06.02.10 | Gary Cahall | Staff NotesPrint this Post
Think it's not easy to replace a legend? Try having to stand in the shadows of two successive legends. It's a hazardous experience that some manage to pull off (Jim Rice playing left field for the Boston Red Sox after Ted Williams and Carl Yastrzemski) and some don't (Gary Cherone following David Lee Roth and Sammy Hagar as Van Halen's lead singer). A cinematic example of this dilemma can be found in the rotund form of veteran stage and screen funnyman Joe Besser, who was tapped in 1956 to join Moe Howard and Larry Fine as one-third of the Three Stooges and co-starred in the team's final 16 two-reel comedies for Columbia Pictures. As evidenced in a poll recently featured on this site, Joe's tenure with the slapstick trio is hardly held in the same regard as those of the two men he replaced, Moe's brothers Curly and Shemp. Most fans, in fact, consider the Besser era beneath their notice, and non-fans (as well as self-confessed aficionados like Howard Stern) often wind up confusing him with '60s member "Curly Joe" DeRita. With this week's release by Sony of these films--part of its eighth and final volume of complete chronological Three Stooges shorts--the time is right to ask if they truly deserve their bad reputation.
First, for those non-fans out there, some background is in order. In 1934, Moe, Larry and Curly split with straight man Ted Healy--who brought the boys in to serve as his "stooges" in vaudeville, on Broadway, and in the movies--and signed with Columbia to star in their own two-reelers. That line-up remained stable for 12 years and nearly 100 shorts, until a debilitating stroke on the set forced Curly to retire from the act (he would die in 1952). Older Howard sibling Shemp, who left the team to work solo in the early '30s, came back in 1947 to join Larry and Moe for over 70 films. In November, 1955, however, Shemp would pass away from a heart attack after attending a boxing exhibition. Still owing Columbia four pictures for the coming year, Moe and Larry considered working as a duo, then opted to finish them with stock footage and actor Joe Palma, his back to the camera, as a stand-in Shemp. When the time came to find a new third member, the search didn't have to go any farther that the studio's own short subjects department and the dressing room of one Joe Besser.
Born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1907, Besser caught the show business bug early. At age 12, he followed renowned stage magician Howard Thurston by stowing away on a train (and sleeping on top of a lion cage!) and wound up joining the act in Detroit. When his attempts at legitimate legerdemain led to failure, young Joe became Thurston's comedic foil. Striking out on his own in 1923, Besser found success on vaudeville circuits across the country, where he would crystallize his persona of a petulant and easily exasperated man-child who would cry out "Not so haaarrrd!" and "You crazy, you!" at those who annoyed him. He also caught the eye of popular funnymen Olsen and Johnson, who hired him to join their latest frenetic Broadway revue, Sons of Fun. Columbia executives noticed Besser, and he made his big-screen debut in 1938's Cuckoorancho, the first of 11 solo shorts he'd star in for the studio. Joe could also be seen in several features, from 1944's Hey, Rookie! with Ann Miller and the Bud Abbott/Lou Costello 1949 film Africa Screams (which counted Shemp Howard in its cast) to the 1950 Rock Hudson costume actioner The Desert Hawk. His long friendship with Bud and Lou won Joe a recurring role on their 1952-54 TV series The Abbott and Costello Show as Stinky, a bratty kid dressed in a Little Lord Fauntleroy suit (no one back then apparently questioned a man in his late 40s playing a child).
So it was that Besser, with decades of experience and a well-established character, would sign on with the Stooges in early 1956. Things were going to be different from the team's heyday, though. First, the budget for Columbia's shorts department was smaller, which meant more remakes of older films and more use of stock footage. For another, the fellas were getting up in years and weren't able to take all the slaphappy mistreatment of days gone by. Joe, in fact, had a stipulation in his contract that kept Moe or Larry from "slapping or causing him bodily harm" (he later said that Larry told him, "Don't worry. If you don't want Moe to hit you, I'll take all the belts."). And the madcap storylines of their '30s and '40s films were toned down to more closely match the style of the TV situation comedies that were coming into vogue. Larry and Moe even changed their distinctive hairstyles in several of the Besser shorts, combing them back in a less wild manner that befit their older appearances.
The revamped trio's first effort, 1957's Hoofs and Goofs, found them playing siblings trying to cope with their late sister Birdie's reincarnation as a horse...a horse about to have a foal, at that! Someone at Columbia found this horseplay amusing, because they shot a follow-up short, Horsing Around, later that year. Among the other films they made in '57, the boys tracked down Joe's fiancée's stolen engagement ring in Muscle Up a Little Closer; they played three sets of triplets, with a string of confused wives and girlfriends, in the trick photography spectacle A Merry Mix-Up; they went into the cosmos with two different mad scientists (Benny Rubin and Stooge regular Emil Sitka, respectively) in the sci-fi spoofs Space Ship Sappy and Outer Space Jitters; the Curly short Idiots Deluxe was recycled as Guns A-Poppin; and Rusty Romeos reworked the Shemp comedy Corny Casanovas (you can even see a tabletop photo of Shemp in a stock shot).
The repetition continued in 1958's output, as Joe reprised Curly's roles in Pies and Guys (based on Half-Wits Holiday) and Oil's Well That Ends Well (Oily to Bed, Oily to Rise). The fellas played adopted "children" in Quiz Whizz; reunited Besser with his French wartime sweetheart in Fifi Blows Her Top; help Joe's sister Tiny get over her stage fright in Sweet and Hot; and had one more "close encounter"--well, Joe did, even if no one believed him at first--in Flying Saucer Daffy. The fellas' final two shorts, the remakes Triple Crossed (He Cooked His Goose with Shemp) and Sappy Bullfighters (Curly's What's the Matador) reached theaters in 1959, more than a year after Columbia had shut down its short subjects branch and given the boys an unceremonious goodbye. Okay, so much for background.
So, what was so terrible about the Joe Besser Three Stooges shorts? Obviously, the frenetic, anything-goes pace of the '30s Curly era films was gone, with the boys playing in mostly domestic situations that often seemed to take place in the same apartment. Joe's rather prissy persona, as the one who would get on Larry's and (especially) Moe's nerves, also rubbed fans the wrong way. What worked during his Stinky stint with Abbott and Costello, apparently, didn't come across with the Stooges. That said, the interaction between the trio was perhaps better than it was at times with Shemp, who was also used to working solo. Muscle Up a Little Closer and Fifi Blows Her Top, along with the first two space comedies, had some fine sight gags (Joe's trying to ship a crate of eggs in Muscle Up, for example) and wordplay that made them stand out (I, for one, always liked Larry's throw-away plug in Outer Space Jitters when he tells the audience "And don't forget to see [Columbia's] Pal Joey, folks."). With more original stories and fewer remakes, the Moe-Larry-Joe combo might have had a chance to stand out more, but due to money constraints and the series's imminent demise we'll never know.
After the Stooges were given the gate by Columbia, the sudden popularity of their earlier shorts on TV in the late '50s renewed interest in the act, but Joe begged off a planned personal appearance tour to look after his ailing wife. Moe and Larry would convince roly-poly comic Joe DeRita, another Columbia veteran who was briefly considered as Shemp's replacement, to join them for their '60s small-screen and feature film renaissance...but that's another story. As for Besser, he'd eventually get back into acting, with turns in movies starring the likes of Bing Crosby (Say One for Me), Marilyn Monroe (Let's Make Love) and Jerry Lewis (The Errand Boy, Which Way to the Front); TV guest spots and a recurring role on The Joey Bishop Show; and even cartoon voice work for Hanna-Barbera (Jeannie, Yogi's Space Race). It was Joe who represented the team when the Stooges finally got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1983, and he continued to welcome fan mail up until his death in 1988.
While his 1984 autobiography was originally entitled Not Just a Stooge, Besser later changed it to Once a Stooge, Always a Stooge, and of his time with the beloved knuckleheads he said, "I'm glad I did join the Stooges and I have never regretted it." Three Stooges devotees shouldn't regret it, either.

He had a bit in Woman In Hiding(1949)
Ida Lupino,Steven McNally,Howard Duff,etc
Good Film Noir
Also had bits in
Outside The Wall(1950)
I The Jury(1953)
Helen Morgan Story(1959)
Anyone who came after Shemp is best forgotten as a Stooge.
They should've stopped after Shemp as they were too old by then for slapstick. This is not a dig at either Joe but there's something sad about senior citizens engaged in such foolishness-remember the latter-day Lucy?
Being a long time fan of the Stooges,I always loved the ones with Curly. Shemp was never a fave,could always spot him in movies(a Charlie Chan movie stick out in my mind) but Joe Besser was a hoot,Moe could never get the best of him....if your a true Stoogist give the man his props
By the time he came to the Stooges, Joe Besser was an experienced, very talented comic actor. This seems to be forgotten in discussions that ultimately revolve around the question of whether one cares for his on-screen persona. Besser was a thorough pro, and on that score alone he deserves our compliments. As for his tenure with the Stooges, we have to keep in mind that he had nothing to do with the shorts' diminishing budgets and shooting schedules, or the ever-more liberal use of stock footage. I find him completely delightful with Moe and Larry, and three of the Besser shorts--FLYING SAUCER DAFFY, OUTER SPACE JITTERS, and SPACE SHIP SAPPY--are terrific sendups of the then-current science-fiction craze. Joe makes me laugh.
John's comment about the boys' ages is thoughtful, but what it misses is that the Stooges--unlike a lot of other comics--never were dependent on youthful innocence for their appeal. Harry Langdon, Jerry Lewis, and a lot of other comics graded on that, and seemed a little lost as they grew older, but the Stooges only grew funnier as they morphed into late middle age. Their carryings-on only became funnier.
And thanks to FCB for his kind remarks about Joe.
Hi Gary Cahall! After watching the last chronological volume of The Three Stooges I found myself laughing out loud at "the new stooge" and his interactions with the "regular stooges". I found Joe to be a pretty funny guy when removed from the glare of Curly and Shemp. A very nice article about him too. I enjoyed it very much.
As a youngster growing up in the 40,s, the Three Stooges were Moe, Curly and Larry. Their antics and talents were the best.
To say that Shemp or Joe Besser were less funny would not be fair.The chemistry was different. Curly was the best in my mind, but I never got tired of watching the boys............whatever the combination.
Joe Besser, while a good comedian in his own right, just was not a Good "fit" with the Stooges. He always seemed that he would rather do it by himself.I pitied Moe and Larry for having to do those shorts, but the "show must go on." Shemp was great, so was Curly-Joe, but in the end, give me Curly, Curly and more Curly. Not Joe Besser!
I always liked Joe Besser, even as a Stooge, but I feel that the series was weary by the time he arrived, thus appearing limp as compared to the earlier films. I wish circumstances allowed him to stay with the Stooges during their renaissance. Nothing against Joe De Rita the performer, but I just never cared for him as a Stooge.
Thanks for the even-handed assessment of Joe Besser's Stooge shorts. Many dismiss all of these later efforts, but there are some underrated and pretty funny entries in this group.
The Besser Stooge shorts weren't released in the order they were made, so while HOOFS AND GOOFS was the first one issued, MUSCLE UP A LITTLE CLOSER was the first one produced. (In MUSCLE, there's even a reference to their new hairstyles.) Modifying their appearances was a novel experiment, but it also made them look less zany and more "normal." Plus, as producer-director Jules White told me, they couldn't use those altered hairstyles for the shorts that relied heavily on stock footage from the earlier films.
Some Stooge fans resent Besser's alleged unwillingness to take his fair share of the slaps and hits. This has been blown way out of proportion; all one has to do is view the films to see that Joe certainly took his lumps. What Besser wanted no part of was hazardous stunts, which is understandable. His concern stemmed from an accident that occurred during the filming of MUSCLE UP A LITTLE CLOSER, in a scene where Moe ignited Joe's (padded) rear end with a flame thrower. As Moe lowered the flame thrower, the cuff of Joe's pant leg caught fire. (This bit is in the film--watch how Larry quickly steps in to help Joe.)
For the record, SAPPY BULL FIGHTERS was the last Stooge short released. But the last one produced was FLYING SAUCER DAFFY, one of the better Besser efforts and a satisfying way to conclude a remarkable output.
He was a great Actor.
Most 3 Stooges Fans have this utter hatred towards Joe Besser. Joe came in to the Stooges at a very difficult time. Shemp Howard, beloved brother of Moe had unexpectedly died. Shemp had replaced the ailing Curly Howard, the most popular of the three funnymen. Moe had known of Joe and was happy that he agreed to join the team. Most fans feel that Joe's sissy character that he had created years before joining the team didn't quite "Fit in" with the already established style set forth by Moe & Larry. I disagree and am very thankful that we have 16 additional shorts to watch. In fact, OILS WELL THAT ENDS WELL'57 is one of my all time favorite in the 198 series of films. Now a personal story that should shed some light as to why Joe left the boys in 1959. Joe was married to a woman who was just more then slightly protective of her husband's well being. Ernie Besser made it clear that she did not like the violent slapstick that Moe doled out to his partners. She insisted that Joe quit the team in order to avoid personal injury! And timid Joe, in order to save face, made up a story that his wife was ill and needed his full time care. When my friend Mark Lyons and myself visited Joe and Ernie back in the 80's right after the Stooges had received their much deserved star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Joe related this story to us both. Ernie was in the other room. Joe explained his leaving the Stooges story to us and then lowered his head and said very seriously, "She cost me Millions!".
This was a nice,well written article.I've seen virtually all of the original Stooges shorts,most of the ones with Shemp in them and many with Joe DeRita and Joe Besser in them.While it wouldn't be fair or right to say that one was 'better' than the other,I agree with what some of the other viewers have said -- that the fit or chemistry just wasn't there as it was in the original Stooges shorts.It's hard to replace an original -- in fact,it CAN'T be done! I'm glad though that they continued on for as long as they did -- they enjoyed it and so did their fans! Be thankful that we have the films that we DO have!
i loved all the stooges. they made me laugh
Anybody have a copy of the short, 'Cuckoorancho' (Columbia;1938), or know from where I can obtain it?
evedemian@verizon.net
Joe is by far the most underrated stooge, yeah sure, he replaced the funniest stooges but the hate that Joe gets is very underserving. I thought Joe was pretty funny and did a good job at what he had to work with. I actually liked him better then Curly Joe, who didn't seem to even try to be funny.
Sorry, Eve, but "Cuckoorancho," like Joe's other Columbia shorts, has never received an official home video release. Now that Columbia is joining Warner and other studios in releasing video-on-demand titles, perhaps somewhere down the line they'll do a collection of Bessser's shorts, along with other comics like El Brendel, Andy Clyde and Hugh Herbert. You can check at http://www.moviesunlimited.com.
I think Joe's a fine comedian and find his Stooge comedies easier to take than the last dozen or so with Curly. Curly's illness overtakes all else with me and, because of that, he just can't seem to get out of second gear. Actually, it's certainly to Larry & Moe's credit that they had 4 different 'Third Stooge' performers and adapted to them all. None tried to copy from the others' all were distinctively different and were right for their time. The Stooges in the 60's weren't the same as in the 30's and there was no way they COULD be. However, the Larry, Moe, Curly-Joe trio was more subdued and I enjoy them. They WERE older, after all, and just couldn't do the same shtick anymore.