[On August 2nd, this AmericanStudier’s amazing younger sister celebrates her birthday. So this week in her honor I’ll AmericanStudy interesting American siblings!]
On the two
groups of siblings at the heart of mid-20th century American comedy
and popular culture.
From the Booths to the Barrymores, the Douglas’s to the Bridges, on down
to Will and
Jada Pinkett Smith and their increasingly visible young
‘uns, multi-generational families have long been a staple in American
popular culture (I’m setting aside the most famous such multi-generational pop
culture family in 21st America, the Kardashians, as a subject for
another time if I feel up to it). Whether you read the trend as one of many
signs that American society is not nearly as class-less as we like to believe, as a
symbol of our hankering for an equivalent to the British royal family, or as
simply a reflection that it’s easier to get ahead if you know the right people,
there’s no doubt that our cultural icons have often come as part of family
units. Yet I’m not sure that any other cultural medium or any other historical
moment have been dominated by competing families of entertainers as were the
1930s and 40s by the Marx
Brothers and the Three
Stooges.
The two
families (which is a slightly inaccurate word for the Stooges, since Moe, Shemp, and Curly were brothers
but Larry was unrelated to them) have interestingly parallel
biographies: each group of brothers was born to Jewish American immigrant
families in late 19th century New York; members of each began to
perform in Vaudeville-type acts for the first time in 1912, and achieved their
first real breakthrough successes about a decade later; and the
similarly-titled films that truly launched each group both appeared within a
year of each other, the Marx’s The Cocoanuts (1929) and the Stooges’ Soup to Nuts (1930). The families even feature individual
brothers who helped originate the act but left the group at a relatively early
point, Zeppo Marx and Shemp Howard. Yet despite these parallels, in my
experience it’s very rare to find passionate fans of both the Marx Brothers and
the Stooges—they seem today, as perhaps they did in their own era, to have
found pretty distinct fan bases.
It’d be
easy to attribute that divide to the
highbrow/lowbrow dichotomy, and certainly there’s no doubt that the two
groups tended to employ very different kinds of comedy: the Marx’s using their
scripts and wordplay first and foremost, the Stooges their physical comedy and
violence (although certainly Harpo Marx
was entirely a physical comic, and in other ways too this division would
break down upon close examination). Yet I would say that the two groups also
exemplify two very distinct directions for American comedy and popular culture
after Vaudeville, both employing developing technologies but in quite different
ways: Cocoanuts was one of the first sound films, and
throughout their career the Marx Brothers used this new medium of sound film to
great effect; whereas most of the Stooges’ classic works were shorts, and
while such pieces were often featured before or with other films they were also
tailor-made for the new medium of television as it developed in the decades to
come. Both films and television remain central media for American comedy, of
course, but they work and connect to audiences in fundamentally different ways,
and the Marx’s and Stooges can help us analyze those trends at their earlier
moments.
Next
siblings tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Sibling stories you’d highlight?