Jerks of All Trades
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Jerks of All Trades | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom, Television pilot |
Directed by | George Cahan |
Starring | Moe Howard Larry Fine Shemp Howard Emil Sitka Symona Boniface Joseph Kearns |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 1 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Phil Berle |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 20 minutes |
Distributor | public domain |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Picture format | Black-and-white |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | October 12, 1949 |
External links | |
[{{#property:P856}} Website] |
Jerks of All Trades is the title of an American television pilot released on October 12, 1949. It was the Three Stooges' first and only pilot made with Shemp Howard in the role of the third stooge. Filmed before a live studio audience, it was a pilot for a planned TV series on the then-new ABC Television Network; the series never went into production due to objections from Columbia Pictures, who held the trio under contract. The pilot film is currently in the public domain and is available on home video.
Contents
Plot
The overall concept of the series, was that each week The Stooges would try a different job or trade to see if eventually they might succeed. The comedy would ensue as each career they tried would eventually turn into a fiasco, In the pilot they try their hand as interior decorators. In their office, they meet a new client, Mr. Pennyfeather (Emil Sitka). Just a few moments after Pennyfeather arrives, Shemp accidentally spills ink down the front of Pennyfeather's suit, who becomes enraged. The Stooges then challenge Pennyfeather to mischief with them, featuring the famous "Texas" routine. After the some slapstick mayhem, they are successful in tossing Mr. Pennyfeather out of the office. Suddenly, the next client calls him on the phone for them to come in to manage her house. In her house, The Stooges not only hang wallpaper, but also manage to trash their client's home. Unfortunately, that woman is Mrs. Pennyfeather (Symona Boniface) and that house is Mr. Pennyfeather's house. After Mr. Pennyfeather comes home, the Stooges cover Mr. Pennyfeather with wallpaper and both Mr. Pennyfeather and the Stooges recognize each other (after Pennyfeather imitates the "Texas" routine done for him earlier by the Stooges). In a rage, both Pennyfeathers attack the boys with their own paint and utensils.
In the end, Moe, Larry, and Shemp, defeated, hang up their brushes.
Notes
- The pilot took a single day to film, and was never aired. It was actually a kinescope film of a three camera television production, mostlikely to replicate a proposed live broadcast series.
- As sketch humor it compared well with the Stooges's own short films of the day, and with other early network comedy series. But it was fated not to become a regular series. B.B. Kahane, Columbia Pictures' Vice-President of Business Affairs, stopped the show from being broadcast. Kahane warned the Stooges that a contract stipulation restricted them from performing in a TV series that might compete with their two-reel comedies. Columbia further threatened to cancel the boys' contract and take them to court if they tried to sell the series. To avert a legal hassle, the pilot was shelved and the project abandoned; Columbia instead licensed a package of 30 shorts from the film series to ABC, beginning a long tradition for The Three Stooges on television.[1]
- The Three Stooges (with Joe DeRita as the third stooge with Moe and Larry) would eventually land their first made-for-television series in 1965, The New 3 Stooges, for which the trio contributed short live-action wraparounds and voices for animated segments. Like Jerks of All Trades, most of The New 3 Stooges is now in the public domain.
- The Stooges would try another television series Kook's Tour in late 1969 and early 1970, again with DeRita as the third stooge. It was a show based on cinema verite filming of the ongoing adventures of the Stooges in their travels, mixing farce with a look and feel that almost anticipated modern reality TV shows like MTV's "Road Rules". But Larry suffered a severe stroke after the pilot was shot, making it impossible for him to continue and bringing the project to an end before the show could air.
- On April 16, 2002, The Three Stooges All Time Favorites DVD was released and featured this pilot as well as an interview with the director.[2]
- The sound effects that The Three Stooges often used for the slaps, smacks, pokes and head bonks in their shorts are not used in this pilot.
References
- ↑ Grossman, Gary H. Saturday Morning TV, Dell Publishing, 1981
- ↑ http://www.amazon.com/Three-Stooges-All-Time-Favorites/dp/B00005RYLP