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The New 3 Stooges

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American animated television series
The New 3 Stooges
GenreComedy
Slapstick
Created byNorman Maurer
Dick Brown
Based onThe Three Stooges
Written byEddie Bernds
Story byPat Kearin
Jack Kinney
Cecil Beard
Art Diamond
David Detiege
Lee Orgel
Homer Brightman
Nick George
Barbara Chain
Warren Tufts
Jack Miller
Sam Cornell
Directed byEddie Bernds
Sam Cornell
David Detiege
Eddie Rehberg
StarringMoe Howard
Larry Fine
Joe DeRita
Emil Sitka
Margaret Kerry
Harold Brauer
Jeffrey Scott
Michael Maurer
Eric Lamond
Cary Brown
Tina Brown
Eileen Brown
Voices ofMoe Howard
Larry Fine
Joe DeRita
Margaret Kerry
Hal Smith
Paul Frees
Johnny Coons
Music byGordon Zahler
Paul Horn
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes40 (live-action)
156 (animated cartoon)
Production
Executive producerNorman Maurer
ProducersNorman Maurer
Lee Orgel
AnimatorsKay Wright
Bob Maxfield
Chic Otterstrom
EditorsWilliam J. Faris
George Probert
Camera setupJerry Smith
Edwin Gillette
Running time30:00
Production companiesNormandy Productions
Cambria Studios
Heritage Productions
Original release
NetworkSyndication
ReleaseOctober 1965 (1965-10) –
September 1966 (1966-9)
Related

The New 3 Stooges is an American animated television series that ran during the1965–66 television season starringthe Three Stooges. The show follows the trio's antics both in live-action and animated segments. The cast consisted ofMoe Howard,Larry Fine andJoe DeRita (as Curly-Joe), with actor and close friendEmil Sitka co-starring, as well asMargaret Kerry.[1] The stories took place in varied settings, includingNewport Beach and sailing asbuccaneers on theSpanish Main.[2]

Production

[edit]

Forty-one live-action sequences were executively overseen by cartoonist Norman Maurer, son-in-law of Moe Howard, serving as their film agent during this period. Additionally, Edward Bernds, who directed the team at Columbia Pictures from 1945 to 1952 (predominantly during the Shemp era), was enlisted to both script and direct the series. Emil Sitka, a familiar figure from numerous Stooges comedies, was slated to feature in these wraparound segments, assuming the role of a straight man to the Stooges.[3]

Under the auspices of Cambria Studios, 156 short Stooge cartoons were produced, under the supervision of Lee Orgel. Notably, four cartoons were meticulously crafted to thematically align with each of the 40 live-action Stooge opening and closing sequences. Consequently, a single live-action segment could seamlessly transition as a wraparound for four distinct cartoons. However, this format posed a challenge for viewers, as articulated by Joe DeRita:

There were 156 cartoons and we made only 40 live-action segments. So after they ran the whole 40, they'd just start over by using these same introductions onnew cartoons. This turned out to be misleading because viewers would say, "Oh, I've seen this one before", and they'd turn off the television. They didn't know it was a new cartoon.[3]

The majority of the cartoons culminated with the trio fleeing into the horizon following inadvertent chaos at their various employments and ensuing predicaments. Remarkably, these cartoons diverged from Cambria's customary employment ofSyncro-Vox, a patented technique involving filmed footage of voice actors' mouths over still frames. The inaugural cartoon, "That Little Old Bomb Maker", featured a distinctive live-action wraparound that remained exclusive to that particular cartoon.

A number of the cartoons featured recurring characters, such as Badman, a juvenile antagonist sporting a Batman-esque attire, who paradoxically is a benevolent 5-year-old boy. Another recurring character was the western outlaw named Getoutoftownbysundown Brown.

To preclude potential licensing entanglements, Cambria abstained from employing any of the Stooges' theme songs, including "Three Blind Mice" and "Listen to the Mockingbird", despite their lapse into thepublic domain. Similarly, the on-screen titling employed a numeral "3" to circumvent potential infringement on any trademark held by Columbia Pictures regarding the name "The Three Stooges".

The New 3 Stooges represented a subsequent endeavor at animating the trio. In the late 1950s, Norman Maurer sought to market "Stooge Time", a hybrid live-action/rotoscope animation half-hour series for television. In 1960, Maurer and the Stooges filmed a pilot forThe Three Stooges Scrapbook, a half-hour series incorporating a five-minute Stooge cartoon. The Stooges later revisited animated form forHanna-Barbera, contributing to two episodes ofThe New Scooby-Doo Movies (1972–74) and the seriesThe Robonic Stooges (1977–78), the latter developed posthumously following the demise of both Moe Howard and Larry Fine.

Lawsuit

[edit]

The series posed significant financial challenges for the Stooges. Per the terms of their contract, Cambria Studios' distributor was obligated to furnish quarterly financial statements to the trio, ensuring transparency regarding the show's earnings. However, Norman Maurer recalled receiving only one or two statements throughout a span of five years, precipitating legal action. In the ensuing lawsuit, the presiding judge, lacking substantial familiarity with the intricacies of the film and television industry, ruled in favor of Cambria.

Undeterred, the Stooges pursued an appeal in 1975, ultimately securing a favorable verdict. Nonetheless, this legal triumph failed to rectify the distributor's persistent failure to furnish requisite profit statements to Normandy Productions. By the time the litigation concluded, both Moe and Larry had passed away.[3]

Episodes

[edit]

List of live-actionwraparounds and cartoons forThe New 3 Stooges television series (1965–1966):

Live-action wraparounds

[edit]
  • Soldiers
  • Lost
  • Campers
  • Bakers
  • Zookeepers
  • Flat Tire
  • Fan Belt
  • Fishermen
  • Dentist (remake ofThe Tooth Will Out (1951))
  • Janitors
  • Artists
  • Decorators (remake ofA Bird in the Head (1946)/Jerks of All Trades (1949))
  • Golfers (remake ofThree Little Beers (1935))
  • Hunters
  • Weighing In
  • Telegram
  • Sunken Treasure
  • Outdoor Breakfast
  • Setting Up Camp
  • Rare Bird
  • Caretakers
  • Seasick Joe
  • Magicians
  • Electricians (remake ofThey Stooge to Conga (1943))
  • Salesmen
  • Barbers
  • Inheritance
  • Sweepstakes Ticket
  • Sunbathers
  • Doctors
  • Buried Treasure
  • Waiters
  • Athletes
  • Shipmates
  • High Voltage (remake ofMonkey Businessmen (1946))
  • Pilots
  • Sharpshooter
  • Piemakers
  • Prospectors
  • Turkey Stuffers
  • Melodrama

Cartoons

[edit]
  • A001That Little Old Bomb Maker
  • A002Woodsman Bear That Tree
  • A003Let's Shoot the Player Piano Player
  • A004Dentist the Menace (remake ofThe Tooth Will Out (1951))
  • A005Safari So Good
  • A006Thimk or Thwim
  • A007There Auto Be a Law
  • A008That Old Shell Game
  • A009Hold That Line
  • A010Flycycle Built for Two
  • A011Dizzy Doodlers
  • A012The Classical Clinker
  • A013Movie Scars
  • A014A Bull for Andamo
  • A015The Tree Nuts
  • A016Tin Horn Dude
  • A017Thru Rain, Sleet and Snow
  • A018Goldriggers of '49
  • A019Ready, Jetset, Go
  • A020Behind the 8 Ball Express
  • A021Stop Dragon Around
  • A022To Kill a Clockingbird
  • A023Who's Lion
  • A024Fowl Weather Friend
  • A025Wash My Line
  • A026Little Cheese Chaser
  • A027The Big Windbag
  • A028Baby Sitters
  • A029Clarence of Arabia
  • A030Three Jacks & a Beanstalk
  • A031That Was the Wreck That Was
  • A032The Three Astronutz
  • A033Peter Panic
  • A034When You Wish Upon a Fish
  • A035Little Past Noon
  • A036Hair of the Bear
  • A037Three Lumps in a Lamp
  • A038Who's for Dessert?
  • A039Watts My Lion
  • A040Which Is Witch
  • A041Suture Self
  • A042The Yolks on You
  • A043Tally Moe with Larry and Joe
  • A044The First in Lion
  • A045The Transylvania Railroad
  • A046What's Mew Pussycat?
  • A047It's a Bad Bad Bad Bad Word
  • A048Bridge on the River Cry
  • A049Hot Shots
  • A050Mel's Angels
  • A051Bee My Honey
  • A052That Dirty Bird
  • A053Stone Age Stooges
  • A054Smoke Gets in Your Skies
  • A055Queen Quong
  • A056Campsight Fright
  • A057Goldibear and the Three Stooges
  • A058The Lyin' Tamer
  • A059The Pen Game
  • A060It's a Small World
  • A061Late for Launch
  • A062Focus in Space
  • A063The Noisy Silent Movie
  • A064Get Out of Town by Sundown Brown
  • A065Table Tennis Tussle
  • A066Phony Express
  • A067Best Test Pilots
  • A068Litter Bear
  • A069A Fishy Tale
  • A070The Unhaunted House
  • A071Aloha Ha Ha
  • A072The Rise and Fall of the Roman Umpire
  • A073Deadbeat Street
  • A074Cotton Pickin' Chicken
  • A075Larry and the Pirates
  • A076Tree Is a Crowd
  • A077Feud for Thought
  • A078Bat and Brawl
  • A079Knight Without End
  • A080Up a Tree
  • A081Turnabout Is Bearplay
  • A082Pow Wow Row
  • A083Flat Heads
  • A084No News Is Good News
  • A085Bully for You, Curly
  • A086Tee for Three
  • A087Goofy Gondoliers
  • A088Bearfoot Fishermen
  • A089Washout Below
  • A090The Three Marketeers
  • A091Follo the White Lion
  • A092One Good Burn Deserves Another
  • A093Curly's Bear
  • A094Land Ho, Ho, Ho
  • A095Surfs You Right
  • A096Seven Faces of Timbear
  • A097Bearfoot Bandit
  • A098Nuttin' But the Brave
  • A099Three Good Knights
  • A100Call of the Wile
  • A101Snowbrawl
  • A102Rob 'n' Good
  • A103There's No Mule Like an Old Mule
  • A104Squawk Valley
  • A105Mummies Boys
  • A106The Plumber's Friend
  • A107Rub-a-Dub-Tub
  • A108Under the Bad-Bad Tree
  • A109Hairbrained Barbers
  • A110Waiter Minute
  • A111Souperman
  • A112Abominable Snowman
  • A113Curly in Wonderland
  • A114Stooges in the Woods
  • A115Chimney Sweeps
  • A116The Mad Mail Mission
  • A117Out of Space
  • A118Wizards of Odd
  • A119Three for the Road
  • A120Feudin' Fussin' and Hillbully
  • A121Don't Misbehave Indian Brave
  • A122You Ain't Lion
  • A123Muscle on Your Mind
  • A124Badmen in the Briny
  • A125Furry Fugitive
  • A126How the West Was Once
  • A127Bowling Pinheads
  • A128The Mountain Ear
  • A129Norse West Passage
  • A130Lastest Gun in the West
  • A131Toys Will Be Toys
  • A132First Glass Service
  • A133Strictly for the Birds
  • A134Le' Stooginaires
  • A135The Bear Who Came Out of the Cold
  • A136The Bigger They Are, the Harder They Hit
  • A137Little Red Riding Wolf
  • A138Bell Hop Flops
  • A139Dig That Gopher
  • A140Gagster Dragster
  • A141Just Plane Crazy
  • A142From Bad to Verse
  • A143Droll Weevil
  • A144The Littlest Martian
  • A145The Bear Showoff
  • A146No Money, No Honey
  • A147Get That Snack Shack Off the Track
  • A148Curly's Birthday-a-Go-Go
  • A149The Men from UCLA
  • A150Super Everybody
  • A151Kangaroo Catchers
  • A152No Smoking Aloud
  • A153The Chicken Delivery Boys
  • A154Sno Ball
  • A155Rug-a-Bye Baby
  • A156Dinopoodi

Home media

[edit]

Several episodes are currently available onVHS andDVD (often in cheap "dollar packages" with the cartoons and live action sequences being in poor quality) as the majority of the series fell into thepublic domain.

Using the original 16mm acetates,Rhino Entertainment issued a restored version in 2002 of 28 live action segments, and 32 of the cartoons over two volumes. Each volume contains a Spanish audio option, and Volume one has a near 7 minute retrospective interview with Lee Orgel. During it, he mentions only 39 live action segments being produced which added confusion to some claims of there being 40 or 41.

In 2004, EastWest DVD released a slim case volume of episodes. In 2007 and 2008, Mill Creek Entertainment released a number of episodes as part of theirUltimate 150 Cartoon Festival, theirGiant 600 Cartoon Collection and their200 Classic Cartoons – Collector's Edition Label formats.

On October 15, 2013, Image Madacy Entertainment releasedThe New 3 Stooges: Complete Cartoon Collection on DVD in Region 1 making it the first time a complete set was released. The five-disc set features all 156 cartoons and 39 live action sequences on four discs, with the bonus disc being an audio CD by the Stooges which combines tracks from two of their albums.

On October 17, 2017, Mill Creek Entertainment released all 156 cartoons and 40 live action segments as part ofThe Three Stooges: The Big Box of Nyuks box set.[4]

Reception

[edit]

The New 3 Stooges was well received upon initial airings, despite the use oflimited animation. However, the Stooges were visibly aging during this time (Moe was 68 and Larry was 63), so the team's patented slapstick routines were subdued in the live action segments. Orgel later stated that the Stooges' penchant for violence was kept to a minimum due to the concerns of parental groups.[3][5] In addition, in what would prove to be a bit offoreshadowing to his 1970stroke that ended his career, Larry's motor skills had become somewhat sluggish, resulting in occasional slurred dialogue. To compensate, most of the comedy being divided between Moe and Curly-Joe, with Larry only chiming in when necessary. In retrospect, this altered comedy dynamic was a throwback to the Stooges' prime years in the 1930s whenCurly Howard dominated the team's films and Larry was relegated to an occasional line of dialogue.[6]

The New 3 Stooges lasted for a single season. Although animated portions of the show were last aired insyndication onWGN-TV in theChicago area in the early 1980s and 1990s, repackaged, redubbed, new music and distributed at the time byDIC Animation City and Jeffrey Scott Productions,[7] it is occasionally seen onMe-TV. It also aired in Japan onTV Tokyo. They are also seen on the Three StoogesFAST channel airing on various streaming services includingDirecTV,Sling TV, andFreevee.[8]

The New 3 Stooges became the only regularly scheduled television series in the Stooges' history. Unlike other film shorts that aired on television likeLooney Tunes,Tom and Jerry andPopeye the Sailor, the Stooges' short films never had a regularly scheduled national television program to air in, neither on network nor syndicated; the film shorts, at roughly 20 minutes apiece, were of ideal size to be run as a stand-alone television series in and of themselves. When Columbia/Screen Gems licensed the film library to television beginning in 1958, local stations aired the shorts when they saw fit, either as late-night "filler" or marathon sessions.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Erickson, Hal (2005).Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 589–591.ISBN 978-1476665993.
  2. ^Woolery, George W. (1983).Children's Television: The First Thirty-Five Years, 1946-1981, Part 1: Animated Cartoon Series. Scarecrow Press. pp. 288–290.ISBN 0-8108-1557-5. Retrieved14 March 2020.
  3. ^abcdHoward Maurer, Joan; Jeff Lenburg; Greg Lenburg (1982).The Three Stooges Scrapbook. Citadel Press. pp. 170–171.ISBN 0-8065-0946-5.
  4. ^"Three Stooges, The Big Box of Nyuks".Mill Creek. Retrieved8 November 2022.
  5. ^The Three Stooges – Cartoon Classics, Vol. 1[dead link]
  6. ^Forrester, Jeff (2004).The Three Stooges: The Triumphs and Tragedies of the Most Popular Comedy Team of All Time. Donaldson Books. p. 162.ISBN 0-9715801-0-3.
  7. ^New 3 Stooges – Syndicated Program Elements, Circa 1992 (Reupload) – YouTube, accessed on January 30, 2021.
  8. ^https://threestooges.com/streaming/

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