Tag: Television

The Fonz Does English Pantomime

POST 56
Saturday, January 16, 2010


The Christmas pantomime is what remains of the old harlequinade, the cauldron for physical comedy in 19th-century England.

Click here to read the whole NY Times article.

Click here to read about the harlequinade in my book Clowns.

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Borat at the Gym

POST 40
Saturday, November 28, 2009

You’ve probably all seen (I hope!) the brilliantly provocative movie Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan, starring Sacha Baron Cohen. Here’s a short (2:16) physical comedy clip that’s not from the movie, but from one of his Borat skits on season one of Da Ali G Show.

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Happy Birthday, Harpo Marx!

POST 38
Monday, November 23, 2009

I’m sure you’ve all seen the Marx Brothers movies several times over — and if not, what are you waiting for?? — but all the more reason to celebrate today being the birthday of Harpo (November 23, 1888 – September 28, 1964), the Marx Brothers’ most physical performer and purest clown.

In an attempt to show something that might be new to at least some of you, here are an even dozen of somewhat odd clips. They’re mostly from the documentaries The Marx Brothers Collection: Mixed Nuts (2003), Inside the Marx Brothers (also 2003), and — the oldest but still best of the lot — The Marx Brothers in A Nutshell (1982). All are available on Netflix.

1. First an overview, the intro to Harpo on Marx Brothers in a Nutshell:

2. Harpo (without his brothers) as the “village Peter Pan” in the 1925 silent movie, Too Many Kisses, in which he speaks his only line ever in a film. Of course you have to read it on a title card because it’s a silent film!

3. Harpo with his brothers in the opening scene from their 1924 Broadway musical revue, I’ll Say She Is, in rhyming couplets no less, recreated for film in 1931. Harpo does not enter until the 2:26 point.

4. At poolside with all three brothers:

5. A few moments of Harpo performing in Moscow during his triumphant six-week goodwill ambassador tour to the Soviet Union in 1933.

6. A rare Marx Brothers stunt in The Big Store (1941), though not a very convincing one. I’m assuming the first shot is done by stunt doubles, with the Harpo character being wired. The second shot, where we don’t even see the unicycle wheel, could easily have been done on a stationary bicycle traveling on a dolly.

7. Harpo et.al. in a variety of cartoons. Did that last bit inspire The Who?

8. Next is a brief appearance by Harpo in Stage Door Canteen, a 1943 star-studded World War II morale booster.

9. This chasing after young women, honking away on his horn, became a Harpo trademark, but ironically he was the only Marx brother to stay married to the same woman till death did them part. Here’s a touch of family life.

10. You’ve probably seen Harpo and Lucille Ball reprise the broken mirror routine for television, but maybe you missed the the footage that comes before and after. Harpo chasing Lucy and then Ethel seems pretty risqué for 1955 television!

11. Harpo (and Chico) make commercials.

12. Last clip, from a failed sitcom pilot, Deputy Seraph. Kind of depressing to hear some director telling them how to act. There’s more footage from this on YouTube.

Cool Links
• Check out the Harpo Marx Tribute Site and sign their petitions to preserve the original home of the Marx Brothers on East 93rd St. in Manhattan, and to co-name that street Marx Brothers Place. They have some clips of Harpo speaking, such as this recording, apparently from tapes made for the writing of his memoirs.
• And click here for a good Marx Brothers site.

Last and definitely least…

Irrelevant-Two-Degrees-of-Separation Department

Harpo worked with Kitty Carlisle in A Night at the Opera, and she was a panelist 41 years later when I appeared on To Tell the Truth promoting my book Clowns. (She said my smile was a dead giveaway that I was the clown.)


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Dick Van Dyke on Slapstick

POST 14
Saturday, June 6, 2009

Had lunch today in Paris with Caroline Simonds, who is doing wonderful things with clown care in the city’s hospitals (and as far away as Brazil) through her work with Le Rire Médecin. Caroline turned me on to this Dick Van Dyke clip about slapstick comedy, which I somehow never saw before. Not sure of the original context, but I think you’ll like…..

Update (12-17-09): Thanks to Laura Fernandez for alerting me to the fact that the original YouTube clip is no longer there. I tracked down the episode (finale of season 1) and here’s the clip, but with the scene before it as well, so now we do in fact have the original context. Come to think of it, the context of physical comedy is what this blog is all about, so this blip turns out to be a good thing! One step back, two steps forward…

You can watch the entire episode (with new commercials) on Hulu by clicking here or without commercials on Netflix Instant Play (if you’re a member).

Update:
See a new post on Dick Van Dyke here.

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