Showing posts with label Larry Fine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larry Fine. Show all posts

April 17, 2025

Tutankhamun articles/mentions

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mentions:     
Cloisonné         
Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy           
            
            
            
            
             
            
            
Tutankhamun sarcophagus   
photographer unknown
            
            
            
            
           
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    

        
       
        
        
       
       
        
       
       
        
       
       
 
 
 

June 19, 2021

Moe Howard ~ No mummy's dummy

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Today is the birthday of Moses Harry Horwitz who is better known by his stage name, Moe Howard. He was an American actor and comedian who is best remembered as the leader of the comedy team, ‘The Three Stooges.’ He was the leader and the most aggressive of the Stooges, much given to bopping the others on the head with mallets, tweaking their noses, gouging their eyes, kicking their shins and committing otherwise cheerful acts of mayhem that magically never seemed to harm his partners (YouTube links below).   
 
 
 photo: John Springer Collection / Corbis / Getty
 

Moe's mother did not allow him to cut his hair during his childhood. When he was being teased at school for having grown his hair to shoulder length, he gave himself a haircut in his backyard shed. His ‘bowl cut’ hairstyle eventually became his distinctive style.         
 
 

photo by Shirley V. Martin

 
I was not so keen on the group until I saw the film Mummy's Dummies sometime in the late forties. The action takes place in Ancient Egypt and I was beginning to be interested in Archaeology so it peaked my interest.     
 
 
 
Moe Howard started out in the 1920s as part of a vaudeville comedy act titled ‘Ted Healy and His Stooges.’ The act originally had Moe and Ted Healy who were later joined by Shemp Howard and Larry Fine (link below). Eventually, The Three Stooges became distinguished for its slapstick comedy and farce with Moe and Larry as its two mainstays. Though only three performers took the stage to complete one act, a total of six performers (stooges) were featured throughout the act’s running period of almost five decades. The Three Stooges collaborated with Columbia Pictures and made 190 short films and Moe was widely recognized as one of the stooges. He was seen in more than 250 films during his career spanning six decades.    

During those sixty years Moe Howard struggled to replace, with brilliance, determination and luck, a  "Curly"Stooge as each actor portraying  him suffered ill health or died. The original Curly's health problems brought back Shemp, who in turn was replaced by comedian Joe Besser, who eventually gave way to "Curly Joe" DeRita.  

Moe Howard died of lung cancer at age 77 on May 4, 1975, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, where he had been admitted a week earlier in April, just over three months after the death of Larry Fine (link below) and just before his 78th birthday.         


NY Times obit

 
His wife Helen Schonberger died of a heart attack later that year on October 31, 1975, at age 75 and was interred in the crypt next to him on the right.     
 
At the time of his death, Moe Howard was working on his autobiography titled I Stooged to Conquer. It was released in 1977 as Moe Howard and the Three Stooges.        
 
Moe Howard was posthumously honored with a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.       
          
There is an interesting and fun interview by David Letterman with the daughter of Moe, Joan Howard Maurer, on February 9, 1983 (link below).          
          
          
          
Viewfinder links:
          
Larry Fine          
Curly Howard         
Moe Howard        
Shemp Howard           
David Letterman          
The Three Stooges                  
          
Net links:
          
NY Times ~ Moe Howard, Last Survivor Of The Three Stooges          
          
YouTube links:
           
Ken R. Deutch ~ Moe Howard interview) (audio w/images)                
Mike Douglas Show ~ Moe Howard (1 Hr., 9 Mins.)         
Moe Howard ~        
       at Home (no sound)             
       Bad to the Bone video tribute              
       "Why, You!"  
Richard Lamparski ~ Moe Howard (interview) (audio w/images)      
David Letterman ~ Joan Howard Maurer (10 mins.)    
The Tragic Death Of Moe          
          
          
          
          
          
"Only fools are positive." 
             ~ Moe Howard
          
          
          
          
          
Styrous® ~ Sunday, November 29, 2020 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

David Letterman articles/mentions

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mentions:      
Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy     
Moe Howard ~ No mummy's dummy 
King Kong & Jessica Lange         
La Strada ~ Quinn, Fellini & Masina     
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















Curly Howard articles/mentions

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mentions:      
Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy     
Moe Howard ~ No mummy's dummy      
The Three Stooges                 
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















Shemp Howard articles/mentions

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mentions:      
Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy     
Moe Howard ~ No mummy's dummy      
     
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















Moe Howard articles/mentions

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Moe Howard ~ No mummy's dummy    
     
     
mentions:      
Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy     
The Three Stooges           
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















Larry Fine articles/mentions

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Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy          
     
     
mentions:      
Moe Howard ~ No mummy's dummy   
The Three Stooges     
     
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
      
     















October 5, 2017

Larry Fine ~ A mummy's dummy












Today, October 5, is the birthday of Louis Feinberg who was born in 1902, 115 years ago, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is better known professionally as Larry Fine, an American actor, comedian, violinist and boxer and a member of the comedy act, The Three Stooges.      
         
The Stooges must have made a bazillion film shorts but of them all, Mummy's Dummies, their 111th film (November 4, 1948), is my all-time favorite. I was 8 years old and totally enamored of all things ancient, especially Egypt and King Tutankhamun of the New Kingdom. At the time, it was my desire to be an archeologist when I grew up; that didn't happen but I've never lost my fascination of ancient civilizations.    

Mummy's Dummies had the zany trio cast as used chariot salesmen in Ancient Egypt; need I say more?        

 


The Pharaoh was King Rootentootin, played by Vernon Dent. I remember howling with unbridled laughter every time his name was mentioned. Well, to be honest, I still do; yes, I admit I HAVE to watch it when I come across it on TV.        


  Vernon Dent as King Rootentootin


Dent was featured in many of the Three Stooges films; he made more appearances in their films than any other supporting actor (96). Dent also appeared with The Three Stooges on a live CBS Television broadcast of The Frank Sinatra Show on January 1, 1952. Through his association with the Stooges, Dent became a close friend of Shemp Howard.      


The plot 

King Rootentootin has a toothache and Shemp is Painless Papyrus, an expert (???) dentist. Eventually Rootentootin offers the hand of his daughter Fatima, played by Dee Green, in marriage to Painless (Shemp). The laughs generated by this exchange are non-stop. Totally silly, totally wacky but totally hysterical (link to YouTube below).   


 Shemp Howard, right, as Painless Papyrus
 


When Larry Fine was a child, his left arm was badly burned from acid used by his father in his jewelry business and a skin graft was done on his arm. The doctors recommended that he be given violin lessons as a form of therapy; playing the violin was supposed to strengthen his damaged arm muscles. His skill as a violinist became so impressive that eventually, he began to play professionally and played in local theater amateur nights usually taking the top prize.       

Fine was also a boxer who earned money as a lightweight fighter. Later on, he would develop an act in which he would do a Russian dance while playing the violin. He went on with Moe Howard and Curly Howard to form The Three Stooges, who appeared in the Columbia Pictures shorts beginning in 1934.     

On January 9, 1970, Fine suffered a stroke that paralyzed the left side of his body. It marked the end of his performing career. He moved to the Motion Picture Country House, an industry retirement community in Woodland Hills, where he  completed his "as told to" autobiography, Stroke of Luck. He suffered several additional strokes before his death on January 24, 1975, at the nursing home, at age 72.          
        
     
         
Viewfinder links:         
          
The Three Stooges      
The Andrews Sisters     
Batman, Adam West & the Whole Gang     
The Night of the Hunter & Robert Mitchum          
          
Net links:         
          
The Three Stooges:         
              Filmography     
              website bios      
NY Times Larry Fine obit         
           
YouTube links:         
          
The Three Stooges 111: Mummy's Dummies 1948 (16 minutes)  Disorder in the Court       
           
        
       
         
           
         
  
         


Thanks for the yuks, Larry!


                
                 
Styrous® ~  Thursday, October 5, 2017