In 1932, Jerome Howard (soon to be universally known as “Curly”) joined the Three Stooges comedy team. He was replacing his older brother, Shemp, as the third Stooge, joining his older brother Moe and frizzly haired Larry Fine.
In 1934, the team signed with Columbia Pictures and began churning out the series of comedy slapstick shorts that were to bring hilarity to the world. Within a year, Curly had established himself as the comedy star of the act. His “woo-woo”s and “n’yuk nyuk”s, as well as his incredible gift for physical, inventive, surreal comedy, made Curly Howard everyone’s favorite Stooge. On the 60th anniversary of his passing, here’s a look back at Curly’s later years.
From 1934 to 1944, Curly Howard and the other Stooges made 80-odd of the funniest shorts in the history of movie comedy, but by 1945, something was obviously wrong with the brilliant Curly. He was having a harder time than usual learning and remember his lines (although he was always a bad study anyway), his once graceful and quick movements now seemed slower and more lethargic, and his voice had lost its high-pitched vitality, now sounding deeper and more like a strained croak.
In early 1945, Moe Howard made an appointment for his kid brother at the Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital. The test results proved shocking: Curly was suffering from high blood pressure, hypertension, a retinal hemorrhage, and obesity.
Curly loved the good life—drinking, hanging out at clubs, seeing and dating as many beautiful women as possible. Moe, attempting to help his beloved brother settle down, tried to fix Curly up with a glamorous beauty named Marion Buxbaum. Always a sucker for a pretty face, Curly married Marion after only two weeks. Curly was soon to discover that Marion was not a very nice person and was only after his money. The marriage proved a disaster, and the unhappy couple divorced after only three months together. In the terrible divorce proceedings, Marion said of Curly: “He used filthy, vile language, kept two vicious dogs, he shouted at waiters in cafes, struck and kicked me, put out cigars in the sink.” These specious accusations were disputed by all who knew Curly as a jovial, good-natured, good-hearted fellow. Curly, always a free spender, had spent a fortune buying gifts for Marion, and the divorce really shook him up. He had his first stroke soon thereafter, in early 1946.
Curly’s great vigor and boyish vitality, his comedy trademarks, sank lower and lower. Instead of enabling Curly to rest after his stroke, as Moe requested, studio head Harry Cohn kept Curly churning out new Three Stooges shorts. Sadly, these final Curly shorts show him looking very old and worn, his previously starring roles greatly reduced, and, indeed, they put a bit of a black mark on his body of otherwise amazing comedy performances. Curly’s appearance grew worse until finally, while filming his 97th Three Stooges short, “Half Wit’s Holiday,” on May 6, 1946, the straw finally broke the camel’s back. Curly was supposed to participate in the film’s final, climactic pie fight, but Moe spotted Curly sitting in his chair on the set. “Come on, Babe,” he said. (“Babe” was Curly’s nickname among his close friends.) Moe found Curly slumped over in his chair with tears running down his face; Curly had suffered another stroke. He was taken to recover to the Motion Picture Country Home and Hospital, his career as a Stooge now effectively over. He was replaced in the act by older brother Shemp.
Curly finally got a happy break in 1947, when he met an attractive brunette named Valerie Newman. The two fell in love and married on July 31, 1947. Valerie was to bear Curly a daughter, Janie, the following year. She truly loved Curly and stuck by his side, through his constant downhill ride over the next few years, feeding and even bathing him as his health continued its slow deterioration in the late 1940s.
After his second stroke, Curly was confined to a wheelchair, but soon recovered enough to move around himself.
In the days of Curly’s slightly improved health, he made a cameo appearance in a Three Stooges short (with his replacement, Shemp) called “Hold That Lion!” Moe, knowing Curly was frail, made sure the set was cleared of all but the absolutely necessary actors and technicians, in order to take any pressure off his brother. Curly, a brilliant comedian to the end, acquits himself quite well in his brief appearance, coming across as very funny, even doing his trademark “woo-woo-woo” sound effects. This brief cameo was to be the only recorded instance of the three Howard brothers—Moe, Curly, and Shemp—appearing together on film. (At left, a photo of all four in “Hold That Lion!”)
In the post-stroke days, Curly loved playing gin rummy, watching the Hollywood Stars (a local baseball team), and going to the fights at the Hollywood Legion. He and Valerie had a swimming pool built in their home, hoping Curly could use it for physical therapy. (Curly had always loved swimming.) Crazy about dogs, he enjoyed playing with his beloved pets, a collie named “Lady” and two other canines named “Salty” and “Shorty.” He watched the new device, “television,” and loved a little kids’ puppet show called “Time for Beany.” He also watched and admired a young television comedian named Jackie Gleason.
During these final years, Curly let his thick, wavy hair grow back, instead of the world-famous shaved dome he had sported as a Stooge. He liked to wear a sea captain’s hat (he had black and white captain hats) and, like any new father, he loved playing with and doting on his newborn daughter. In his last few years of “health,” Curly was still upbeat and seemed happy, not down or sad about all that had happened to him. Contemporary photos show a smiling Curly, happily puffing on his cigar (despite his weak health, Curly still did not give up his beloved cigars), posing around the house, and horsing around with his little daughter.
Tom Emery, a good friend of Curly, recalls going on a drive with Curly one day in the late 1940s. Curly spotted a young girl in a wheelchair and told Tom to pull over. Curly talked to the girl at some length, asking her what she liked, what she needed, etc. Tom and Curly then drove off, and Curly bought the little girl everything she mentioned, dropping all the goodies off at her home with no card.
Curly’s stay at his home lasted through the late 1940s, but his health deteriorated again, and on August 29, 1950, Curly was returned to the Motion Picture Home. Missing his pal, the collie “Lady,” Curly asked Moe if he could bring the dog to stay with him at the hospital. (Curly liked sleeping with the dog when he was at home.) Sadly, when Moe brought Lady to see Curly, the reticent dog refused to enter Curly’s hospital room, staying outside in the doorway.
During the next few months, as his health got worse, Curly became confined to bed. He was put on a strict diet of boiled apples and rice. After another stroke, he was moved to the Colonial Home, but it was soon closed down for violating local fire laws. Curly was then moved to the North Hollywood Hospital and Sanitarium.
As a consequence of his strokes, it became harder and harder for Curly to talk and communicate. One visitor during these last years recalls Curly crying because he couldn’t communicate during one visit. Curly’s sister-in-law remembered a time visiting Curly in the hospital when Curly was very frustrated by not being able to communicate as she and the other visitors tried to understand what he wanted. Finally, after a long and frustrating period of guessing, they realized poor Curly just wanted a bowl of ice cream. Another visitor recalls Curly trying to sit up in a chair and his hand continually falling off the arm of the chair. Moe, too, recalled Curly’s tough time communicating as his health ebbed.
By the end, Curly could only communicate with Moe by squeezing his hand, sometimes just by blinking his eyes. The hospital supervisor told Moe that Curly’s physical and mental deterioration was causing the hospital inconvenience and suggested that Moe move him to a mental institution. Moe adamantly refused.
Curly was soon moved to his last residence, the Baldy View Sanitarium in San Gabriel, California. It was there, on January 18, 1952, that the great Jerome “Curly” Howard passed away. He was just 48 years old. Jules White, a great director of Curly in many Three Stooges shorts, recalls one of his final visits to Curly during Curly’s waning days. White never forgot Curly’s words to him that day: “Gee Jules, I guess I’ll never be able to make the children laugh again.”
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Eddie Deezen has appeared in over 30 motion pictures, including Grease, WarGames, 1941, and The Polar Express. He’s also been featured in several TV shows, including Magnum PI, The Facts of Life, and The Gong Show. And he’s done thousands of voice-overs for radio and cartoons, such as Dexter’s Laboratory and Family Guy.
Read all Eddie’s mental_floss stories.
That brought a tear to my eye. R.I.P. Curly.
posted by GVGal on 1-18-2012 at 1:14 pm
Eddie – As always, a wonderful piece. Who’d have thought that someone who brought so much laughter to the world would exit it so sadly?
posted by nancy pants on 1-18-2012 at 1:31 pm
Then he’d be glad that through reruns, he’s still making kids (and adults) laugh.
posted by Megan on 1-18-2012 at 1:35 pm
Great post Eddie. Truly touching and very insightful.
posted by RP on 1-18-2012 at 1:39 pm
this is one of the most heartbreaking stories i’ve read in a long time.
posted by meg on 1-18-2012 at 1:46 pm
The good news is he’ll *always* be able to make people laugh….
posted by Dianne on 1-18-2012 at 1:55 pm
Curly also did a cameo in “Malice in the Palace” (no, not as Ron Artest), but his scenes were cut … and lost.
posted by QDV on 1-18-2012 at 2:00 pm
I enjoyed the story; another typo though(that seems to be the norm for mental floss. I find a typo in nearly every article/magazine I read).
3rd paragraph
From: …learning and remember his lines…
To: …learning and remembering his lines
posted by Susan Hyland on 1-18-2012 at 2:36 pm
It’s been a long time since I saw the Mel Gibson Stooges bio-pic, but they really made Moe out to be motivated mainly by money, getting Curly to sign off his rights to his image. Is this true? It almost seems like something the executors of his estate wanted to put in (updating history as it were). I can’t imagine anyone being that insightful back in the forties before movies got recycled into TV shows.
posted by Joe on 1-18-2012 at 2:44 pm
Awesome post! I love the 3 Stooges!
posted by chris on 1-18-2012 at 5:18 pm
If your out there Mr. Howard, I want to let you know you did make this kid laugh, long after you left this world. I have so many fond memories of watching those old shorts with my parents and grand parents. Not only did you make us laugh but you brought us together as a family. Thank you.
posted by averagebrad on 1-18-2012 at 5:33 pm
I grew up watching Three Stooges shorts, my father was an avid fan and passed the love on to me. Curly has always been my favorite and I had no idea his life was so difficult. Great post!
posted by CatZilla on 1-18-2012 at 5:55 pm
Curly, still stooging it up.
posted by ecco6t9 on 1-18-2012 at 6:46 pm
I’m more of a Marx Brothers fan, but what a great post. Curly’s words to Jules White: a little teary-eyed over here now.
posted by M on 1-18-2012 at 7:48 pm
Great piece, Eddie. Love you, Curly!
P.S. Love your stuff, too, Eddie. 1941 has always been one of my favs. Did you get to ride down the pier in the ferris wheel for real? Ha, ha!
posted by The Mad Zak on 1-18-2012 at 8:34 pm
I think I remember reading somewhere that in one of the episodes, I think it was “Violence is the Word for Curly” (The one where they imitate college professors), in the scene where Larry and Moe are thawing him out on a spit, he was actually burned during that scene because the dry conditions and wind started whipping the flames and he couldn’t get off the spit
posted by Carbs on 1-18-2012 at 8:34 pm
HI Mad Zak! We (me and Murray Hamilton) spent a long time together, many, many hours in that ferris wheel. One day, Steven Spielberg whipped us around and around real fast and I got very motion sick. Steven’s assistant took me to his dressing room, where I promptly threw up in Steven Spielberg’s toilet. A true honor and a career highlight! And no, we did not ride on the pier for real, we were only in the studio.
posted by Eddie on 1-18-2012 at 11:25 pm
Don’t worry, Curly. This is one kid who, 27 years or so after you passed away, would get up early before school to watch the Stooges leading off the morning cartoon show on WTBS, and you and your friends made him laugh.
“He cannot be a gentleman that loveth not a dog” — I love the above photo of Curly with his dogs.
posted by MatthewZD on 1-18-2012 at 11:47 pm
i’ve always been a stooge fan and curly was always my favorite, this was a wonderful story. thanks for sharing it.
posted by john good on 1-19-2012 at 1:24 am
@Joe – It’s a bit of a reach to say Moe was “motivated” by money, but he was indeed very shrewd financially, convincing the other Stooges to let him invest/put away some of their money, which came in handy later in life when bad business practices came back to bite them.
posted by MetFanMac on 1-19-2012 at 6:16 am
“The hospital supervisor told Moe that Curly’s physical and mental deterioration was causing the hospital inconvenience”
Anyone who thinks that way should not be working in a hospital in any capacity. The reason hospitals and nursing homes exist is to care for people like that. Even for that time period, that is s cold line of thought.
posted by Julie on 1-19-2012 at 7:44 am
High blood pressure and hypertension are the same thing.
posted by Simon on 1-19-2012 at 12:29 pm
“funniest shorts in movie history” Even as a child in the `40′s I thought they were stupid and hated them. The Three Stooges were not and are not funny.
posted by Ken on 1-19-2012 at 6:18 pm
Ken sounds n’yuking bitter. Great article about a brilliant comedian.
posted by Steven on 1-20-2012 at 8:40 am
Sad story. Of course, the Stooges, particularly Curly, will be making children of all ages laugh for eternity. All of them were brilliant, but Curly was one of the most unique, funny, and under-rated comedians of all time. It’s hipper for “intellectuals” to prefer Lauren and Hardy or the Marx Brothers, Woody Allen, all of whom I love- but I have to say that when it came to belly laughs, Curly just might have been the funniest comedian of all time. Sorry, ladies… I wish I could explain.
posted by auramac on 1-22-2012 at 1:10 am
Dear Eddie ~ Just came across your blog. It is GOLD! Of course, I haven’t done anything around the house in days and my wife keeps giving me daggers, but who cares? BTW, I think the scene in ’1941′ of you and the dummy, is one of the funniest things on film. That movie was so underappreciated.
Keep dishing the facts please.
Cheers
DD
posted by Danny Del Rossi on 2-18-2012 at 6:56 am