Richard Lamparski interviews Moe Howard of the Three Stooges

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Interview done in Moe Howard's California home in late 1970.

Komentáře • 352

  • @LinkRocks
    @LinkRocks Před 2 lety +24

    I like how he insisted he be called Moe instead of Mr. Howard. It shows how humble and gracious he was.

  • @pete49327
    @pete49327 Před 6 lety +144

    What a delightful and down to earth man Moe Howard was

    • @jimnething1264
      @jimnething1264 Před 4 lety +21

      true. the mean, bossy, aggressive character that Moe played was just that-a fictional character played by a great actor. by all accounts, the real-life Moe was one of the nicest, kindest persons ever!

    • @jessicathethreestoogesfan2635
      @jessicathethreestoogesfan2635 Před 3 lety +6

      He said nostalgic

    • @NuisanceMan
      @NuisanceMan Před 3 lety +8

      The perfect working-class gentleman

    • @miketapley6445
      @miketapley6445 Před 3 lety +11

      I first heard this interview 30 years ago, I was given a CD by another fan, which I still have somewhere. This is the BEST Moe Howard interview ever recorded. He tells the story so plainly and so gentleman and humbly. This was Moe Howard. Harry Cohn mistreated them for 24 years. Hollywood did not make Moe Howard rich. He was a businessman. And never a negative thing to say about anyone. I looked up to this man as a child and as an adult.

    • @oreally8605
      @oreally8605 Před 2 lety +3

      @@miketapley6445 The Stooges should have gotten $10k each for each short. But they got $5k to split between them. Ripped off. But so humble about it.

  • @coolkidsdiscord
    @coolkidsdiscord Před 4 lety +93

    Moe Howard, what a fantastic human being. So grateful for him and the rest of the boys for sharing their gift of comedy to the world. During one of Moe's last interviews there was a comment that I'll never forget..."with a little luck, I think the 3 Stooges will live on forever" Rest in peace Moe Larry Curly Shemp Joe Curly Joe Ted Healy and Emil Sitka 💙

    • @maritzajimenez6690
      @maritzajimenez6690 Před 2 lety +6

      I beg he knows, wherever he may be, that the 3 Stooges live forever !

    • @rufust.firefly4890
      @rufust.firefly4890 Před 2 lety +3

      Christine McIntire, et al. Hey, whaddya smoking, an inner tube?

    • @mjp96
      @mjp96 Před rokem +2

      Christine McIntyre. Lovely and talented.

    • @publicmail2
      @publicmail2 Před rokem

      Well joe and Curly Joe ehh.

  • @charlesnolan7602
    @charlesnolan7602 Před 2 lety +11

    Wow! 1971...I was 16...and in 2022, still a Stooges fan!

  • @angrycat3525
    @angrycat3525 Před 2 lety +36

    Moe was far from the Stooge that appeared onscreen.
    This interview is typical of his down-to-earth look at his life and career, and you can tell how seriously he took the business of making us laugh, and for which I will always be grateful. Rest well, Moe -- you earned every bit of it!

  • @snarfinigus
    @snarfinigus Před 4 lety +74

    Laughed with Moe for many years, growing up, after school. An American treasure.

    • @emmitstewart1921
      @emmitstewart1921 Před 2 lety +2

      I used to watch him during school lunch hour. My grade school, during the fifties didn't have a lunch program. We had an hour to go home to eat. As we ate, we had a program called Captain Penny. Ron Penfound, a local newscaster hosted the show dressed as a railroad engineer. He would have interesting guests and show old cartoons and comedy shorts. Among those shorts were lots of three stooges' films. That was where I first saw Larry and Moe as live persons. As soon as they learned that their films were being shown on children's shows, they made a tour of those shows telling all the children, "Don't do those things you see us doing on the screen. We're trained professional stunt men and we know how to do those tricks without hurting each other." Those appearances left me with some respect for those guys. They didn't have to do that. They did it out of a sense of personal responsibility.

    • @RedBud315
      @RedBud315 Před 2 lety +2

      @@emmitstewart1921 Did the same thing myself between 70-73 in L.A. on Channel 52 after school. We watched the Stooges, The Little Rascals, Speed Racer, Kimba, etc.

    • @oreally8605
      @oreally8605 Před 2 lety +2

      I remember going home for lunch from school 🏫 too one hour only - Speed Racer The Monkees and the Stooges on Saturday night. A dreamy life for a 12 year old kid in 1978.

    • @mjp96
      @mjp96 Před rokem +1

      born in '63 my parents were very strict about this stuff - but they let me alone when it came to the Stooges!! They saw how *happy* they made me

  • @tommybrackett5519
    @tommybrackett5519 Před 2 lety +19

    His mind is so sharp, I can't remember what I did yesterday! My favorite comedy team of all time!

    • @kevinwachs5905
      @kevinwachs5905 Před rokem +1

      His memory is either failing in this interview, or he is being untruthful. Ken Lakey was a stooge for Healy before Moe and Shemp joined, as was a three person dance act, Syncopated Toes. Healy wasn't even in big-time vaudeville in 1922. In 1923 Healy married his first wife, Betty Braun, and formed the act Ted and Betty Healy. They were playing the Keith Circuit in New York in autumn 1923 when Moe and Shemp joined. The pear incident wasn't spontaneous; it was part of the act. Moe and Shemp each married in early 1925. They left Healy's act in spring 1925 because they didn't want to go on an Orpheum Circuit tour that would take them away from the east coast and their new brides. Moe then stayed out of show business until 1929. Shemp rejoined Ted and Betty Healy in 1926 and became his most important of several stooges. Shemp left Healy in 1928 to try his own act in small-time vaudeville, and Larry was hired to replace him. Shemp returned before the year ended. By this time, Betty had retired due to strained marital relations after Ted had a high profile affair with a socialite. The first time Shemp, Larry and Moe appeared together as Healy's stooges was in Cleveland in 1929. They starred in A Night in Venice on Broadway in 1929 as Ted Healy and his Racketeers. During the run of that revue Fred Sanborn became the fourth Racketeer. Howard, Fine and Howard left Healy in 1931 to try their luck as a vaudeville act. They performed Healy's material in a new west coast vaudeville circuit that was primarily movie houses with a few live acts. Healy had to sue over the material, but the court ruled in Howard, Fine and Howard's favor because the Shuberts, not Healy, owed the material that Ted wrote for their revues. Meanwhile, Healy was back on Broadway with other stooges for other producers. Howard, Fine and Howard returned to Healy's act in 1932. They opened in out of town tryouts for The Passing Show of 1932 when the producers, the Shubert brothers again, violated Healy's contract. Healy walked out. Shemp stayed with the show, and Larry and Moe went with Healy. After a brief return of Fred Sanborn, Curly joined the act.

  • @philipmclaughlin9636
    @philipmclaughlin9636 Před 6 lety +106

    Call me Moe!!! What a great person he really was

  • @steveroberson1488
    @steveroberson1488 Před rokem +7

    Moe is the Paul McCartney of comedy simply the best !

  • @tameikabrown1119
    @tameikabrown1119 Před 5 lety +94

    I Definitely Love Moe's Bowl Haircut Who Else Agrees With Me On This One

  • @Trucker1957
    @Trucker1957 Před 4 lety +52

    What a kind man, R.I.P Moe. Love all the Stooges, best of all time they were.

  • @markmed9091
    @markmed9091 Před rokem +6

    He possess such a sharp memory at an advanced age . Same was true when he appeared on the Mike Douglas Show. I was enthralled back when he went on the Douglas show . Thanks for posting this .

  • @joetruth5924
    @joetruth5924 Před 2 lety +13

    What a true gentleman. He was nothing like his on screen persona. I grew up watching the Stooges and still watch them today. Great comedy. Actually saw them live on stage at Gwynn Oak Amusement Park in Baltimore in 1959. My father had me on his shoulders so I could see the stage. They even took questions from the audience. I remember a woman in the crowd asked about all the slapping and eye poking and Moe took the time to demonstrate how it was safely done but enhanced with sound affects in the Columbia shorts. Before Moe passed he did a few appearances on the Mike Doulas Show which are well worth watching. He even demonstrated his pie throwing technique.

    • @maximuscomfort
      @maximuscomfort Před rokem

      Those eye pokes to date are pure evil to view.

    • @philipmclaughlin9636
      @philipmclaughlin9636 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@maximuscomfort If you slow the video down to 0.25 you can see Moe poke the guys above the eyes on the forehead

  • @thomasbinninger1355
    @thomasbinninger1355 Před 5 lety +41

    Moe sounded alert and happy at this time in his life.great interview.

  • @Jen195152
    @Jen195152 Před 2 lety +12

    I adore this man!! He is a big part of my wonderful childhood memories!! Thank you for all the laughs!! It was incredible!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @KoshN
    @KoshN Před 3 lety +34

    Moe passed away when I was a senior in high school. I wasn't into The Three Stooges much until 2020 when I bought the complete DVD collection of short features. Prior to that, I only had a VHS tape or two.
    Since buying the DVD collection, I've watched them all, in chronological order, straight through, *three* times. Now, I'll put one DVD on, watch nothing but that all evening, often watching each feature multiple times, knowing the lines by heart. It's amazing how much funny stuff they crammed into about 16 minutes. Their timing, expressions (e.g. Larry knocked out at the phone booth in Brideless Groom. 😂🤣😂!), the sound effects, I just enjoy and appreciate every second of their short features.
    They also had a GREAT group of recurring character actors, Emil Sitka (who I'll never forget after first seeing him as Sappington get that pie in the face and carrying on as if nothing had happened.😂), Dudley Dickerson (whether as a cook putting up with the Stooges destruction of the house, a watchman or a porter.😂), Vernon Dent, Christine McIntyre, Kenneth MacDonald (Give me the anesthetic. Well give it to me!! 🔨"🔔"), Stanley Blystone (I think of him whenever somebody says short ribs or creamed chip beef on toast. Poor Larry!😂), Gene Roth (Give me that filim!), Cy Schindell (steamed & pressed, or knocked out with two bricks, as a cop, or getting an Rx.), Tiny Brauer, and Symona Boniface ("Sword of Damocles" and getting ⬇️pied⬇️).😂🤣😂
    I'm due for a fourth rewatch. 😉😁

    • @Bill032559
      @Bill032559 Před 2 lety +6

      I started watching them on TV as a little boy in about 1963 or so, and never stopped!

    • @josephgreen2824
      @josephgreen2824 Před 2 lety +3

      I started watching The Three Stooges the year that Moe and Larry died, which was in 1975

    • @jeffreysnow2640
      @jeffreysnow2640 Před 2 lety +3

      @@josephgreen2824 It was 1974 when I started watching them. I remember my father telling me when Larry & Moe died

    • @oreally8605
      @oreally8605 Před 2 lety +1

      Young kid here, I started in 78. You apple 🍎 heads!

    • @dr.hugog.hackenbush9443
      @dr.hugog.hackenbush9443 Před rokem

      Also had a few shorts with Lucille Ball, who also worked with the Marx Brothers.

  • @ifilmls4702
    @ifilmls4702  Před 7 lety +165

    I shared this interview with Paul Howard, Moe's son. He had never heard it before.

    • @johnbertalan4862
      @johnbertalan4862 Před 7 lety +26

      How incredible! I am sure that Paul was overjoyed to hear this. I will never forget the "Stooge Shorts" that played in the Chicago area as I was growing up in the 1970's. I remember when Moe died in 1975. I cried my eyes out, and still have the newspaper clipping.

    • @misterwhitman4368
      @misterwhitman4368 Před 5 lety +7

      Is Paul Howard still living?

    • @glb5053
      @glb5053 Před 5 lety +9

      @@misterwhitman4368 Yes. So is his daughter, Joan.

    • @enormerschwanz
      @enormerschwanz Před 5 lety +3

      Ifilmls, with your permission, I would like to upload this video to my bitchute channel to make it available to those users who use that site. I will do so, respectfully. I will mirror the video, guving full credit to you and I would include a link to your channel. I promise, though, that I will not upload this video to my channel without your direct permission.
      Thanks

    • @jessicathethreestoogesfan2635
      @jessicathethreestoogesfan2635 Před 3 lety +1

      You shared this interview with Paul?

  • @gregmiell3037
    @gregmiell3037 Před 2 lety +7

    Listening to Mo is like hearing the voice of an old friend.

  • @the4seasons4ever
    @the4seasons4ever Před 4 lety +43

    moe had quite the memory.

    • @philipmclaughlin9636
      @philipmclaughlin9636 Před 3 lety +7

      He reminds me of my 90 year old Grandfather who still can recall dates and years of his life. I could listen to him and Moe all day

    • @Bill032559
      @Bill032559 Před 2 lety +2

      He sure was interesting and candid, and his memory was exemplary. Wish I could have met him back in the early 70s ... I understand that he always welcomed seeing and speaking with his fans.

    • @maximuscomfort
      @maximuscomfort Před rokem

      I'm always amazed at that gift. I find that with actors, those scripts and delivery lines on set, just amazing.

  • @maritzajimenez6690
    @maritzajimenez6690 Před 2 lety +6

    When I was a teenager, every saturday afternoon i went to my parents bedroom to watch in their TV The 3 Stooges. I remember i laughed so hard ! And, my mother, while washing, said: "God bless this laughing,wish you never loose it". God Bless my beloved mother and 3 Stooges for this memories ! Love Moe, Larry, Curly and Shemp !

  • @benbing3926
    @benbing3926 Před rokem +2

    It's so great that you can find so much footage like this on CZcams. It's history on demand.

  • @DynamicCycleParts
    @DynamicCycleParts Před 4 lety +27

    I'm 60 and never knew about this interview. AWESOME Stooges info straight from the Legend.

  • @PortlandsTransport
    @PortlandsTransport Před 4 lety +13

    What a great interview. We will never see his kind again.

  • @tameikabrown1119
    @tameikabrown1119 Před 5 lety +58

    IK Moe Was Happy When He Finally Got Called Home For Eternity To See His Brothers His Parents & Larry

  • @tameikabrown1119
    @tameikabrown1119 Před 5 lety +27

    RIP God Rest Your Soul Moe Larry Shemp & Curly U Guy's R Definitely Missed But Lucky For Us Stooges Fan's We Got Laughter For Watching Y'alls Episodes On CZcams OR On DVD

  • @suzeaa
    @suzeaa Před 2 lety +9

    He was hilarious, and cared very much for his brothers and Larry.

  • @sfel10
    @sfel10 Před 7 lety +97

    I too met Moe in 1975 at a Radio Station, he gave me his home Encino phone number so I could play an Audio recording for him, even putting his wife on the phone. I wish I would have kept in contact but he died shortly after. Thanks for posting this

    • @ifilmls4702
      @ifilmls4702  Před 7 lety +12

      This was recorded around Christmas time 1970 because Moe mentions the cards he has received.

    • @dad7275
      @dad7275 Před 6 lety +3

      sfel10 wow that to me would have been such a privilege but I was only around 2 or 3 years old then LOL. I would have liked to met any of them. that's awesome that you did meet him.

    • @mselbit
      @mselbit Před 5 lety +14

      I met Larry at the Motion Picture Country Home where he graciously allowed me to interview him. Sweet and gentle man. I wish I could be met Moe. He was the stooge I had a crush on when I was a little girl!

    • @nealanpaulaking9708
      @nealanpaulaking9708 Před 5 lety +5

      @@dad7275 I was born in 68 so I was probably 3 I would have love to have met them.

    • @dad7275
      @dad7275 Před 5 lety +2

      @@nealanpaulaking9708 I was referring to 1975, which would put me at 2-3. But yea, it would have been a honour to meet him. :)

  • @stanzinspalbar8729
    @stanzinspalbar8729 Před 7 lety +39

    moe howard sir. when i die someday, i am gonna take all my happy memories into my grave. i am very much thankful to three stooges for giving me such happy memories of my childhood. i used to watch the show when i was a child and still watch it at the age of 34 . this show never gets old. my son will watch it as he grows up. thankyou uploader for another wonderful memory. i love moe curly and larry.

    • @glenncollins4778
      @glenncollins4778 Před 6 lety +3

      I still watch them today at age 68. This is good stuff. I’d love to be able to sit with Moe and pick his brain.

  • @EricBrunoBorgman
    @EricBrunoBorgman Před rokem +2

    What a great interview. I didn't know he worked in pictures as early as 1908! He beat them all, Chaplin, Keaton, and Laurel!

  • @AccurateCrabLegs
    @AccurateCrabLegs Před 5 lety +20

    Listened to this whole thing while enjoying a nice, warm bubblebath. Very informative.

  • @GentiluomoStraniero
    @GentiluomoStraniero Před 2 lety +5

    Moe, thank you for making me laugh all of these years. Those were some dark times for me but you three made life so much better. God bless you and yours. Much love and respect.

  • @tameikabrown2542
    @tameikabrown2542 Před 4 lety +10

    RIP Moe Howard God Rest UR Soul Along With Everybody Else Who Has Passed Away From These Film's

  • @matthewronson5218
    @matthewronson5218 Před 4 lety +23

    I am amazed at this man's memory-sharp as a tack in his senior years, recalling names, dates, personalities, writers, directors, timelines, long defunct studio names and locations and details on movies, productions, contributors as if they had all had just recently happened to Moe, and not the 40-60+ years ago as he recounted here.
    Meanwhile there are those in my own life not half that time ago, the kind of persons that at the time it's so easy to think 'I could never forget this person, no way, not ever' only to do exactly that...what was his/her/their names again, when was that anyway, must have been around..." But Moe? He had a mind like a steel trap.
    Moe: Born: Moses Harry Horwitz, June 19, 1897, Brooklyn, New York, U.S. Died: May 4, 1975, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
    10:55 "Broncho Billy" Anderson was the stage name of Gilbert Maxwell Aronson, America's first cowboy movie star. Anderson pioneered the genre that eventually produced stars such as John Wayne, Gary Cooper, Roy Rogers, Buck Jones, and Tom Mix. Anderson also worked behind the camera as a director and producer and developed production techniques still in use today. (Passed: January 20, 1971, South Pasadena, California 1971)

  • @RedBud315
    @RedBud315 Před 2 lety +7

    Can you imagine what Three Stooges outtakes look like? Of course back in those days when everything was on film they didn't want to waste too much and did as few takes as possible.

  • @jimelkins9013
    @jimelkins9013 Před 2 lety +5

    So talented and so funny, yet so humble. . . Very informative and enjoyable interview, thanks for sharing..

  • @redkellyre6568
    @redkellyre6568 Před 3 lety +14

    this interview is pure gold

  • @tonydowning1486
    @tonydowning1486 Před 5 lety +20

    the stooges were the greatest! Still watch them today and still laugh so hard! my wife says its a man thing and we're crazy! nyck nyck nyck!

  • @daskritterhaus5491
    @daskritterhaus5491 Před 2 lety +7

    l was so happy for the boys when l watched a documentary and found out there was a HUGE outpouring of love and excitement among the grown up fans who brought *their* kids along when their career revived and they did live personal stage appearances. very heartwarming to know that.

  • @joehemingway6036
    @joehemingway6036 Před 6 lety +30

    i so love moe and the stooges, i have watched them and laughed for years and years, i love you guys and THANK YOU

  • @ssalemi
    @ssalemi Před 5 lety +28

    Moe was SUCH a classic!

  • @astheworldturns3855
    @astheworldturns3855 Před 11 dny

    Put my headphones on, switch off all the negativity around me, and listen to this lovely,intelligent,well spoken man, Moe Howard, tell the world his story. What a legend.

  • @AbnEngrDan
    @AbnEngrDan Před 2 lety +5

    Used to go by his home by boat as a kid with my dad, on Grapevine Lake in Texas. He would be sitting outside on his deck, in the sun. I was very young, but my dad told me who he was and introduced me to the Three Stooges. Still love them to this day and think about those days on the lake cruising by. He always waved back.

    • @sfel10
      @sfel10 Před rokem

      Moe Howard had a house on Grapevine Lake in Texas? I was not aware of that, not a lot of film work done there? Where do you Boat in Texas?

  • @misterpeppercorn3078
    @misterpeppercorn3078 Před 6 měsíci

    Absolutely great interview. May God bless the 3 Stooges. They were so special. Such a deep history here.

  • @redshiftexperiment
    @redshiftexperiment Před 2 lety +5

    This is so precious. Thank you for posting.

  • @clurkroberts2650
    @clurkroberts2650 Před 2 lety +6

    He reminds me of conversations I had with my grandfather ..always interesting and very personal, peppered with hundreds of lovely memories of events and friends and family

  • @Jondsmusic
    @Jondsmusic Před 5 lety +18

    I grew up as a kid in the eighties and loved these guys from day one! For the life of me I could never understand why most women disliked them so much? I think they were misunderstood by many people. They brought me a lot of joy in my childhood

    • @AceripXF
      @AceripXF Před 5 lety +3

      im 35/f i loved them since i was 12/13

    • @Jondsmusic
      @Jondsmusic Před 5 lety +4

      AceripXF well that’s both cool and a rarity!

    • @AceripXF
      @AceripXF Před 5 lety +3

      @@Jondsmusic yes i find slap stick very funny ive always loved moe

    • @Jondsmusic
      @Jondsmusic Před 5 lety +4

      AceripXF yep I liked Larry

    • @AceripXF
      @AceripXF Před 5 lety +3

      @@Jondsmusic cool :) i USED to have a TON of 3 stooges stuff but most of it got lost when i moved or went down south carolina for the summer only things i have now are some vhs dvds n the 3 stooges dolls from spunko

  • @ontogeny6474
    @ontogeny6474 Před 2 lety +9

    After listening to this, I love Moe even more.

  • @ultraparadoxical7610
    @ultraparadoxical7610 Před rokem +3

    Incredible interview! A treasure

  • @garohagopian2253
    @garohagopian2253 Před rokem +3

    This is great. I love hearing Moe's phone ring, back when phones had real mechanical bells.

  • @timcrnkovic8991
    @timcrnkovic8991 Před rokem +3

    Listening to Moe in this and other interviews from later in his life, one would never imagine that this was a guy who dropped out of high school after just two months. He was not uneducated. Far from it. He just educated himself. It's well-known that he was fond of Horatio Alger books as a kid. He was so intelligent that he was likely just plain bored at school and didn't feel like he needed it, and his career and his life proved him right. One of the indicators of his brilliance is the fact that he could play a dim-witted stooge - a personality completely opposite of his own - and make it believable and entertaining, and he did so for decades.

  • @tameikabrown2542
    @tameikabrown2542 Před 3 lety +9

    Moe Howard knew a whole lotta stuff from way back then before he started doing his film's ain't to many people knew stuff from way back In the day's like ol Moe Howard

  • @jmtpubs
    @jmtpubs Před 5 lety +26

    The Three Stooges are remembered for their slapstick, but they also did excellent parodies of popular movies of the day. Their short, "Disorder In The Court", was a direct parody of a now unknown movie called "The Drag-Net". "Men in Black" parodied medical drama, "Men in White." And the short "Punch Drunks" (featuring Curly as K O Stradavarius) was a take-off on the Warner Brothers classic, "Kid Galahad."

    • @alexvaliansky7707
      @alexvaliansky7707 Před rokem +1

      Kid Galahad was released in 1937, while Punch Drunks was released in 1934.

  • @peterraymond8470
    @peterraymond8470 Před 4 lety +11

    I've read and frequently reread Mr. Lamparski's "Whatever Became Of..." books. Even as a twelve-year-old I had an insatiable appetite for old-timey entertainers whether they be silent film stars, vaudeville legends or, well, the Three Stooges. I confess I had never heard Mr. Lamparski's voice before and it's quite wonderful.

  • @fw1421
    @fw1421 Před 4 lety +7

    I grew up watching the 3 Stooges every morning before school and half the morning on Saturday. Great comedy,I miss watching them.

  • @daveb8449
    @daveb8449 Před rokem +2

    Such a great part of my childhood!

  • @Spike643
    @Spike643 Před 3 lety +3

    I met you Richard in 1969 while you were being interviewed by Boone and Erickson at WCCO Radio. You autographed my book, What ever became of.

  • @darrylruiz2573
    @darrylruiz2573 Před 2 lety +3

    You guys have given me so much joy over the years Thanks and rest in peace

  • @jimymac
    @jimymac Před 4 lety +31

    Oh my I wish this was longer, more in depth would love too hear him talk about Larry and shemp and of course curly. Wish this was about 4 hours longer

    • @jessicathethreestoogesfan2635
      @jessicathethreestoogesfan2635 Před 3 lety +1

      Hello

    • @jimymac
      @jimymac Před 3 lety +1

      @@jessicathethreestoogesfan2635 high

    • @normal_media
      @normal_media Před 3 lety +2

      there is the Mike DOuglas show interviews here on youtube

    • @miketapley6445
      @miketapley6445 Před 3 lety

      Yes absolutely. And interviews with Shemp and Curly do not exist, that I know of.. I've never seen Shemp out of character; although they say he wasn't a lot different. Always joking and laughing. Curly was very shy and quiet, and probably would not have interviewed if Moe wasn't alongside him.

    • @kevinmiller6380
      @kevinmiller6380 Před 3 lety +2

      @@miketapley6445 Shemp was laughing and joking the night he died. He was laughing after having told a joke when he suddenly slumped over into his friend Al Winston's lap, burning him with the cigar he had just lit. Shemp was gone at the age of 60.

  • @ronhaworth5471
    @ronhaworth5471 Před 2 lety +4

    What an amazing interview!!

  • @mselbit
    @mselbit Před 5 lety +20

    Terrific interview. Very informative. What an amazing career they had!

  • @catfish24
    @catfish24 Před 2 lety +4

    Without Moe there wouldn't be any Three Stooges.

  • @pl5624
    @pl5624 Před 7 měsíci +1

    His story never changed...he had a great memory.

  • @loveaodai100
    @loveaodai100 Před 3 lety +4

    One would never know by looking at the Three Stooges films but all of them were actually quite good looking in their younger days in regular clothes. I love this!

  • @SpudsFamilyJewels
    @SpudsFamilyJewels Před rokem +1

    48yrs old... Watched my entire life. Curly of course was always fav. But now... Moe was an amazing comedic presence. Moe was genius and his one liners.... What a once in a life time combination of comedic talent. To this day.... Unmatched
    "WAKE UP AND GO TO SLEEP" 😂

  • @julianbristow4793
    @julianbristow4793 Před 5 lety +38

    I could never call him anything else but Moe. I love Moe’s brothers Shemp and Curley. They were good people and were very funny comedians.

  • @tameikabrown1119
    @tameikabrown1119 Před 5 lety +12

    Man O Man I Can't Get Enough Of Watching Him & His Slapping Eye Poking The Other Stooges But Moe's Definitely Missed After All These Years

  • @HalfassDIY
    @HalfassDIY Před 3 lety +6

    Moe was the man !

  • @leftofcenter4
    @leftofcenter4 Před 7 měsíci

    What strikes me with this interview is how alert and smart this dude is in his later years…he is dropping names and details of events from 40 and 50 years ago like it was last week….a testament to staying busy and active in your 0ld age…. A true legend Who gave so much to the world of comedy and laughter to the masses.

  • @thebatman911
    @thebatman911 Před 2 lety +3

    They were all geniuses of comedy! They rescued me from such a traumatic childhood!

  • @scottpiwinski7610
    @scottpiwinski7610 Před rokem +2

    Best Comedy Team of all time love all those guys always make me laugh

  • @bobbyhall3689
    @bobbyhall3689 Před 3 lety +3

    I was so happy that I found this and listen to it the mo Howard interview it was Tastefully done I learned so much thank you

  • @AceripXF
    @AceripXF Před 5 lety +11

    i love listening to him

  • @linapagliari8003
    @linapagliari8003 Před 5 lety +10

    What a grand man he was moe and the stooges class act they were 😂🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦

  • @johnkru1295
    @johnkru1295 Před 3 lety +5

    Read Moe's autobiography, 'I Stooged To Conquer '. Incredible, entertaining and informative, for all Stooges fans.

  • @SkyMelon-wc1fx
    @SkyMelon-wc1fx Před 4 lety +10

    Man this is so emotional

  • @johnnyblazze6921
    @johnnyblazze6921 Před rokem +3

    Moe looked good with a gangster hat great man great comic

  • @cynthiarowley719
    @cynthiarowley719 Před 2 lety +2

    A film history gem. 🤩😘😘😘a great body of work. 😍

  • @angelicadavila9246
    @angelicadavila9246 Před 3 lety +5

    Moe era mi favorito me reí tanto con todos ellos hasta hoy en día veo sus videos y me siguen haciendo reir

    • @sfel10
      @sfel10 Před 3 lety +1

      I miss Moe! Keep laughing Angelica, he was a very nice man

  • @laurenherda2415
    @laurenherda2415 Před rokem

    Theres no greater comedians and comedy than the 3 Stooges. The work and talent these brothers and Larry put into this is phenomenal. They were destined to be together and Larry became their brother too in a way. Im 40 yrs old and my whole life because of my dad and family we grew up watching them every Saturday. I was in awe and never laughed hard. True geniuses and icons for ever and ever

  • @SonyComputerEntertainment
    @SonyComputerEntertainment Před 7 lety +16

    I know this is late 1970s because Moe mentions he is going to the Philippines, which is where they were planning on filming a WWII-themed movie, with Emil Sitka in Larry's role after his stroke. It's a shame they never made the film!

    • @ifilmls4702
      @ifilmls4702  Před 7 lety +3

      Then why at the very end does Moe wish the interviewer a wonderful 1971

    • @SonyComputerEntertainment
      @SonyComputerEntertainment Před 7 lety

      ifilmls because it was recorded in *late* 1970 ( most likely November/December) and New Years was a few weeks away

    • @ifilmls4702
      @ifilmls4702  Před 7 lety +2

      Correct. For some reason I thought your posting said 1974. I must have been tired. A previous posting read "This wouldn't have been conducted in the late 70's as Moe died in 1975." They simply read my description incorrect.

    • @MayorMcCheeseStalker
      @MayorMcCheeseStalker Před 3 lety

      No, this interview is not from the late 1970s; it's from late 1970. See how the 's' makes the difference? And no, it's not a shame they never made the film; it's a blessing. DeRita (age 60) and Moe (over 70) were both too old to be believable as soldiers in a P.O.W. camp. Larry's stroke in 1970 marked an appropriate end to the act. Moe mentions in this interview that audiences didn't like to see old people get hit with pies. That's true, and by this point, Moe and Curly-Joe were just too old to engage in the physical mayhem for which the Stooges were famous.

  • @bluekarma6849
    @bluekarma6849 Před 3 lety +2

    There are something’s technology is really good for,this would not have ever come to light for the masses to see,if it wasn’t for you tube or other platforms.I love this stuff😊

  • @fredpickett6219
    @fredpickett6219 Před 4 lety +5

    Good Good Interview. Thanks for posting it.

  • @jcgjcg3844
    @jcgjcg3844 Před 7 lety +45

    I wish These Guys Lived Forever we need there Comedy Today more then ever the Comedians we have today are worthless and not funny and couldn't act to save there own lives

    • @maxxard7992
      @maxxard7992 Před 6 lety +7

      I agree. And that's not all. Music these days as well. Rappers, dope, money, dice, I mean COME ON!! What has happened to society? We need Moe, Larry, Curly, and Shemp.

    • @douglaslett7504
      @douglaslett7504 Před 3 lety +3

      I totally agree with you the days of the stooges and groucho marx where we had clean simple humor is long gone. Moe what a humble great guy ! The only modern funny guy that even comes remotely close to these guys was john ritter when he was playing jack tripper on three's company.

  • @benrumson1063
    @benrumson1063 Před 5 lety +16

    "Interview done in Moe Howard's California home in late 1970." Well Moe says they had just done Kook's Tour (1970) and Moe's death of (1975) I'd say early 70's. I can almost remember when he died. It seemed it was just mentioned in passing, but I felt a sad loss.

  • @tameikabrown2542
    @tameikabrown2542 Před 3 lety +2

    I can't understand y In the world people choose to dislike this classic video 19 time's In the first place at all cause clearly the people don't like The Three Stooges for some strange reason SMH on this situation who else agree's with me on this

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 Před 2 lety +3

    Really appreciate this interview! Would have loved one with Curly while he was still in decent health.

  • @jakre10
    @jakre10 Před 4 lety +10

    I don't know who made all the fuss about the so called "violence" in the 3 Stooges shorts. No kid in their right mind would have done what they did. They were truly funny and I loved watching them.

    • @sfel10
      @sfel10 Před 3 lety +1

      When you think about it the Stooges were most violent? From the Guns to the Knives to the Hammer, Saw, Eye Poke including the Pick Two & 69 C which I'm still not sure what it is. And the Pie throwing...

    • @thriller985
      @thriller985 Před 2 lety +1

      Yt karens obviously. They been yeehawing and ruining things for a thousand + years.

  • @pablotwa1
    @pablotwa1 Před 7 měsíci

    Thuis is a very important piece of Stooge history and clearly shows that Moe and the rest of the stogges had a method to their madness, real show biz professionals through and through. I still maintain that 500 years from now they will still be remembered and reruns of their shows will still be playing in Holodecks around the world.

  • @kittenkagome1
    @kittenkagome1 Před 4 lety +8

    Wonderful interview!

  • @37parman
    @37parman Před 3 lety +3

    In my teens I made sure i got home by midnight on Saturday to watch 2 hours from 12 to 2 a.m. of The Three Stooges.

    • @thriller985
      @thriller985 Před 2 lety

      Damn you coulda got alot more tail if you just had a VCR timer

  • @frankprovasek5394
    @frankprovasek5394 Před rokem +1

    Marvelous that Moe was very generous with his time and did many interviews. Even though I have his autobiography and every Stooge book, I still hear something I never knew in these interviews.

  • @Chicago-Brooklyn-Express
    @Chicago-Brooklyn-Express Před 7 měsíci

    Would have loved to meet him. My ma had a few of Lamparski's books and i read them cover to cover as a kid. Between her and my Yiayia, i have a deep appreciation for the classic movies and the actors and actresses from those years. Hope to pass it on to our granddaughter.

  • @jonathangoodwin457
    @jonathangoodwin457 Před 4 lety +3

    Me Too! I wish they were still around

  • @rickmeade2643
    @rickmeade2643 Před 5 lety +5

    moe was agreat funnyman withthe hittingthose guys he made people laugh a nd themhurt godbless

  • @nealanpaulaking9708
    @nealanpaulaking9708 Před 5 lety +7

    My dad kinda reminded me of Moe. I miss the stooges.

  • @philaman1972
    @philaman1972 Před 3 lety +2

    Moe Howard = icon.

  • @joecesarano4301
    @joecesarano4301 Před 3 lety +1

    Much gratttude. Very much needed.

  • @kygkyg8971
    @kygkyg8971 Před rokem +1

    Moe howard was basically the equivalent to an intern,
    Getting coffee, getting lunches for people at the studio

  • @bluesmatically
    @bluesmatically Před 3 lety +2

    This is just wonderful. Thank you. I'm lucky to share a birth date with Moe. Different year though.

  • @IosifStalin2
    @IosifStalin2 Před 2 lety +1

    A special part of my childhood.