To: *Pittsburgh; Willie Green; 3catsanadog; agrace; annyokie; Atlantin; Ayn Rand wannabe; Badray; ...
The boys were HUGE in the 'Burgh.
3 posted on
11/24/2003 12:22:31 PM PST by
martin_fierro
(_____oooo_(_°_¿_°_)_oooo_____)
To: martin_fierro
Huge in Detroit bump!!
7 posted on
11/24/2003 12:37:01 PM PST by
dakine
To: martin_fierro
The boys were HUGE in the 'Burgh."They were a comedy act??
"I thought they were in a 'Life in Pittsburgh' documentary." (G)
22 posted on
11/24/2003 2:27:25 PM PST by
Vinnie
To: martin_fierro
The Bob Bernet website and his meeting with Moe Howard blows away my reminiscence but here it is anyway.
In High School in the early to mid-1970s, my friends and I would have a free hour during the afternoon which provided time to head to my parents house for some Three Stooges on the UHF station in Milwaukee. It was a wonderful way to break up the afternoon.
As we talked about the Stooges during late 1974, our attention was focused by Larry Fines passing earlier that year on the fact that Moe was the only original Stooge left. We decided to locate him and try to talk with him on the phone.
We ran up several hundred dollars in long distance bills in trying to locate him assuming that NYC and LA were the best bets. Finally we decided on the approach of using the name of a booking agency in NY when contacting the Screen Actors Guild (SAG). Thinking we would be given the name and number of his agent we were surprised to be given his home phone number (!) I called and spoke with Moe's wife Helen and she asked us to call back later when he was up from an early afternoon nap.
When we called he was very gracious, spoke with us for perhaps 20 minutes, recalling vaudeville and the Riverside theatre in Milwaukee from his performances there 40 ears earlier.
He was coughing slightly during our conversation but was very willing to talk and to responded to our enthusiasm about his comedy. It was a huge thrill. At the end of the conversation he politely asked us not to call his home number again - indicating he was not thrilled that SAG had given it out.
Roughly two months later on May 4th 1975, I was attending a Linda Ronstadt concert at the Performing Arts Center in Milwaukee and was explaining to my date, a H.S. classmate, about the phone call we had made to Moe. She had heard about it from someone who heard a tape of the conversation at school. I remember feeling an odd sensation as I was discussing this but had no idea what this was. The next morning I heard a radio that Moe had passed away.
I envy this Bernet fellow for going to LA and meeting Moe. In his website description I can see many similarities in the Stooges fanaticism we experienced. Its great to know that Moe had many opportunities to understand the depth of appreciation there was for the Stooges work. Although it earned them a mere pittance by comparison to much lesser entertainment today the appreciation by the fans was and is still there.
To: martin_fierro
Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk.
24 posted on
11/24/2003 10:09:08 PM PST by
Badray
(Molon Labe!)
To: martin_fierro
The Boys were HUGE in the 'Burgh...
Why soytently!
To: martin_fierro
Thankee for the 'Burgh Thing ping! The Stooges were always a hit with me..then again I'm from that demogrpahic...Guyz. Do you remember the fellow who used to put together a StoogeFest every year in Pittsburgh? Sometimes it was at the playhouse, sometimes another venue.
It was always a great time with screenings of all their movies. In any case he passed away about a year ago. I'm not sure if the Stoogefests will continue.
Of course Paul Shannon with "Adventure Time" on channel 4 WTAE was a big boost to promoting the Stooges locally if not nationally.
Finally has anyone else developed a taste to 3 Stooges beer. My local distributor (Shaw's Noble Avenue in Crafton near Pittsburgh) has it on special for ten bucks a case. Usually it ran around 20. Not bad...!
prisoner6
27 posted on
11/25/2003 3:55:46 AM PST by
prisoner6
( Right Wing Nuts hold the country together as the loose screws of the left fall out!)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson