The Three Stooges: Shemp, the Underrated Stooge

Will Wright
Love them or hate them, the Three Stooges were one of the most underrated comedy teams of all time. And among the most underrated of the Stooges was Shemp Howard. Most people think of Shemp as the anemic replacement for Curly. After all, Curly had perfected signature lines and trademark moves 40 years before countless Saturday Night Live performers would attempt to do the same. Yet, despite Curly's popularity, Shemp was one of the cornerstones of the Three Stooges.

Shemp's Early Years

Shemp Howard was born on March 17, 1895 in Brooklyn New York. His given name was Schmool Horowitz, which was Anglicized to Samuel Howard. He was called Sam, but when his mother, with her thick European accent, called out his name, it sounded like Shemp and the nickname stuck.

Shemp was a mischievous child growing up, but by his early teens he'd outgrown most of his practical joking. Friends and family thought Shemp would grow up to be a comedian or actor, but Shemp had other plans and never seriously pursued acting, unlike his younger brother Moe who pursued his acting career with a vengeance.

Shemp dropped out of high school, along with younger brother Moe. Their mother insisted the boys pursue a trade since neither were in school. Shemp and Moe went to trade school. Shemp pursued plumbing. Moe studied to be an electrician. Neither of them finished trade school.

Although he tried, Shemp wasn't a good student, he and Moe were very industrious. They worked hard doing odd jobs around the neighborhood. They delivered newspapers, tried setting up pins at the local bowling alley, even opened a plumbing business, but none of these careers stuck. This succession of jobs continued until young Shemp realized there was nothing left for them to do except try their hands at acting.

Shemp On Stage

Moe was already doing a stage act at local dance halls and amateur theater nights. Shemp joined Moe on stage, and the two decided to form an act. Neither one pursued comedy at this point. Moe had been pursuing a career in drama. Shemp had no theatrical experience. The brothers wrote a short skit and performed it at the local Bath Beach Theater. A few minutes into their performance they were literally thrown out of the theater - a rather inauspicious beginning. Shemp was discouraged, but Moe felt they had taken a big step. They were now performers. Bad ones to be sure, but at least they were gaining experience.

During World War I, Shemp and Moe switched to comedy. The two, particularly Shemp found that comedy came easily, naturally. In 1922, Shemp got his big break. One of Shemp's old schoolmates, Ted Healy, had been doing well with a comedy routine. Healy needed a replacement in his act, which was being performed at the Brooklyn Prospect Theater. Moe and Shemp filled in and ad-libbed a routine that proved to be a big success. Healy took note and asked the brothers to join his act on a permanent basis. The act, Healy and his Stooges, was born.

As a result of this act, Shemp began to prosper on stage. He began performing in other productions in addition to his "stooge work." In 1925, Shemp married Gertrude Frank, and two years later the couple gave birth to a son, Morton.

In 1927, Larry Fine joined the stooge act. The stooges at this point consisted of Ted Healy, the leader, Larry, Moe and Shemp. A typical routine consisted of Ted trying to deliver a comic monologue while Larry, Moe and Shemp cut up behind him and "ruining" Healy's attempts at comedy.

In 1930, the act went to Hollywood to co-star in Rube Goldberg's "Soup to Nuts." Shortly after this, Larry, Moe and Shemp left Healy to form an act of their own called "The Lost Souls." They met with limited success and rejoined Healy in 1932 to perform in a Broadway revue. Healy left the revue over a contract dispute taking Moe and Larry with him. Shemp declined to go with Healy and struck out on his own.

Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk

With Shemp's departure the Healy's act needed a third stooge. Moe suggested his kid brother, Jerome Howard, better known by his nickname, Curly. Meanwhile, Shemp was starring in two-reel comedies for Vitaphone and began to expand into feature films. He landed the role of Knobby Walsh in the famous Joe Palooka series. Meanwhile his brothers were also doing well. The Three Stooges, with Curly as the third Stooge, were a comic staple for Columbia Pictures.

Shemp -- The Night Club Owner

Times were good for Shemp and his wife. In 1937, Shemp opened a nightclub, Stage One. He was under contract to do a comedy series at Columbia and worked in feature films for RKO and MGM. Shemp worked alongside Abbot and Costello, W.C. Fields, John Wayne and Broderick Crawford.

Shemp entertained regularly at his North Hollywood home. Shemp had many friends in the Hollywood acting community. Occasionally Moe and Curly would drop by with their wives. But Moe's circle of friends didn't include many celebrities. Moe's circle included judges, lawyers, prominent businessmen and so forth. Moe was always up on current affairs, news, politicas and such. Shemp was more laid back. He liked the simple life. He'd often be found fishing with his son or listening to music with his wife.

Shemp Rejoins the Stooges

When Curly had a stroke, Shemp reluctantly rejoined the Three Stooges. His career was doing well, and he hesitated before joining. He wanted to make sure that his work as a stooge was only temporary until Curly recovered from his stroke and could resume work. Unfortunately Curly's condition worsened. He died in 1952. Part of Shemp's reluctance may have been that he knew he was replacing the most popular stooge. Curly was a tough act to follow.

Shemp acted in 73 Three Stooges shorts until his death from a sudden heart attack on November 22, 1955.

Shemp's Legacy

It's hard to use the words Shemp and legacy together without smiling. But that is Shemp's legacy. Shemp Howard, the underrated stooge, brought smiles to millions.

Published by Will Wright

I'm a film industry veteran with over a hundred professional credits.  View profile

14 Comments

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  • brent morgan7/1/2010

    three stooges 4 lyfe

  • David Lindberg12/18/2009

    I just published an article about the Stooges marathon on AMC this New Year's Eve and then came across your article. I couldn't agree more with you. I always loved Shemp, even as much as Curly. Stooge on fellow fan!

  • Sam O'Brien12/16/2009

    Curly and Shemp were just very different and most people took more to Curly and I understand why. I also preferred Curly. The fans' opinion is what counts.

  • Rick Gruesome7/18/2009

    Curly originally took his role from Shemp who had worked with Ted Larry and Moe until 1931. Shemp gets no credit for being the original character that Babe used in 1932 to form and expand upon. Curly took the character places that it had not previously been but according to the cronicles given by Shubert the show featured Shemp as the funniest of them all and with many facial expressions taken by younger brother Curly.

  • Darkshdw1/1/2008

    Also, when Curly joined the stooges it was shortly afterwards that they left Ted Healy for a second time and struck out on there own with Columbia Pictures. Ted Healy was not a part of the 3 stooges by the time they were with Columbia Pictures. Also according to their official biographies Shemp is actualy considered the funniest stooge

    for verification: www.threestooges.com this is the official website made by the company they founded

  • Darkshdw1/1/2008

    Unfortunately this article is full of inaccuracies. Jerome Howard was not know for the nickname of Curly until AFTER he had met with Ted Healy. Curly recieved the name because he had long waves and curls in his hair and Ted said they didn't fit in with the act. Jerome went into another room, cut them off and came back. Enters the nickname "Curly"

  • mike Cusack9/30/2007

    I think the reason our Mom hated the Stooges so much is because myself and two of my brothers were constantly imitating them. Them guys were the greatest.

  • Elliot Feldman6/20/2007

    I like Joe Besser

  • Stan Schultz6/10/2007

    Oops, somehow Shreck morphed into Shemp. Who knows, maybe that's what happened?

  • Stan Schultz6/10/2007

    I just got through watching Shemp 1, the animated film with my grandkids. This guy had to be the inspiration for the name, eh?

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