Not To Mention All the TV Appearances, (Ed Sullivan, Joey Bishop etc.)
It's too bad that the "powers-that-were" in early TV didn't see fit to give the Stooges their own show in the early 50's. A great example of what
could have been is Moe, Larry, and Shemp's appearance on the Ed Wynn Show (available on "Three Stooges, The Men Behind The Mayhem" from Laughsmith Entertainment/Mackinac Media).
Along with the "Niagara Falls" routine in "Gents Without Cents," we get a rare example of how the Stooges performed in front of a live audience rather than just the camera. As with the Marx Brothers, Abbott & Costello, and a few other comedy teams that came up in vaudeville, they'd honed their routines to
perfection by then. That is, in terms of timing (the most important element in slapstick comedy), and also knowing what would make an audience laugh and what wouldn't, they were old veterans, and they could hold audiences in the palms of their hands.
A half-hour live Stooges program would have been the equal of the funniest American comedy show of the 50's, "The Honeymooners."
Well, there's another historical "what if..."