Production Information
Title: Pop Goes The Easel
Studio: Columbia
Short Number: 7
Release Date: March 29, 1935
Running Time: 18:17
“Oh! Look at the grouse!” – (Curly)
Pop Goes The Easel Short Take
The onset of the Great Depression, The Stooges are forced to look for jobs. Taking a merchant’s brooms to sweep his sidewalk, they are mistaken for thieves by him and soon find themselves on the run from the police. With a cop chasing them, they flee into an art school, where they are mistaken for art students. They take their first art lessons while hiding from the police, resulting in a climactic clay fight that takes no prisoners (the persistent cop is among the numerous people who get hit). The film ends when three art students break sculptures over the boys’ heads, resulting in them being soundly beaten up.
The Advent of Long-time Three Stooges Director, Del Lord
Pop Goes The Easel brings Stooge short-film to a new plateau thanks to the advent of director Del Lord, who would also direct all the remaining 1935 Stooge film releases and nearly three dozen more, in addition to a number non-Stooge Columbia shorts, until 1948, when he left the unit to make feature films. Lord’s early training came as a driver for Mack Sennett’s Keystone Cops, and then directed a number of classic silent comedies starring Billy Bevan in 1925/26.
Cast & Crew
Directed by | Del Lord |
---|---|
Produced by | Jules White |
Written by | Felix Adler |
Starring | Moe Howard Larry Fine Curly Howard Bobby Burns Phyllis Crane Joan Howard Maurer Phyllis Fine William Irving |
Cinematography | Henry Freulich |
Edited by | James Sweeney |
Pop Goes The Easel Trivia
- Moe and Larry’s daughters are the two girls playing hopscotch. Joan (Howard Maurer) is the girl on the right with the brown hair. Phyllis is the younger girl on the left with the blonde hair.
- The title of the film Pop Goes the Easel is a pun on the nursery rhyme “Pop Goes the Weasel“, which is used for the one and only time as the opening theme. The film also ends with the tune, as with the ending of Punch Drunks.
- The two girls playing hopscotch on the sidewalk are Larry Fine’s daughter, Phyllis (who died in 1989 at age 60) and Moe Howard’s daughter, Joan.
- A colorized version of Pop Goes the Easel was released in 2006 as part of the DVD collection entitled “Stooges on the Run”.
- According to the updated version of the book The Three Stooges Scrapbook, there was an alternate clay fight in the script by Jules White. It was listed as unused or edited. A careful viewer of the clay fight can see some places where the two clay battles were filmed and edited to make one battle. Differences include: The female model is standing in the foreground close to the screen at the beginning, but when she’s hit with clay she’s standing in front of the windows. She’s brunette throughout the whole short but at the ending her hair is blonde. As The Stooges walk through the studio, there are spots on the wall made from clay. The officer who was chasing them is out cold and struck with a piece of clay, but later is shown getting his toupee knocked off his head (from a thrown piece) as he is throwing clay.
Pop Goes the Easel marks several Stooge firsts:
- Moe holding out his hand to Curly and asks him to “pick out two” fingers. Curly does, and Moe pokes him in the eyes with them. This would be a recurring joke.
- In addition, the short contains a very rare scene in which Moe delivers a slap in the face to several people at once. At the end of the clay fight scene, Moe stops everyone and asks, “Who started this?!” Larry yells, “YOU did!”, to which Moe angrily replies, “Oh, YEAH?!” and, with right hand extended, spins in a counter-clockwise motion, slapping everyone around him.
- A clay-throwing fight, a precursor to the classic pie fights which would become a staple of the Stooge films. The first genuine pie fight would appear the following year in Slippery Silks.
- Moe holding out his fist to Curly and says, “See that?” When Curly replies, “Yeah,” he smacks the fist dismissively, in which it swings in a circle behind Moe’s body, over his head, and bops Curly on the head with it.
- Curly dressing in drag, a gag that would be revisited in several later Stooge shorts, such as Uncivil Warriors, Movie Maniacs, Whoops, I’m an Indian!, Wee Wee Monsieur, Mutts to You, Oily to Bed, Oily to Rise, Nutty But Nice, Matri-Phony, Micro-Phonies, Uncivil War Birds and Rhythm and Weep.
Production Notes
It was filmed on February 6–11, 1935.