Favorite Shemp Moments Part 1
Shemp Howard MR. NOISY Columbia solo
NBC Nightly News The Three Stooges Segment 1975
Three Stooges Shemp - I Hit the Wrong Monkey
PT 1 Shemp Howard In Pleased To Mitt You
Three Stooges "Fake Shemp" Footage
The Three Stooge's, Shemp Howard
THE THREE STOOGES -- MOE and SHEMP HOWARD THIER 1S
Vitaphone Comedy Collection Vol 1 - Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle/Shemp Howard (Preview Clip)
SHEMP HOWARD - "WHERE THE PEST BEGINS" (1945) CHRISTINE McINTYRE
Shemp Howard & Jerome and Paul Dean - Dizzy and Daffy Pt 1
Shemp Howard surrealist short (1950), lost film, Three Stooges
Shemp Howard MR. NOISY Columbia solo Part 2
HELLZAPOPPIN' (1941) Olsen & Johnson vs Shemp Howard * Funny film booth scene * Slapstick
Favorite Shemp Moments Part 1
Shemp Howard MR. NOISY Columbia solo
NBC Nightly News The Three Stooges Segment 1975
Three Stooges Shemp - I Hit the Wrong Monkey
PT 1 Shemp Howard In Pleased To Mitt You
Three Stooges "Fake Shemp" Footage
The Three Stooge's, Shemp Howard
THE THREE STOOGES -- MOE and SHEMP HOWARD THIER 1S
Vitaphone Comedy Collection Vol 1 - Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle/Shemp Howard (Preview Clip)
SHEMP HOWARD - "WHERE THE PEST BEGINS" (1945) CHRISTINE McINTYRE
Shemp Howard & Jerome and Paul Dean - Dizzy and Daffy Pt 1
Shemp Howard surrealist short (1950), lost film, Three Stooges
Shemp Howard MR. NOISY Columbia solo Part 2
HELLZAPOPPIN' (1941) Olsen & Johnson vs Shemp Howard * Funny film booth scene * Slapstick
Christine McIntyre meets Shemp Howard.
Shemp Howard Gravesite
Henry The Ache (1930's short film starring SHEMP HOWARD) Also starring Bert Lahr
IN THE DOUGH (1932) -- Roscoe Arbuckle, Shemp Howard, Lionel Stander
Olsen & Johnson - "Hellzapoppin" Opening Credits and Scenes with Shemp Howard
PT 2 Shemp Howard In Pleased To Mitt You
Road Show - Shemp Howard cameo
MCAP - Live COMEDY SLUG -Shemp Howard!
60 Second Screaming Shouting Shemp Sampler
Rest In Peace Shemp Howard
Love Those Stooges (Part 1/2)
Africa Screams (1949) Abbott and Costello - Full Movie
The Three Stooges
The Ed Wynn Show Season 1 Episode 25 - 3 Stooges & William Frawley
Abbott & Costello "Africa Screams" (classic comedy movie)
Africa Screams (1949)
Golden Age Of The Arcade
Dumpsterpiece Theatre #38 - Feb 21, 2007 - Dizzy & Daffy
Dumpsterpiece Theatre #24 -- July 17, 2006
''OS TRÊS PATETAS'' - {Heróis Excêntricos} CURTAS
Private Buckaroo (1942) -
Africa Screams (1949) [Full Movie]
Africa Screams 1949 Abbott and Costello
Africa Screams
The Ed Wynn show - The Three Stooges
1949 - Africa Screams - BUD ABBOTT & LOU COSTELLO - Charles Barton | FULL MOVIE Kopyası
Opie & Anthony :: 2012-08-15 (August 15 2012)
Gyémántvadászok (Africa Screams)1949. /Teljes film/ gallantsyte
Service With a Smile
Space Patrol: The Laughing Alien || a classic TV encore and precursor to Star Trek
I grandi film di Salento-one.it: Hellzapoppin'
Moe Howard on Mike Douglas Full Interview
The Three Stooges Interview (Rare)
Three Stooges at Steel Pier, Atlantic City -- 1938
Last Appearance of Curly and The Only 4 Stooges Appearance
The Best of Moe & Larry - 2
Shemp Howard & Jerome and Paul Dean - Dizzy and Daffy Pt 2
Three Stooges Curly Kills the Clam Soup
Larry Fine in NYC 1970 & the 1973 interview (Part 1)
The Lost Stooge Tapes--Moe Howard
Curly Takes the Stand
The Three Stooges Extreme Rarities - Trailer
Roast Beef and Movies Technicolor excerpt Curly Howard
Shemp Howard (March 11, 1895 – November 22, 1955) was an American actor and comedian best known as a part of The Three Stooges comedy team. Born Samuel Horwitz, he was called "Shemp" because "Sam" came out that way in his mother's thick Litvak accent. He was an older brother of both Moe Howard and Curly Howard as well as the "third stooge" in the early years of the act. He would rejoin the trio in May 1946 after Curly suffered a stroke.
Shemp was born in Manhattan, New York. He was the third of the five Horwitz brothers and of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry.
Moe Howard entered show business as a youngster, on stage and in films. Eventually, he and older brother Shemp tried their hands as minstrel-show-style "blackface" comedians with an act they called "Howard and Howard—A Study In Black", and even worked for a rival vaudeville circuit at the same time by appearing without makeup. By the 1920s Moe had teamed in a roughhouse act with boyhood friend-turned-vaudeville star Ted Healy. One day Moe spotted his brother Shemp in the audience, and yelled at him from the stage. Quick-witted Shemp yelled right back, and walked onto the stage. From then on, Shemp was part of the act, usually known as "Ted Healy and His Stooges". On stage, Healy would sing and tell jokes while his three noisy stooges would get in his way. Healy would retaliate with physical and verbal abuse. Healy's original stooges were the Howard brothers and Larry Fine. Shemp played a bumbling fireman in the Stooges' first film, Soup to Nuts, the only film in which he plays one of Healy's gang.
Christine Cecilia McIntyre (April 16, 1911–July 8, 1984) was an American actress who appeared in many movies in the 1930s and 1940s but is mainly known as the beautiful blonde actress who appeared in many Three Stooges shorts produced by Columbia Pictures.
A native of Nogales, Arizona, Christine McIntyre was one of five children. A classically trained singer, McIntyre received a Bachelor of Music degree at Chicago Musical College in 1933. It was here that she developed her operatic soprano voice, which would be put to good use in several Three Stooges films in the 1940s. McIntyre began singing in feature films at RKO Pictures, and made her film debut in 1937's Swing Fever. She then appeared in a series of B-westerns featuring the likes of Ray Corrigan and Buck Jones. She appeared with dark hair in these early roles, and also appeared occasionally in "mainstream" feature films (like 1939's Blondie Takes a Vacation). She sang songs such as "The Blue Danube" and "Voices of Spring" in a Vienna-themed short Soundies musical film, and her performance was singled out as the best of the inaugural series. Her singing in this soundie may have given the Three Stooges the idea of using "Voices of Spring" in their short film Micro-Phonies.
Bert Lahr (born Irving Lahrheim; August 13, 1895 – December 4, 1967) was an American actor and comedian. Lahr is remembered today for his roles as the Cowardly Lion and Kansas farmworker Zeke in The Wizard of Oz, but was also well known for work in burlesque, vaudeville, and on Broadway.
Lahr was born in New York City, the son of Augusta and Jacob Lahrheim. His parents were German Jewish immigrants. Lahr grew up in the Yorkville section of Manhattan. Dropping out of school at the age of 15 to join a juvenile vaudeville act, Lahr worked his way up to top billing on the Columbia Burlesque Circuit. In 1927 he debuted on Broadway in Delmar's Revels. Lahr played to packed houses, performing classic routines such as "The Song of the Woodman" (which he later reprised in the film Merry-Go-Round of 1938). Lahr had his first major success in a stage musical playing the prize fighter hero of Hold Everything! (1928–29). Several other musicals followed, notably Flying High (1930), Florenz Ziegfeld's Hot-Cha! (1932) and The Show is On (1936) in which he co-starred with Beatrice Lillie. In 1939, he co-starred with Ethel Merman in DuBarry Was a Lady.
Roscoe Conkling "Fatty" Arbuckle (March 24, 1887 – June 29, 1933) was an American silent film actor, comedian, director, and screenwriter. Starting at the Selig Polyscope Company he eventually moved to Keystone Studios where he worked with Mabel Normand and Harold Lloyd. He mentored Charlie Chaplin and discovered Buster Keaton and Bob Hope.
He was one of the most popular silent stars of the 1910s, and soon became one of the highest paid actors in Hollywood, signing a contract in 1921 with Paramount Pictures for an unprecedented $1 million.
In September 1921, Arbuckle attended a party at the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco during the Labor Day weekend. Bit player Virginia Rappe became drunk and ill at the party; she died four days later at a sanitarium known for performing abortions. Arbuckle was accused by a well-known madam of raping and accidentally killing Rappe. Arbuckle endured three widely publicized trials for manslaughter. His films were subsequently banned and he was publicly ostracized.
Lionel Jay Stander (January 11, 1908 – November 30, 1994) was an American actor in films, radio, theater and television.
Lionel Stander was born in The Bronx, New York, to Russian Jewish immigrants, the first of three children. According to newspaper interviews with Stander, as a teenager he appeared in the 1926 silent film Men of Steel, perhaps as an extra; he is not listed in the credits. During his one year at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he appeared in a student production of "The Muse and the Movies: A Comedy of Greenwich Village." Stander's professional acting career began in 1928, as Cop and First Fairy in "Him" by e.e. cummings at the Provincetown Playhouse. He claimed that he got the roles because one of them required shooting craps, which he did well, and a friend in the company volunteered him. He appeared in a series of short-lived plays through the early 1930s, including The House Beautiful, which Dorothy Parker famously derided as "the play lousy."
In 1932, Stander landed his first credited film role in the Warner-Vitaphone short feature In the Dough, with Fatty Arbuckle and Shemp Howard. He made several other shorts, the last being The Old Grey Mayor with Bob Hope in 1935. That year, he was cast in a feature, Ben Hecht's The Scoundrel with Noël Coward. He moved to Hollywood and was signed a contract with Columbia Pictures. Stander was in a string of films over the next three years, appearing most notably in Frank Capra's Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936) with Gary Cooper, playing Archie Goodwin in Meet Nero Wolfe (1936) and The League of Frightened Men (1937), and in A Star Is Born (1937) with Janet Gaynor and Fredric March.