Ten months before Charlie Chaplin released The Great Dictator, the Three Stooges
came out with You Nazty Spy. Produced
by Columbia Pictures in January 1940, the film came out four months after
Germany invaded Poland, and nearly a year before the U.S. entered the war.
Comprised of Larry Fine, and brothers Moe and Curly
Howard, the Three Stooges began as the vaudeville act “Ted Healy and His
Stooges” in 1922. Larry and Moe were the original stooges with the third played
by various individuals throughout their fifty-year career. In 1934, the trio
signed a contract with Columbia and became wildly popular within their first
year. Their movies were typically “shorts,” films less than thirty minutes.
After WWII began, the Stooges (all of whom had Jewish
heritage) put out several pieces that poked fun at Hitler and the Nazis, the
first being You Nazty Spy with a
sequel I’ll Never Heil Again the
following year. Moe played “Moe Hailstone,” an Adolf Hitler-like character from
Moronica, with Larry playing a Joachim von-Ribbentrop-type ambassador and Curly
playing a Hermann Göring character. Consider by most to be the actors’ best
film, You Natzy Spy is also the
Stooges’ favorite.
In the movie, the evil cabinet ministers overthrow the
king and decide to put Moe the new ruler, believing that he’ll be stupid enough
to follow their orders. After successfully committing mayhem, the trio is run
out of office by a mob and eaten by lions. A bit of a dark ending, but audiences
loved it.
You
Nazty Spy opens with a disclaimer that reads: “Any resemblance
between the characters in this picture and any persons, living or dead, is a
miracle.” Was this a Stooge-style eye poke at the censors or an attempt to
appease them?
Other wartime movies by the Stooges included They Stooge to Conga, Higher Than a Kite,
Back from the Front, Gents without Cents, and No Dough Boys. An anti-Japanese film The Yoke’s On Me was issued in 1944.
Have you seen any of the Stooges’ wartime films?
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Linda Shenton Matchett writes about ordinary people who did extraordinary
things in days gone by. Her latest release, Under Ground, features WWII war
correspondent, Ruth Brown. A volunteer docent and archivist for the Wright
Museum of WWII, Linda is also a trustee for her local public library. She was
born a stone’s throw from Fort McHenry and has lived in historic places all her
life. Now located in central New Hampshire, Linda’s favorite activities include
exploring historic sites and immersing herself in the imaginary worlds created
by other authors. Visit her website where she blogs about history, mystery, and faith.
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The actors who played German officers on Hogan's Heroes were Jewish. That was after the war. I wonder if the Stooges knew what was happening to Jews in Europe.
ReplyDeleteI knew about the Hogan's Heroes folks. If I remember correctly the guy that played in Frenchman LeBeau, was in a concentration camp. Their stories are fascinating. I'm not sure how much folks knew what was happening at that time.
ReplyDeleteThe Hogan's Heroes post is here: https://stitchesthrutime.blogspot.com/2018/09/hogans-heroes.html
ReplyDelete