked Larry if he might be interested in being a substitute “stooge.” The pay was good (Healy offered him an extra ten dollars a week if he would “throw that fiddle away”), so Larry was amendable.

    At first, he was tossed in with Bob Pinkus and Sam “Moody” Braun. Once Shemp returned, however, Larry, Shemp, and Shemp’s brother Moe – who had worked with Healy from the beginning – were brought together for the first time.

    Shemp would depart to pursue a solo career in film, working with W.C. Fields, Fatty Arbuckle, and Abbott and Costello. He was replaced by his and Moe’s younger brother, Jerome – better known as Curly.

    The reconfigured Stooges followed Healy to the big screen. Soon Healy was being groomed by MGM for a career as a solo comedian. The Stooges signed their own contract with Columbia and left their abrasive former boss in the dust. From the mid-1930s through the late-‘40s, The Three Stooges were the movies’ most popular short subject attractions. Shemp would return to the team after Curly suffered a stroke in 1946.

    Larry, Philadelphia’s native Stooge, is commemorated in a mural near his birthplace at 3rd & South. We’re coming up on the 20th anniversary of the original mural’s dedication on October 26, 1999. The mural was overpainted with another Larry mural in 2006.

    While we’re on the subject of boxers and violinists, Curly is unstoppable in his ascent to the championship, thanks to Larry’s stirring rendition of “Pop Goes the Weasel,” in “Punch Drunks” (1934):

    https://vimeo.com/60991844

    Happy birthday, Larry Fine!


    PHOTO: Larry, as immuralized in 2006

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