In the 1939 short Oily to Bed, Oily to Rise Moe does not hit Larry. Moe does drop Larry to the ground but he never hits him.
No , only Moe Howard lived within his budget whereas Larry Fine passed away nearly penniless .
The movie you describe was never made. Curly Howard died before the Three Stooges made any movies, and he appeared only in short films. The third stooge in the Three Stooges movies was played by Curly Joe DiRita. Of the shorts (with Curly) I liked "Punch Drunk" the best. Of the movies (with Curly Joe) I liked "The Three Stooges in Orbit" the best.
There were only three stooges at a time, but six of them altogether. 1) Moe Howard (Moses Horwitz) 2) Larry Fine (Louis Fienberg) 3) Shemp Howard (Samuel Horwitz) 4) Curly Howard (Jerome Horwitz) 5) Joe Besser 6) Joe [Curley Joe] DiRita
Yes.Actually, the original short was Hold That Lion that was released in 1947 and the remake was Booty and the Beast that was released in 1953. The Stooges are looking for a crook that stole their dough and they follow him onto a train. They are looking around when they see a fellow sleeping in a seat with a derby hat over his face. Thinking this might be the crook, Larry lifts up the hat to reveal a snoring Curly who has a full head of hair. After a few seconds of snoring and barking and the like, Larry puts the hat back over Curly's face and the Stooges look elsewhere for the crook.This was the only time Moe, Curly, and Shemp appeared together in a Three Stooges short.
yes Lucy did appear on one of the three stooges episodes. That episode was called 'Three Little Pigskins' and was made in 1934. Lucy was the girlfriend of a professional football team owner.
only curly and Larry attended college
Moe and Larry were the only two that stayed for the entire 40 year run
No , only Moe Howard lived within his budget whereas Larry Fine passed away nearly penniless .
The movie you describe was never made. Curly Howard died before the Three Stooges made any movies, and he appeared only in short films. The third stooge in the Three Stooges movies was played by Curly Joe DiRita. Of the shorts (with Curly) I liked "Punch Drunk" the best. Of the movies (with Curly Joe) I liked "The Three Stooges in Orbit" the best.
There were only three stooges at a time, but six of them altogether. 1) Moe Howard (Moses Horwitz) 2) Larry Fine (Louis Fienberg) 3) Shemp Howard (Samuel Horwitz) 4) Curly Howard (Jerome Horwitz) 5) Joe Besser 6) Joe [Curley Joe] DiRita
Yes.Actually, the original short was Hold That Lion that was released in 1947 and the remake was Booty and the Beast that was released in 1953. The Stooges are looking for a crook that stole their dough and they follow him onto a train. They are looking around when they see a fellow sleeping in a seat with a derby hat over his face. Thinking this might be the crook, Larry lifts up the hat to reveal a snoring Curly who has a full head of hair. After a few seconds of snoring and barking and the like, Larry puts the hat back over Curly's face and the Stooges look elsewhere for the crook.This was the only time Moe, Curly, and Shemp appeared together in a Three Stooges short.
yes Lucy did appear on one of the three stooges episodes. That episode was called 'Three Little Pigskins' and was made in 1934. Lucy was the girlfriend of a professional football team owner.
Moe didn't play any instrument. Larry was the only one who could play an instrument. He learned to play the violin as a child as means of rehab due to an accidental acid burn injury to his hands. He performed in several concerts before joining the Stooges, and one of his performances was his winning ticket to becoming one of the Stooges
lion
Six. When the Three Stooges began making two reelers for Columbia in 1934, the Stooges were Moe Howard, Larry Fine, and Curly Howard. Curly suffered a stroke in 1946 and was replaced by his brother Shemp Howard. Shemp passed away from a heart attack in 1955 and was replaced by Joe Besser. When Columbia quit making two reelers in 1958, Joe Besser left the team and was replaced by Joe DiRita who played with Moe and Larry in several films in the 1960s.
For Crimin' Out Loud, completed in late 1955 and released in the spring of 1956.Four more shorts were released after Shemp's passing. Most of the original material in those shorts featured only Moe and Larry and if there was a scene with 'Shemp' he was played by an actor who didn't speak, kept his back to the camera, and wore a hairpiece that looked similar to Shemp's hair style.
Richard Kline portrayed Larry Dallas on the sitcom Three's Company. Larry Dallas is a fictional character on the ABC Three's Company. Larry was only the second character to appear.