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W. C. Fields Films, The
The Stooges are out-of-work vagrants looking for jobs, but run afoul of a shop owner who thinks they're thieves and calls for the police. The boys duck into a nearby art school, and are mistaken for new art students. The art world is quickly rocked with havoc, culminating in a wet clay fight with patrons and fellow students.
Moe's daughter Joan, and Larry's daughter Phyllis, appear in the hopscotch scene with the Stooges running from the cop.
Joan Howard has supported her father's legacy by appearing at numerous Stooges conventions, Fan Club meetings, and film festivals over the years. In her status as a supporting actress, Joan joined ten other actresses who worked with the Stooges, at a costar reunion held on Feb. 17, 2007 in Burbank CA; see The Three Stooges Journal # 121 (Spring 2007) for the story and photos.
Unfilmed/edited scenes found in Jules White's final shooting script, including an alternate version of the climatic clay fight scene, were transcribed in The Three Stooges Journal # 101 (Spring 2002).
Jerry Howard
Curly
Moe Howard
Moe
Larry Fine
Larry
Al Thompson
Man in car
William J. Irving
Man panhandled by Curly
Grace Goodall
Rich woman in car
Billy Engle
Storekeeper
Louis Mason
Detective
Joan Howard Maurer
Girl playing hopscotch
Phyllis Fine Lamond
Girl playing hopscotch
Bobby Burns
Professor Fuller
Phyllis Crane
'The Hunt' model
Leo White
French artist
Ellinor Vanderveer
Dignified woman
Jack Duffy
Bearded man
George Ovey
Little bald man
Ernie Young
Man in top hat
Doris McMahon
Model
Jack Kenney
Laughing art student
Bobby Callahan
Art student
Blanche Payson
Art student
Charles Cross
Art student
Arthur Rowlands
Art student
Delos Jewkes
Art student
Lew Davis
Art student
Neal Burns
Art student
Unidentified POP GOES THE EASEL 1
Boy with ice cream cone
Unidentified POP GOES THE EASEL 2
Woman hiring secretary
Unidentified POP GOES THE EASEL 5
Art students
Jules White
Producer
Del Lord
Director
Felix Adler
Story and Screenplay
Henry Freulich
Photography
James Sweeney
Film Editor
Prod. No.: | 163 |
Shooting Days: | 5 days From: 1935-02-06 To: 1935-02-11 |
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This one has it all--the stooges panhandling, running from the law, mixing with the upper crusters of society, and, of course, a big pie fight. Ok, so technically it was clay--but that's only a minor technicality. Plus, it's the debut of the great Del Lord behind the director's chair. In short, stooge heaven....
8.5 pokes
I love the early ones. Larry was once asked why their early films were so great, and his reply was "one word: Curly".. However they all shine here. Funny dialog and sight gags galore. The boys manage to f**k up everything they get involved with, and an art school is no diffrent. Highlights are: Chrysanthemum. Girls laughing at the boys playing hopscotch. The very cute art model (great legs). Midnight on the Ocean. Stooges as non-American students. Shufflboard. The boys in drag. Curly's Mae West impersonation. And the big clay fight of course. All the Stooge films have a surreal quality to them, but the early ones moreso.
"Oh, a pair of drawers,"
Anacanapanasan.
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