This beautiful photograph (which comes to us by way of the great George Bettinger, and can be seen full-size at the Facebook Marx Bros. Archive) shows us three giants of comedy -- and three of my very greatest heroes -- sharing a laugh and a smile in the spring of 1972. Charlie Chaplin had returned to the United States from his exile in Switzerland in order to accept an honorary Academy Award. (Video of that is here.) He was received as the conquering hero of Hollywood, and in this photo he gazes into the eyes of Groucho as Danny Kaye looks on. The photo credit for this one goes to none other than Candice Bergen. (See also this picture of Groucho, Chaplin, and Oona O'Neill, daughter of Eugene and wife of Chaplin.)
It was on this occasion that Chaplin said to Groucho, "Keep warm" -- a tender moment between two crusty legends, and one which Groucho fondly recounted many times thereafter. These two men were the greatest popular artists of the twentieth century. Their stars shine so brightly that even the magnificent Danny Kaye looks like an also-ran.
Here are three favorite clips of these three comic geniuses. In reverse chronological order, we begin with Danny Kaye's "Melody in 4-F." Like most of his best material, this was written by his wife Sylvia Fine (of whom Kaye often said, "Sylvia has a fine head on my shoulders"). "Melody in 4-F" is the most virtuousic of the Kaye/Fine "git-gat-giddle" doubletalk numbers. It was the most noted item from Kaye's career-making 1940-1941 engagement at Manhattan's La Martinique nightclub, which led directly to Broadway (Lady in the Dark and Let's Face It). "Melody in 4-F" was so popular that the number was incorporated into Let's Face It, even though the rest of the score was by Cole Porter. It was also incorporated into Kaye's first feature film, Up in Arms (1944), and it's in this context (or, rather, out of this context) that we enjoy it today. The number begins at around 5:50 in the following clip (uploaded by Huilifoj, whose YouTube channel is something every Danny Kaye fan on the web can be grateful for).
Next we have Groucho Marx, whom I have accepted as my personal savior, in one of his greatest confrontations. In this scene from Animal Crackers (1930), Groucho (as Captain Jeffrey T. Spaulding) confounds the wealthy art patron Roscoe W. Chandler (intended by the writers, George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind, as a satirical jab at Otto Kahn, and perfectly embodied by Louis Sorin). In addition to featuring some of the most elliptical comic writing humans have ever had to wrap their heads around, this scene has always struck me as an important clue to what the Marx Brothers' shows must have been like in front of a live audience. At one point, Groucho even turns to the camera and asks if he can look at a program.
And finally, here are the beautiful final moments of The Circus, Charlie Chaplin's underrated masterpiece of 1928. The Circus is one of Chaplin's saddest and funniest films, and perhaps the most effective use of his signature final shot, in which the dejected Little Tramp heads off toward the horizon, his spirits slowly improving as he walks away from us. Chaplin first used this device in The Tramp (1915); not until Modern Times (1936) did the Tramp finally get to walk off into the sunset in the company of the woman he loved.
NOTE: In an earlier version of this article, I incorrectly referred to Let's Face It as Danny Kaye's Broadway debut. In fact, Lady in the Dark preceded Let's Face It by six months. I can't tell you how deeply I regret this tragic error. I did it and I have to live with it.
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Elaine May's Tribute to Mike Nichols
Comedy Palace favorites Nichols and May have not worked together as an active comedy team in almost fifty years. But because of their subsequent independent careers -- Mike Nichols as one of our best directors, and Elaine May as one of our best screenwriters -- they remain linked, even when they're not collaborating on a film, as in The Birdcage and Primary Colors. Earlier this year, the American Film Institute honored Mike Nichols with its Lifetime Achievement Award. Elaine May, with the signature wry, faux-confused delivery which made her one of comedy's brightest lights, delivered this speech in tribute to her old stage partner.
The original Comedy Palace appearance of Nichols and May includes a history of the team, along with audio clips of their work together. Other Comedy Palace appearances of the team are here and here.
The original Comedy Palace appearance of Nichols and May includes a history of the team, along with audio clips of their work together. Other Comedy Palace appearances of the team are here and here.
Labels:
nichols and may
Friday, October 8, 2010
A Messenger
We all wonder what we'd be doing if we were not doing what we're doing. Here's Woody Allen's answer, from a 1984 interview on French television.
Labels:
woody allen
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Happy 120th, Groucho
Today is Groucho Marx's birthday -- his 120th, were he still with us, but as he himself cautioned, "If you keep having birthdays you will eventually die." The world has been going on without Groucho for nearly 34 years now, but the comedy he left behind is very much alive, and one despairs to envision the world without it.
We have three birthday tributes today, here at the Comedy Palace. The first is from a radio broadcast in the early sixties, in which Zeppo, Gummo, and Harpo wish Groucho a happy birthday. Harpo's greeting comes in the form of a harp recital, but this recording is a rare opportunity to hear the voice of Gummo, the Marx Brother who left the act before the team got to Broadway and Hollywood.
Here's Groucho on The Dick Cavett Show, September 5, 1969, performing one of his late signature numbers, "Father's Day." Bert Kalmar having passed away in 1947, "Father's Day" was one of a handful of songs written by the songwriting duo of Marx and Ruby.
And let's give S.J. Perelman the last word. Perelman was perhaps America's greatest comic essayist, during a period rife with great comic essayists. He never matched in dialogue the dizzy heights of his prose, but he did well by the Marx Brothers on both Monkey Business (written with Will B. Johnstone) and Horse Feathers (with Kalmar and Ruby). Two decades later, Perelman paid tribute to Groucho in an essay entitled "I'll Always Call You Schnorrer, My African Explorer." This essay, later collected in The Most of S.J. Perelman, begins with a recollection of the Brothers' seminal vaudeville tab Home Again, and ends with Perelman visiting Groucho on the set of A Girl in Every Port (1952), in which the comedian starred with William Bendix:
We have three birthday tributes today, here at the Comedy Palace. The first is from a radio broadcast in the early sixties, in which Zeppo, Gummo, and Harpo wish Groucho a happy birthday. Harpo's greeting comes in the form of a harp recital, but this recording is a rare opportunity to hear the voice of Gummo, the Marx Brother who left the act before the team got to Broadway and Hollywood.
Here's Groucho on The Dick Cavett Show, September 5, 1969, performing one of his late signature numbers, "Father's Day." Bert Kalmar having passed away in 1947, "Father's Day" was one of a handful of songs written by the songwriting duo of Marx and Ruby.
And let's give S.J. Perelman the last word. Perelman was perhaps America's greatest comic essayist, during a period rife with great comic essayists. He never matched in dialogue the dizzy heights of his prose, but he did well by the Marx Brothers on both Monkey Business (written with Will B. Johnstone) and Horse Feathers (with Kalmar and Ruby). Two decades later, Perelman paid tribute to Groucho in an essay entitled "I'll Always Call You Schnorrer, My African Explorer." This essay, later collected in The Most of S.J. Perelman, begins with a recollection of the Brothers' seminal vaudeville tab Home Again, and ends with Perelman visiting Groucho on the set of A Girl in Every Port (1952), in which the comedian starred with William Bendix:
Labels:
dick cavett,
groucho marx,
harpo marx,
marx brothers,
s.j. perelman
Friday, October 1, 2010
The Gift Shop is Open
Try to stay calm and contain your excitement as Noah's Comedy Palace unveils a new feature -- our Gift Shop, powered by Amazon. Here you'll be able to purchase books, videos, and recordings referenced on this site, all at discounted prices. A portion of what you spend will go to the Comedy Palace, thereby helping us to stay open.
New products will be added all the time. For our grand opening, there are eleven departments: The Marx Brothers Library, Marx Brothers videos, the Woody Allen Library, Woody Allen videos, and general sections devoted to Charlie Chaplin, Danny Kaye, Mel Brooks, Laurel and Hardy,W.C. Fields, Monty Python, and Tom Lehrer. There is much more to come.
Henceforth, links to books and DVDs will point directly to the relevant shelf of the gift shop. We'll also occasionally highlight specific products -- favorite books, movies, and recordings which are essential components of your classic comedy library. Now, please, you're making a spectacle of yourself -- didn't I tell you to stay calm? It's exciting, I know.
New products will be added all the time. For our grand opening, there are eleven departments: The Marx Brothers Library, Marx Brothers videos, the Woody Allen Library, Woody Allen videos, and general sections devoted to Charlie Chaplin, Danny Kaye, Mel Brooks, Laurel and Hardy,W.C. Fields, Monty Python, and Tom Lehrer. There is much more to come.
Henceforth, links to books and DVDs will point directly to the relevant shelf of the gift shop. We'll also occasionally highlight specific products -- favorite books, movies, and recordings which are essential components of your classic comedy library. Now, please, you're making a spectacle of yourself -- didn't I tell you to stay calm? It's exciting, I know.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


























