Your 3 Santas: Hovey Burgess (left), Mr. Clown (center), and yours truly
Here’s a Winter Solstice-Chanukah-Christmas-Kwanza-New Year’s present for you, a compilation of Santa’s favorite physical comedy acts. This year you’re being gifted self-contained acts, not physical comedy that’s part of a narrative, which is why there are no movie clips from Keaton, Chaplin, Lloyd, and the rest of the gang in your stocking. Sure, some of these 13 acts are from movies, but they were just snuck in there like whiskey in the eggnog to punch things up. So off we go, in no particular order. Happier holidays!
Larraine & Rognan
Her name is often listed as “Lorraine” but her actual name was Jean Larraine. Either way, she’s fabulous. If you’ve never heard of them, that’s because their career ended tragically in an airplane crash that killed him and left her with injuries too severe to continue dancing. You can read more about them in this previous blog post.
Walter Dare Wahl & Emmet Oldfield
I love the movement imagination of these guys. So inventive! Donald O’Connor: Make ’em Laugh
You could make a case for this being the best physical comedy act ever. It’s got everything but the kitchen sink. I wrote a lot more about it here.
The Mathurins
HIgh-speed, high-caliber comedy acrobatics (even if the host says “it looks easy”). Not big on character, but boy do you get your money’s worth!
George Carl There are many versions of this amazing act available online, and I’m sure you’ve all seen at least one. Still, Santa would be remiss to leave him off the list.
Charlie Rivel: Comedy Trapeze
The legendary Catalonian clown could do it all. This is from the movie, Acrobat-Oh!
Red Skelton: Guzzler’s Gin (“Smooth!”)
Perhaps the classic drunk act. For more on Red Skelton, see my previous post.
Dick Van Dyke & Rose Marie: Mary’s Drunk Uncle
I came across this piece since I wrote this post and this postabout Van Dyke. As with Jean Lorraine, what I absolutely love here is Van Dyke’s back-and-forth between two states of being.
Beijing Opera: The Fight in the Dark
This one goes back centuries, but it’s a masterpiece of physical dexterity. This is the tradition Jackie Chan came from, and it’s easy to see the connections. Fifteen minutes long, and it’s not all comedy, but it’s great.
The Wiere Brothers
A recent discovery, which you can read all about here, and see lots more videos.
Lupino Lane with Lillian Roth (The Love Parade, 1929)
Lupino Lane was one of the great silent film comedians, although his characters never registered as strongly as those of Keaton or Chaplin. He was, however, every bit their match as a physical comedian. A member of the legendary Lupino family, with theatre lineage dating back to the pantomime days of Joseph Grimaldi, he was a superb dancer and acrobat. As it turned out, he could also sing and act well enough to survive the transition to sound. Lubitsch’s Love Parade, starring Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette McDonald, was one of the first good movie musicals, and it signaled Lane’s new career direction. Shortly thereafter he left Hollywood and returned to London, where he remained a star on stage and screen for decades. Lots more on Lane hereand here.
The Jovers (1980)
Here’s proof that you don’t have to be skinny and you don’t have to have 15 tricks in a row to do good physical comedy. (Not that there’s anything wrong with that!)
Alrighty then, that’s twelve, one for each day of Christmas, but let’s make this a baker’s dozen in honor of all the people who never bake the rest of the year but are churning out cookies for Santa while we lazily sit around watching these videos.
Wilson & Keppel
Long before Steve Martin’s King Tut, there was this sublimely silly sand dance performed by Jack Wilson, born in Liverpool in 1894, and Joe Keppel, born in Ireland a year later. Wilson and Keppel first performed together in New York in March 1919 as a comedy acrobatic and tap dancing act in vaudeville, and continued working together until 1963. Yep, that’s 44 years together.
Way back in the day, 1980 to be precise, when I was working with Joe Killian and Michael Zerphy, whenever we saw other performers do a bit we really liked, we’d say “consider it stolen!” I think the phrase originated with Joe, but he may have stolen it.
You know what they say, there’s nothing new under the sun, and that mostly holds true for physical comedy. I’m always amused, for example, when the Marx Brothers (or even Lucille Ball) are given credit for originating the broken mirror routine (Duck Soup), when in fact it not only appears in many early silent film comedies, but is referenced in even earlier reviews of vaudeville acts. Sure, there’s originality, but there’s a whole lot of borrowing going on and —if we’re lucky— creative reshaping of traditional materials.
Keaton as The Cameraman
The historian-detective in me has enjoyed tracing this kind of thing, for example in this post on what I call the oblivious gag. My return to this theme is inspired by some excellent detective work done by silent film pianist and historian Ben Model, showing how Singin’ in the Rain (1952)borrowed from Buster Keaton’s The Cameraman (1928). But we’ll get to that juicy discovery a bit later…
You all know Singin’ in the Rain, right? If not, you’re in for a treat! It’s a corny but delightful MGM musical from1952 starring Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds, and Donald O’Connor, all about the rough transition from silent film to sound. The remarkable thing about Singin’ in the Rain is that it began not as a story idea but as a musical woven around old songs, but also a musical partially woven around old physical comedy material.
The big musical link was Arthur Freed. As Cecil Adams points out in thisStraight Dope article, “Freed, the producer responsible for most of the MGM musicals of the 40s and 50s, began his career as a songwriter. “Singin’ in the Rain” was part of Brown and Freed’s score for MGM’s first “all talking, all singing, all dancing” musical, The Hollywood Revue of 1929. In 1952, Freed decided to use his own songbook as the basis for an original musical, as he had done with Jerome Kern’s songs in 1946 (Till the Clouds Roll By) and George Gershwin’s in 1951 (An American in Paris).”
They had Freed’s songs, might as well shape a show around them!
So the song Singin’ in the Rain goes all the way back to one of the two first big MGM musicals of the sound era, which featured “30 MGM stars! More Stars Than There Are in Heaven!” Here it is, the show’s big finale:
Not only did the songs come first, but the fact that they all came from the late 1920s gave screenwriters Comden & Green the idea for the story. According to this piece on the Cafe Songbook site, “Betty Comden and Adolph Green returned to M-G-M in May of 1950 to begin work on the screenplay for the movie they had been contracted to write, believing they were also contracted to write the lyrics for its songs. M-G-M clarified the terms of the contract to them. It was the studio’s option regarding the lyrics and M-G-M’s choice was that all the songs would be by the songwriting team of Arthur Freed (the film’s producer) and Nacio Herb Brown, his songwriting partner. Furthermore, they would be almost exclusively songs from their existing catalog. While looking at these songs, Comden and Green noticed that Freed-Brown songs such as “Should I?,” “All I Do Is Dream of You,” “Good Morning,” You Were Meant for me,” “You Are My Lucky Star,” “Singin’ in the Rain,” etc. were written in the late twenties which gave them the idea to create a story that came from that period; and the lynch pin of the plot they created was based on the disastrous results that sometimes occurred when silent screen actors and actresses were forced to talk on screen, to be heard no matter how awful they might sound.”
All these songs made it into the film, or should I say “made the film”?
Donald O’Connor
A Tale of Two Tunes
The film was coming together, but co-director Stanley Donen still wanted a solo number for Donald O’Connor, who played Gene Kelly’s comic sidekick and was a talented and very physical comedian. In fact, O’Connor’s parents were vaudevillians, his father an Irish-born circus strongman, dancer, and comedian, and his mother a circus acrobat, bareback rider, tightrope walker, and dancer. There was nothing in the Arthur Freed oeuvre that fit, but that didn’t stop MGM from doing some more borrowing. They just went back to an earlier MGM movie starring Gene Kelly, The Pirate (1948), and “borrowed” from Cole Porter instead.
Again according to Cecil Adams, “Donen suggested that Brown and Freed write a new song, pointing to Porter’s “Be a Clown” as the sort of thing he thought would fit in at that point in the script. Brown and Freed obliged —maybe too well— with “Make ‘Em Laugh.” Donen called it “100 percent plagiarism,” but Freed was the boss and the song went into the film. Cole Porter never sued, although he obviously had grounds enough. Apparently he was still grateful to Freed for giving him the assignment for The Pirate at a time when Porter’s career was suffering from two consecutive Broadway flops.”
Grateful, or simply too afraid of MGM’s power?
So that’s the background. Ironically, Kelly sang the original “Be a Clown” song, and in Make ’em Laugh, it is O’Connor singing to cheer up Kelly’s character. Here’s a short comparison, brief excerpts from each so you can see the similarity between the two tunes and the message.
But it’s not just the tune that was lifted. The Make ‘en Laugh lyrics directly paraphrase those of Be a Clown. Clever but barely disguised plagiarism:
In The Pirate, Kelly is about to be hung by his neck in the town square. O’Connor quotes what that immortal bard, Samuel J. Snodgrass, said “as he was about to be led to the guillotine.”
While O’Connor’s dad advised him to “be an actor my son, but be a comical one,” Kelly was only three when his “clever” mom told him “I’ve got your future sewn up if you take this advice: be a clown, be a clown.”
And why go into the funny business? Because you’ll get rich, unlike in those other more effete professions. Kelly’s mom asks him “Why be a great composer with your rent in arrears? Why be a major poet and you’ll owe it for years? A college education I should never propose. A bachelor’s degree won’t even keep you in clothes.” Likewise, O’Connor’s dad warns him that “you could study Shakespeare and be quite elite, and you could charm the critics and have nothing to eat.”
But if you’re funny, what happens? Kelly is promised a bright future where he’ll “only stop with top folks” and “he’ll never lack” and “millions you will win.” O’Connor likewise will have “the world at your feet.”
Okay, sounds good. But what does it take to be funny? Kelly’s clown is instructed to…
• show ‘em tricks, tell ‘em jokes
• wear the cap and the bells
• be a crack Jackanapes
• give ’em quips, give ’em fun
• act the fool, play the calf
• stand on your head
• wiggle your ears
• wear a painted mustache
• spin on your nose
• quack like a duck
O’Connor’s comical actor must…
• slip on a banana peel
• [perform] old honky-tonk monkeyshines
• tell ‘em a joke, but give it plenty of hoke.
• take a fall, butt a wall, split a seam.
• start off by pretending you’re a dancer with grace, wiggle till they’re giggling all over the place, then get a great big custard pie in the face
The actual acts differ more than the lyrics because they are structured around the individual talents of the performers. “Be a Clown” actually is done twice in The Pirate, first with Kelly and the fabulous Nicklaus Brothers, and is later reprised by Kelly and Judy Garland. In both cases, it’s a partner number with more of a dance base to it. O’Connor, on the other hand, is both a better comedian and a far more skilled acrobat. The result, one of the greatest physical comedy acts ever, became his signature piece.
Here are the complete versions. Enjoy!
Be a Clown #1 (Kelly & the Nicklaus Brothers)
Be a Clown #2 (Kelly & Judy Garland)
Make ’em Laugh
The Plot Thickens
Keaton & Josephine the
monkey in The Cameraman
But that’s just the beginning! As I said at the top, this blog post got jump-started by Ben Model unearthing a less obvious and even more fascinating Singin’ in the Rain borrow. And this one is all the juicier because it involves our hero, Buster Keaton.
Take it away, Ben…
Wow! Like I said, great detective work. And as if that wasn’t amazing enough, think back to the original version of the song from The Hollywood Revue of 1929. In that cavalcade of stars, did you notice the one luminary who couldn’t / wouldn’t have “a smile on his face”? Yep, that’s “the great stoneface” himself at the 39-second mark.
The one thing I would add to Ben’s chronology is that in the years before Singin’ in the Rain (1952), Keaton was an uncredited gag writer for a bunch of MGM movies, including the Marx. Brothers, but especially a slew of Red Skelton vehicles, right up to his 1950 Watch the Birdie, which was partially a remake of The Cameraman, and two more 1951 Skelton films. So if Keaton wasn’t directly consulted on Singin’ in the Rain, he was certainly still a presence at the studio. It was also in 1950 that his appearance on the Ed Wynn Show led to a lot of work on early television and made him less dependent on the Hollywood film industry.
Kelly & Skelton in Du Barry Was a Lady
And speaking of Red Skelton…
A talented pantomimist, Red Skelton, like Keaton, had grown up in show business, performing in medicine shows at the age of ten, and later burlesque and vaudeville. Keaton’s work with him in the 1940s would be enough to fill another blog post (don’t get me started!), but there are a couple of possible links between Skelton and Singin’ in the Rain. Gene Kelly’s “Broadway Ballet” fantasy sequence was apparently based on an idea that was used for MGM’s Du Barry Was a Lady (1943), starring Skelton as a nightclub worker who dreams that he’s King Louis XV. And who was his romantic rival for Lucille Ball’s affections in that one? Gene Kelly, natch. (And before the film, it was a Broadway musical starring Bert Lahr chasing Ethel Merman.)
But even more interesting than that is the similarity between some of Skelton’s pratfall moves from Du Barry and those of O’Connor, as seen in this comparison video. In the first part, Skelton and friend think they have tricked Gene Kelly into downing the drink with the Mickey Finn, but (of course!) the glasses have been switched, which leads to Skelton’s wonderful drunk pratfall sequence. Skeleton is drunk, O’Conner is giddy, but the writhing around and the circular movements when on their side on the floor are strikingly similar.
Did O’Connor borrow this? Who knows? —but not necessarily. It’s just as likely that these moves were standard fare. After all, the 108 pratfall was also common property (if you could do it!). Still, you need someone to preserve the vocabulary, and in the yakkety-yak-yak 1940s, that someone may well have been Red Skelton.
Of course, once you start making these connections, it’s endless —ancestry.com run amok— so I’ll stop the narrative here and just leave you with a few tidbits for dessert…
• When they made the biopic The Buster Keaton Story in 1957, can you guess who played Keaton? Dramatic pause. Are you really guessing? Space filler. Space filler Space filler. More space filler. Even more space filler. Yep, Donald O’Connor. This stuff’s downright incestuous.
• Trav SD points outthat Singin’ in the Rain producer/songwriter Arthur Freed wrote material for the Marx Brothers’ act and performed in their sketches way back in their vaudeville days.
• As for the Nicklaus Brothers, according to Wikipedia “this dance sequence was omitted when shown in some cities in the South, such as Memphis, because it featured black performers the Nicholas Brothers, Fayard and Harold, dancing with Kelly. It was the first time they had danced onscreen with a Caucasian, and while it was Kelly’s insistence that they perform with him, they were the ones who were punished. Essentially blackballed, they moved to Europe and did not return until the mid-60s.”
• Kevin Kline does his own version of “Be a Clown” in the 2004 Cole Porter biopic, De-Lovely. Interesting enough and a much bigger production number.
• In 2006 or so, Volkswagon did this commercialwhere they remade Gene Kelly’s dance in the rain, using his face and choreography but a break dancer’s body and moves. Very interesting!
• Anthony Balducci, whose Journal blog I highly recommend, has an excellent pieceabout gag borrowing/ stealing, with some interesting comparisons between the tv work of Ernie Kovacs and the sketches of the British comedy duo Morecambe & Wise.
• Braggedy-brag-brag, but my personal show-biz DNA intersects with several of the performers mentioned here:
—My first acting job was just days past my 7th birthday, a skit with Skelton and Jackie Gleason on the Red Skelton Show. Skelton had worked extensively with Keaton, and Keaton had done a version of clown Sliver Oakley’s classic one-man baseball pantomime in The Cameraman. The skit I did with Gleason & Skelton was —yep!— about a baseball game. Also, around this time, Skelton did some research for creating his Freddie the Freeloader tramp clown. He visited Coney Island and studied the clown Freddy the Tramp, later “borrowing” some of his bits for his new character. Freddy the Tramp was the father of my long-time clown partner, Fred Yockers. When Fred, Jan Greenfield, and I started the First NY International Clown-Theatre Festival in 1983, Skelton agreed to be honorary chairperson, though we never actually got to speak with him.
—Keaton was on the Ed Wynn Show in 1950, and I was on a tv show with Wynn about nine years later. (There’s no way telling which of us Wynn preferred working with.)
— In The Pirate, the great character actor Walter Slezak played the town mayor who (spoiler alert!) is really the pirate Macoco. In 1958 I acted with Slezak on “Beaver Patrol,” a comic drama on the U.S. Steel Hour about an eccentric New York uncle who visits relatives in Beverly Hills, takes over a scout troupe, and teaches the spoiled rich kids gritty New York City stuff. Yes, I’m the one looking at the camera. I do remember Slezak as being very affable and a pleasure to work with.
Here’s the song classic “Baby It’s Cold Outside” done not once but twice with some nice physical comedy elements. Both are from the 1949 movie Neptune’s Daughter, for which it won the Best Song Oscar. The first version features Ricardo Montalban trying to seduce Esther Williams. The second version reverses the roles, with Betty Garrett putting the moves on none other than Red Skelton (Spanish accent and all).
I don’t see a choreographer listed on the IMDB page, but directorEdward Buzzell had acted in Vitaphone shorts and in a couple of Marx Brothers movies, so I suspect he gets at least some of the credit.
Side note: Betty Garrett and her husband were on the Hollywood Blacklist during the McCarthy era for refusing to name names to the House UnAmerican Activities Committee, but later toured with their own duo act.
We continue our series of popular guest posts on eccentric dance by Betsy Baytos with a piece on the multi-talentedRed Skelton. I was actually on his show (in a skit with Jackie Gleason!) a few days after my seventh birthday, and 28 years later he consented to be honorary chairperson of the first NY International Clown-Theatre Festival, but (unlike Betsy) this time around I did not get to meet him. Click here for all of Betsy’s posts on eccentric dance. —jt
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Red Skelton had always been a favorite of mine growing up, but I never dreamed I would have the opportunity to meet, let alone interview, the great comic. I had just made the decision to work on the documentary but I had no clue how I, with no financial backing or studio supporting me, could make these great artists sit down and talk intimately about their careers. But I had to try.
I was living in New York at the time, freelancing and touring for Disney, and somehow managed to get a contact to Red. He was to be my first interview for the film, but how? Aha! I knew of his clown paintings and I worked hard on a full color Goofy as Freddie the Freeloader, sending it off to Rancho Mirage, while hoping for a reaction. When I followed up with a call, an old German woman answered, “Mr. Skelton does not take interviews!” I asked her to verify that the illustration arrived safely, and she was gone a long while. Finally she returned, surprised as I was. “He said YES!” and I jumped, “I’m on my way!”
I flew out the very next day, rented a car, and spent a sleepless night at a motel near Red’s house, as the interview was early in the morning. I was nervous as Red, over six feet tall, opened the door smiling, cane in hand, and chomping on a cigar, ushered me in. His wife, Lothian, daughter of the great cinematographer Gregg Toland, walked in, curious as to my agenda.
He sat down as I babbled about eccentric dancers, and kindly listened, commenting about the dancers he knew, while signing plates depicting his clowns. I had brought footage on a small portable television but needed to somehow divert his attention. I then mentioned Charlotte Greenwood and placed my leg straight up the door frame. Red, taken aback, sat back staring, got up and left the room, leaving me alone with my leg attached to the door frame, aghast as what to do next! Minutes seemed like hours…..
Betsy & Red
Red returned, camera in hand, chuckling heartily. Whew, I did it! I quickly made space in the living room and proceeded to dance eccentric, with Red filming away in delight! He then agreed to do an interview at a later time. With the backing of the New York Performing Arts Library and a grant from Jerome Robbins, I managed to sit him down a few months later, for one of the most extraordinary interviews in Funny Feet. For over two and a half hours, Red graciously made me feel at ease, sharing his incredible background, and regaling me with timeless stories. My focus with this film had always been on a performer’s technique, the process of character development, and setting up a gag, and essentially how to make a step “funny.” Red delivered over and above, with insight on how he studied babies for his drunk act and how you “have to get right up on a pratfall or the audience will think you are hurt!” Pure gold and I was so grateful for this rare opportunity.
Betsy & Lothian
I kept his wife, Lothian, informed, and when Red passed, she reached out, saying how Red had planned to continue touring, and how he considered me as his opening act! What a thrill that would have been! Lothian and I have since become close friends, and that experience and interview compelled me to push on, making me realize how much these great artists have yet to give!
Here are two amazing Red Skelton clips, the classic Guzzler’s Gin, followed by the lesser known dance class sequence from Bathing Beauty (1944). Skelton’s pantomime is pure “eccentric” in how he uses his character and has a specific reason for everything he does, in every gesture, every move. There is action and reaction. His body language as a ballerina, from a slumped position as he enters, to the extreme pulling up as he gets slapped around, is what makes that piece so effective.
The same in animation: it’s all about the extreme pose and how you build a gag. An eccentric dancer doesn’t give away what is about to happen, instead looking just as baffled as we are at the results of their antics. Surprise is the key, and as the music escalates, so does Red. It’s musicality, not just in dance but in his pantomime. Choreography is not steps, but movement; no matter how small, it’s all important to the development of the routine.