Some popular and
lesser-known facts about Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy...
Oliver Hardy was actually born Norvell Hardy.
He chose the father's first name calling himself Oliver Norvell
Hardy during his career as a stage singer. Hardy's off-screen
nickname, 'Babe' was coined by an Italian barber near
the Lubin Studios in Jacksonville, Florida. He would
rub Hardy's face with talcum powder and say "That's nice-a baby!"
After this, Hardy was billed as "Babe Hardy"
in his early films.
'Putting Pants on Philip' is not the first time that
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were paired up. Both were
cast as separate performers in the 1921 silent short, 'The Lucky
Dog'. After signing with Hal Roach film studio
to individual contracts they were cast together once again (although
in different roles) in the 1926 film '45 Minutes From Hollywood'.
The popular 'Simpsons' catchphrase, 'D'oh!' has its
origins in the Laurel and Hardy films. Scottish actor James
Finlayson, who appeared in 33 of their films would utter the
now famous line in all his appearances.
Both Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were accomplished actors before teaming
up. Laurel had appeared in over 50 films while Hardy had been in more
than 250 productions.
Stan Laurel made his big screen debut with the 1917 silent comedy short,
'Nuts in May'. He was billed as Stan Jefferson.
As a team Laurel and Hardy have appeared in 107 films, with the pair
starring in 32 silent shorts, 40 sound shorts and 23 full-length features.
The Indian comedy duo comprising of actors, Nazir Ahmed Ghory
and Manohar Janardhan Dixit, collectively known as,
'Ghory and Dixit', who were active in Indian cinema
in the 1930s and 40s were called the Indian Laurel and Hardy.
The Sons of the Desert, the official Laurel and Hardy
appreciation society, which was founded in New York in 1965 by the comedy
duo's biographers, John McCabe, Orson Bean, Al Kilgore, Chuck
McCann and John Municino with the sanction
of Stan Laurel has over 150 chapters across North America, Europe and
Australia. The organisation was named after a fraternal society in a
1933 Laurel and Hardy film of the same name.
Members of the legendary English band The Beatles used
cut-outs of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in the cutout celebrity crowd
for the cover of their 1967 album 'Sergeant Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band'.
The signature Laurel and Hardy theme song, known variously as "The
Cuckoo Song", "Ku-Ku" or "The Dance
of the Cuckoos", was originally composed by Roach musical
director Marvin Hatley as the on-the-hour chime for
the Roach studio radio station. Stan Laurel requested it be used as
the their show's theme song after hearing the tune.
Laurel and Hardy's first and only American television appearance took
place on December 1, 1954, when they were surprised and interviewed
by Ralph Edwards on his live TV program 'This
Is Your Life'. Stan Laurel was apparently angered by being
"tricked" into making the appearance without proper intimation.
Oliver Hardy was rejected for enlistment by the Army during the First
World War due to his weight.
Laurel, who was born Arthur Stanley Jefferson, legally
changed his name to Stan Laurel in 1931. He was collaborating with Australian
actress Mae Dahlberg at the time and they were living
as common law husband and wife.
From May 1925 until September 1926, Stan Laurel received credit in at
least 22 films and starred in over 50 films for various producers before
teaming up with Oliver Hardy.
In 1909, during his early years in showbusiness, Stan Laurel worked
for Britain's leading comedy impresario, Fred Karno,
as a supporting actor and as an understudy for Charlie Chaplin.
Stan Laurel found it hard to find diverse film roles as producers, writers,
and directors found it taxing to write for his character with American
audiences knowing him either as a "nutty burglar" or as a
Charlie Chaplin imitator.
Oliver Hardy's first onscreen appearance was in the 1914 comedy film,
'Outwitting Dad'. He was billed as 'Babe Hardy'
in the credits.
Oliver Hardy was inspired to become a comic actor after viewing film
comedies and joined the Lubin Motion Pictures in Jacksonville, Florida
in 1913. He started by helping around the studio with lights, props,
and other duties, gradually learning the craft as a script-clerk for
the company.
In total, Oliver Hardy has starred or co-starred in more than 250 silent
film shorts of which roughly 150 have been lost.
Oliver Hardy did his signature 'tie twiddle' gesture for the first time
in the 1927 film 'Sailors Beware'. Although the action
would later become one of his trademarks he apparently came up with
it by accident. Hardy, while acting, had been met with a pail of water
in the face and just started to twiddle his tie, "to show embarrassment
while trying to look friendly."
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's final on-screen apperance was in the
1951 film, 'Atoll K'.
Stan Laurel had once famously quipped, "If anyone at my funeral
has a long face, I'll never speak to him again."
Stan Laurel outlived frequent friend and collaborator Oliver Hardy.
When the latter died of a stroke on August 7, 1957, Laurel was too ill
to attend his funeral and said, "Babe would understand". Hardy
was 65 at the time of his passing.
Stan Laurel was a heavy smoker until suddenly quitting around 1960,
five years before his death from a sudden heart attack, which took place
on 23 February 1965. He was 74.
The duo made 12 guest or cameo appearances that included the 1936 promotional
film, 'Galaxy of Stars'. Following a resurgance in
popularity in the late 1950s, merchandiser Larry Harmon,
who claimed ownership of the comedy duo's likenesses, co-produced a
series of Laurel and Hardy cartoons in 1966 with Hanna-Barbera
Productions. His animated versions of Laurel and Hardy guest-starred
in a 1972 episode of Hanna-Barbera's 'The New Scooby-Doo Movies'.
A direct-to-video film titled, 'The All-New Adventures of Laurel
and Hardy: For Love or Mummy' starring actors Bronson
Pinchot and Gailard Sartain, who played lookalike
nephews of Laurel and Hardy named Stanley Thinneus Laurel and
Oliver Fatteus Hardy was released in 1999.
Numerous colorized versions of copyright-free Laurel and Hardy features
and shorts have been reproduced by a multitude of production studios.
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