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Sep 8, 2010
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Published on Jan 29, 2010
Philly Violinist Joins Brooklyn Bros In Show BIz Clarence Nash was born in 1896 in Brooklyn, New York. He was a stage and vaudeville actor, and when he took a stage name, he became known as Ted Healy. Moses Horwitz was born in Brooklyn in 1897, the fourth of five brothers to Sol and Jenny Horwitz. Moses worked with his older brother Sam and his younger brother Jerome. Moses would later marry Harry Houdini's cousin, Helen Schonberger. Over in Philadelphia, Louis Feinberg was one of three boys born to Joseph and Fanny Lieberman. As a boy, Louis burned his left arm in an accident with the acid that was used in his father's jewelry business. After his doctors recommended that he take violin lessons to strengthen his arm muscles, he became so proficient at playing it that he began to play professionally. Ted Healy hired the Horwitz brothers one at a time, with Moses being the first one being when he answered Healy's ad for an acrobat for his showbusiness act. Healy later added Louis Feinberg to the group, but they never performed as acrobats. Louis had created an act in which he did a Russian dance while playing the violin that got him noticed by Healy. The trio went from stage to film, and their film careers began in 1930 with their first film titled Soup to Nuts. It was written by Rube Goldberg. Rube was the popular cartoonist whose claim to fame came from drawing cartoons that showed ten to fifteen elaborate steps to achieve a simple task. One of the actors originally went by the name of Harry Howard, as Harry was his middle name. Like many performers, each of the group's members took stage names, so you'll never see the names of Moses, Sam, Louis or Jerome in any of their reruns. That 1930 film was a success, and it began a string of 190 films that the trio created for 20th Century Fox and Columbia Pictures. Many of the shows that aired on television were what they called "shorts," since they were only 10 or 12 minutes long. Today, 90 years after making their first film, they remain as popular as ever in reruns, and the group's likeness has appeared in TV commercials for companies such as MasterCard, Verizon and Sony. They have also enjoyed merchandising success, with their image plastered on lunchboxes, T-shirts and hats. Their image has even appeared on NASCAR cars. The trio left Ted Healy when he tried to reduce their salaries in 1934. Three years later, Ted was celebrating the birth of his son at a Los Angeles nightclub one night. He had too much to drink that night, and he started a fight with three men at the nightclub. When he asked them to step outside, they ganged up on him, kicking him in the stomach, ribs and head. He died the next day as a result of his head injuries. His main legacy, however, is the comedy team which he created. Moses Horwitz, Louis Feinberg and Jerome Horwitz. Say it real fast three times and what do you get? Moe, Larry and Curly, a.k.a. The Three Stooges! As for the three men who killed Ted Healy, their names were Pat DiCicco, Albert Broccoli and Wallace Beery. Who were they? Pat DiCicco was a mobster who married Gloria Vanderbilt. She divorced him because he was violent to her. Albert Broccoli, who was Pat DiCicco's cousin, was a young assistant producer at the time. Wallace Beery was a film actor for MGM. While the names of Pat DiCicco and Wallace Beery probably don't sound familiar to you, Albert Broccoli's name might ring a bell. He went on to become a well-known Hollywood producer. In fact, like The Three Stooges shows, some of his films are as popular today as they were when he first began producing them. His first big hit was the Ian Fleming film, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. It was his other work in which he made his mark, though, and that was as the producer of the James Bond series. You can see Broccoli's name listed in the opening credits of the Bond films. Really? "Soitenly!" Paul Niemann's column has appeared in more than 110 newspapers. He can be reached at niemann7@aol.com c Paul Niemann 2010 Comments: Submit Your Comment:
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