Louis Feinberg (5 October 1902 - 24 January 1975), known professionally as Larry Fine, is an American actor, comedian, violinist and boxer, best known as member of The Three Stooges comedy.
Video Larry Fine
Kehidupan awal
Fine was born in a Russian Jewish family at 3rd and South Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on October 5, 1902. His father, Joseph Feinberg, and mother, Fanny Lieberman, own a watch and jewelry store.
In his childhood, Fine's arms accidentally burned with acid. His father used acid to test jewelry because of its gold content. On one occasion, little Fine thought sour to drink and lifted the bottle to her lips. Before he could drink, his father dropped the bottle from Fine's hand, splashed Fine's forearm with acid and caused great damage to the arm.
His parents then gave a fine violin lesson to help strengthen the damaged muscles in his forearms. He became very adept with violins whose parents wanted to send him to European music conservatories. However, the plan was thwarted by the outbreak of World War I. Fine then played the violin in the Stooge movies. In scenes where the three Stooges play the violin, only Larry actually plays, while the other two are miming.
To further strengthen his damaged arm, Fine grabbed his fist in his teenage years, winning a professional battle. His father, opposed to Larry's battle in public, ended his brief career as a boxer. [1]
Maps Larry Fine
Acting career
Vaudeville
At an early age, Fine began performing as a violinist in vaudeville. In March 1928, while starring as an emcee at Rainbo Gardens, Chicago, Fine met Shemp Howard and Ted Healy. At that time, Healy and Howard performed at Shubert Brothers' A Night in Spain. Since Howard left the drama for several months, they asked him to be a substitute for 'henchmen'. Fine joins the other henchmen Ted, Bobby Pinkus and Sam 'Moody' Braun. Howard returned in September 1928 to complete a nationwide tour of Spain.
In early 1929, Healy signed a contract to appear on Shuberts' new revue A Night in Venice . Healy brings Fine, Shemp Howard, and Moe Howard together for the first time as a trio. "Moe, Larry and Shemp", with Fred Sanborn, appeared in Venice from 1929 to March 1930. Both Shemp Howard and Moe Howard toured as "Ted Healy & His Racketeers" spring and summer, and then went to Hollywood in the summer to film Fox Studio Soup to Nuts (1930).
Both Howard's brothers broke up with Healy after Soup to Nuts and toured as "Howard, Fine and Howard: Three Lost Soles" from the fall of 1930 until the summer of 1932. In July 1932, Fines and Moe Howard teamed up with Healy again, adding Curly Howard to the group. The new formation premiered at Cleveland's RKO Palace Theater on August 27, 1932. Shemp Howard broke away to pursue a solo career, appearing in Shemp Howard shorts and playing a supporting role in feature films starring big comedians like Roscoe Arbuckle, W.C. Fields, and Abbott and Costello, as well as other mainstream players.
Larry's Hair
Fine is easily recognizable in the features of Stooge with its hairdo, bald at the top with lots of thick, bushy hair, red curls around the sides and back; Moe calls him "Porcupine". Fine's fine-branded hair has its origins, according to rumors, from his first meeting with Healy. Fine had just wet her hair in the basin, and it was dry strangely when they spoke. Healy encourages Fine to keep the beautiful hairstyle. In a 1973 TV interview on The Mike Douglas Show , Moe Howard recalled:
"So Healy said," Do you want to be one of the minions and make three, not two? "And Larry said 'Yes, I'll love it.' Healy said, "I'll give you ninety dollars a week." 'Well.' He also said, 'I'll give you an additional ten bucks a week if you throw the violin.' "
It was considered a fictional account, because Moe Howard was absent by then in March 1928, after "retiring" from a show business in July 1925 to go to real estate with his mother. He did not return to perform and Ted acted until December 1928. Visitors behind the Fine screens of the day were Ted Healy, Shemp Howard and Bobby Pinkus.
Three features of Stooges
Starting in 1932, Three Stooges made 206 short films and some features, their most productive period starring Fine, Moe Howard and Curly Howard. However, their careers with Healy are marked by payment disputes, film contracts, and Healy drinking and verbal harassment. Both Howard and his brothers eventually left Healy for good in 1934.
In many Stooge shorts, Larry's character reacts more than acting, staying in the background and serving as a sound reason contrasts with Zany Moe and Curly's antics. He is a surrealistic foil and a middle ground between the rude Moe "boss", and Curly's childish personality. Like other Stooges, Larry often accepts Moe's harassment. The reason is a perfect foil for the harsh roughness of Moe and the boyish Curly or Shemp boyhood, but Larry sometimes suggests something impossible or illogical and quickly dropped by Moe, both verbally and physically, who often react by pulling a handful of hair out Larry's head.
After Curly suffered a severe stroke in 1946, Shemp replaced him in acting. Curly recovered enough to appear in Hold That Lion! (1947), in a cameo appearance (the only Three Stooges film containing the three Howard Brothers: Moe, Curly, and Shemp). Curly died on January 18, 1952, at the age of 48 years.
On November 22, 1955, Shemp died of a heart attack. Joe Palma plays a fake Shemp role in three previously signed Stooges shorts, then Joe Besser replaces him as third Stooge. When Stooges left Columbia in 1958, Joe DeRita replaced Besser.
In the first two Stooge reels (and sometimes later), Larry's characters often engage in really crazy behavior. Fine will turn on the scene with random improvised comments or silly acts. At the spoof of Men in Black hospital (1934), Larry, dressed as a surgeon and holding a large kitchen knife, grumbled: "Let's take it out... and see if he's done!" In Disorder in the Court (1936), the tense courtroom scene is disrupted by Larry breaking into wild Tarzan's shout. Of course, after each blast, Moe would roughly drop him. According to Fine's brother, Fine developed a callus on one side of his face from Moe's countless slaps.
The off-screen character on Larry's character is described as an extension of Fine's own relaxed personality. Director Charles Lamont recalled: "Larry is a crazy person, he's the kind of guy who always says anything, he's a yapper." Writer-director Edward Bernds recalls that Fine's suggestions for scripts are often "peeled off," but sometimes contain good comic ideas.
The Three Stooges became a big hit on television in 1959, when Columbia Pictures released a collection of trio movies, whose popularity took them to new audiences and revitalized their careers.
Personal life
Outside the stage, Larry is a social butterfly. He loves a good time and is surrounded by his friends. He and his wife, Mabel Haney, love to party, and every Christmas is served a sumptuous midnight meal. Some of his friends call him "yes man" because he is always so nice, no matter what the situation.
Larry's demonic-perhaps-care personality was brought to the financial world. He was a terrible businessman and spent his money once he got it. He has a significant gambling addiction, which leads him to risk all the money he has on him either in racetracks or high stakes gin playing cards. In an interview, Fine even admitted that he often gave money to actors and friends who needed help, and never asked to be paid back. As Joe Besser and director Edward Bernds recall, due to his constant and free expenditures and gambling, Larry was almost forced to bankrupt when Columbia stopped the filming of the new Three Stooges in December 1957.
Due to his wasteful ways and dislikes for housekeeping, Larry and his family stayed at the hotel - first at the President Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where his daughter Phyllis grew up, then the Knickerbocker Hotel in Hollywood. He had no home until the late 1940s, when he bought one in Los Feliz area of ââLos Angeles, California.
On May 30, 1967, Mabel died of a sudden cardiac arrest at the age of 63. Larry was on the road and would be on stage for live performances at Rocky Point Amusement Park in Warwick, Rhode Island when he heard the news. He immediately flew home to California, leaving two other Stooges to improvise with their remaining performances in the park.
Mabel's death came almost six years after the death of their only son, John, in a car accident on November 17, 1961, at the age of 24. The only child, Phyllis, died of cancer on April 3, 1989, at the age of 60 years.
Fine is sometimes mistakenly reported as the father of the sports broadcaster Warner Wolf, who is actually the son of Jack Wolf, one of the few "henchmen" who play in the vaudeville action of Ted Healy at one time or another. Fine is the father-in-law of Los Angeles television actor Don Lamond, who is best known for hosting Stooges shorts at KTTV for years.
End of acting year and death
In 1965, Fine, Moe Howard, and Joe DeRita started a new comedy TV show titled The New 3 Stooges , a mix of live and animated segments. While the show produces good judgment, the men are too old at this point to do a slapstick comedy well. Fine began to show signs of mental disturbance, such as the frequent difficulty of delivering the line properly.
A few years later, the men started working on Kook Tour, a new TV series. On January 9, 1970, Fine suffered a debilitating stroke that paralyzed the left side of his body. This event marks the end of his show career.
Fine eventually moved to Motion Picture Country House, an industrial retirement community in Woodland Hills, where he spent the rest of his life, and used a wheelchair for the past five years. Even in his paralyzed condition, Fine does what he can to entertain other patients. Fine also completed an "autobiography" told to "Stroke of Luck", Fine received visits from her old partner, Moe Howard. Fine remained accessible to Stooge fans, regularly hosted her despite her disability When asked whether to spend his life as Stooge is fun, he will comment "it's not fun: it's a job - but it pays off well, so I enjoy it."
Like Curly Howard, Fine suffered several additional blows before his death on January 24, 1975, at a nursing home in Woodland Hills, at the age of 72. He was interred with his wife, Mabel and his son, John at a tomb in Glendale's Forest Lawn Memorial. Funeral Park at Freedom Mausoleum, Sanctuary of Liberation. Fellow Stooge Joe Besser is buried in a graveyard just a short distance from the Freedom Mausoleum. Moe Howard died four months later.
Movieography
Legacy
- The Three Stooges have a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in honor of their contribution to the motion picture-moving industry at 1560 Vine Street in Hollywood, dedicated on August 30, 1983, with Joe Besser's former accomplice in attendance.
- In the 2000 movie made for TV, Larry Fine is played by Evan Handler.
- In the 2004 feature of New Yorker on Farrelly Brothers' efforts to write a script for the new Three Stooges, Peter Farrelly offers his theory of the Stooge award: "Grow, first you watch Curly, then Moe, and then your eyes get to Larry He is the most vulnerable reactor Five to fourteen Curly, fourteen to twenty one Moe Whoever gets out of college, if you do not see Larry, you do not have a good brain. "
- The big mural Larry Fine appears on the wall at the busy junction of Road 3 and South, near his birthplace in Philadelphia. Attempts to create a mural on the site began when the local weekly newspaper suggested that the city must somehow honor it. Dedicated on October 26, 1999, with the sister Fine in attendance, the mural showed Larry with a strange expression on his face. In May 2006, a similar mural showing Larry with a more animated expression and playing the violin was painted over the original murals. The mural stands on Jon's Bar and Grill with a sign saying "The Place of Birth from Larry Fine."
- On October 15, 2009, the Associated of Central High School Alumni in Philadelphia inaugurated Fine into the Hall of Fame honorable school, even though she never graduated. A member of the Central Alumni Hall of Fame Committee pointed out, "Many people do not even realize that Mr. Fine is a Philadelphian and that is part of what we are trying to do."
- In the Farrelly brothers 2012 The Three Stooges , Larry is portrayed by Sean Hayes from Will & amp; Grace fame. Young Larry is described by Lance Chantiles-Wertz.
References
Further reading
- Stroke of Luck ; by James Carone, as told by Larry Fine (Siena Publishing, Hollywood, 1973.)
- Larry, the Stooge in the Middle ; by Morris Feinberg with G. P. Skratz (Last Gasp, San Francisco, 2001.) ISBNÃ, 0-86719-324-7
- One Fine Stooge: A Frizzy Life in Pictures ; by Steve Cox and Jim Terry, (Cumberland House Publishing, 2006.)
External links
- Larry Fine on IMDb
- Larry Fine in the TCM Movie Database
- Larry Fine on Broadway Internet Database
- Larry Fine on the Official Three Stooges Website
- Larry Fine Webpage
- Larry Fine in the Search of the Mausoleum
Source of the article : Wikipedia