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91
The Three Stooges - Curly Years / Re: Introduction to the weekly episode discussions
« Last post by NoahYoung on October 24, 2024, 11:41:03 PM »
I come to follow this up by sharing that I am now Doctor Paul Pain, the heart throb of millions!

Congrats!

You need to change your name to Dr. Painless, though. Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk!
 [pie] [3stooges]
92
Also, you might have passed me!

I'm trying to remember others.

Waiting for a light right across from my apartment -- Bernie Kopell. (I'm pretty sure it was him.)  In the lobby of a friend's apartment -- Burt Young. (He lived there.) Another friend's apartment -- Ed Koch in the lobby -- he lived there. I had heard that Patrick Stewart was living in my apartment building while appearing on Broadway, but I never saw him.

After I moved, I later discovered that the outside of my apartment building was in an episode of THE ODD COUPLE. I noticed it when I got the DVD set of the whole series. I had to freeze-frame to be sure. But that of course was filmed some 25 years before I lived there.

Someone told me that Tina Louise (Ginger from GILLIGAN'S ISLAND) lived near me when I lived at that appt. and that she attended the same Church my wife and I used to go to, but I never spotted her. I did spot Mario Cuomo at that Church once, though.

Once passed Gene Rayburn. Gilbert Gottfried. Vanessa Williams twice -- once on the streets of NYC, the other at an outlet mall in Harriman NY -- Woodbury Commons. She was nowhere near as gorgeous in person without make-up and in plain clothes. And both sightings were over 20 years ago.

I'm good at spotting -- but perhaps there were ones I didn't even spot!

Plus, I think I mentioned it before, I actually met Anthony Quinn and his son at Yankee Stadium and shook their hands. It wasn't in the stands but in the lobby of the front office. Joe D. was there, too, which I also mentioned before.

Also met and got an autograph of Jon Lovitz and a few other new (at the time) cast members of SNL -- got Joan Cusack's autograph, too. I think Nora Dunne was with them too, but didn't get an autograph. This was also at a Yankee game. It was their first season and I didn't even know who they were since I had stopped watching the show, but my friend recognized them. They were only a few seats away from us. Weird to ask for autographs from people you don't even recognize!

Another time in Rockefeller Center late at night I chatted for a minute with a guy in the SNL band who I recognized since he had been with Hall & Oates at one time -- which is what I asked him about. His name is G.E. Smith.

Probably the biggest in terms of number was when my friends and I were having drinks in the lobby of the NYC Hilton, and all of a sudden one after another celebs started walking in. They had been rehearsing one of those "Night of a hundred stars" or something like that at Radio City Music Hall. I got a bunch of autographs -- Muhammed Ali, Rich Little, Robert Loggia.  I think a few lesser known people whose names I can't remember right now. Ali started doing some magic tricks with a handkerchief. It was amazing since he was already ill and could barely talk. What's funny is that my "autograph pad" was a pad of paper in my briefcase from work, so it actually had my name and office phone number on it -- as Ali began to sign, he somehow didn't like it, so he tore it off and stuck it in his pocket -- then signed again for me. (He never called me, btw!)

At a bar of a restaurant -- suddenly Andy Rooney walked in to have dinner.
Outside that same restaurant -- passed Jim Nabors. Also Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy once.

Was in The Mysterious Bookshop in mid-town (50-something street location) browsing, and so was Armand Assante! (He was born in NYC.)

I was watching Seinfeld's "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee" a few years ago on Netflix, when I recognized that he was in the next town over from me here in Joisy. He was with a guy from SNL whose name I can't think of right now who apparently lives there. There's a bookstore in that town that attracts celebrity signings when they have written a book (of course), and maybe 10 years ago, give or take, Roger Moore was there -- but I didn't go. How odd, 007 in Joisy! It's a hole in the wall store with a crappy selection, too. I've always suspected that it's a front for the mob!

I heard that Rosie O'Donnell lives in another town next to me (not where Seinfeld was) but I've never seen her. (I'm not a fan of hers, anyway.)

Ah, memories.
93
The Three Stooges - Curly Years / Re: Introduction to the weekly episode discussions
« Last post by metaldams on October 24, 2024, 08:10:29 PM »
I come to follow this up by sharing that I am now Doctor Paul Pain, the heart throb of millions!

Congrats Doc!
94
The Three Stooges - Curly Years / Re: Introduction to the weekly episode discussions
« Last post by Paul Pain on October 24, 2024, 07:57:49 PM »
I come to follow this up by sharing that I am now Doctor Paul Pain, the heart throb of millions!
95
Random Comedy Reviews / Re: Upcoming review schedule plus your suggestions
« Last post by ChrisBungoStudios on October 23, 2024, 06:06:38 PM »
I've seen ZENOBIA maybe twice, and I'll be darned if I can remember even one scene. If you watch it, it's an hour and a half of ur life that u can never get back! It's neither better nor worse than GENERAL SPANKY.

I've only seen a handful of Wheeler and Woolsey films -- probably 5 or less. COCKEYED CAVALIERS is pretty good. HIP HIPS HOORAY isn't bad. Both have Thelma Todd. Woohoo!

I caught MUMMY'S BOYS once on TCM -- it stunk!

Wheeler and Woolsey are an acquired taste that many people have never acquired!

I'd like to see a few more, but some good ones. Awhile ago I googled to see what other people considered "good" ones, but I never followed up and watched any of them.

What I remember most about ZENOBIA is Philip Hurlic's wonderful performance.

Question for anyone who knows - those that don't know need not answer! :-)   How do you create a new topic in this particular forum?
96
Keith Hernandez was next to me on line at the supermarket once, too, after he retired as a player. Being a Yankee fan, I didn't say hello.

You're starting to get me thinking... I wonder how many famous people I may have passed on the street when I lived in NYC!
97
Stooges DVD/VHS/Home Video / Re: Three Stooges shorts coming to Blu-ray this summer
« Last post by NoahYoung on October 23, 2024, 05:03:53 PM »
The scans appear to be the same as the DVDs, with a few shorts being fixed due to some minor issues on the DVDs (see my previous post for those differences which I noted).

Do you mean that these were originally scanned in 1080 for the DVDs, and then downscaled for release in that original set?

If they are on plain-vanilla blu-ray, they can't be 4K. And even on 4K would be useless unless they were scanned at 4k. What would they fill in the additional pixels with? (The # of pixels when you subtract the # of pixels in 1080HD from the # of pixels in 4K. That's 8.3 million minus 2 million.) That would display more "made-up" pixels than pixels that resulted from the actual scan!

BTW, on real film, you are seeing everything photographed on the days the shorts were filmed -- nothing more, nothing less. No grain is "made up" to make it look better.
 :o
98
Keith Hernandez was next to me on line at the supermarket once, too, after he retired as a player. Being a Yankee fan, I didn't say hello.
99
Random Comedy Reviews / Oh! Oh! Cleopatra (1931) - Wheeler and Woolsey
« Last post by HomokHarcos on October 22, 2024, 10:49:29 PM »


https://imdb.com/title/tt0022217/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

I initially was going to skip this one for two reasons: II thought it was unavailable, and assumed it must be an ensemble short and not really their film. Turns out I was wrong on both!

One of the complaints I had about their films up to this point is that I think they would have been better starting in two reelers; I had no idea there actually was a two reel film starring the duo. The results are quite good, and they can easily fit their style with a shorter runtime.

The plot is goofy enough, but in a fun way for a short comedy: turns out they have an ancestral connection to to Julius Caesar and Cleopatra. There have been a few film versions of Cleopatra’s life featuring Theda Bara, Claudette Colbert and Elizabeth Taylor, but this one is decidedly pre-Code with Dorothy Burgess playing Cleopatra.

My favorite lines in this movie are “to hail with Caesar” instead of “to hell” and “the lions now are more dangerous than the lions den”. There is also a bit of surreal comedy when a cameraman says “hold still”, and the everybody stops for a moment.

Though I think they could have used better material for this film, I absolutely believe they accommodate quite well to short subjects.
100
I've been in 26 Broadway many times -- I worked a few blocks away, but my business users were there. I was in Information Technology.

I don't think I ever saw any filming going on, though.

I used to see celebrities all the time in mid-town when I worked across the street from Rockefeller Center.
Ed McMahon, Paul Schaffer, Al Franken, a few others. Passed Christopher Reeve once while walking down the street, but not near there. Passed Jackie Mason a few times -- he always waved to everyone. Downtown I onced walked by Harvey Keitel. Saw Cindy Crawford signing her calendar in Citicorp Center. Once saw Kim Alexis in a small tie store in Rockefeller Center while I was shopping for ties -- I think it was called The Tie Rack.

I've seen Willie Randolph several times here in Jersey -- he lives a few towns away. I had met him a few times at Yankee Stadium and other Yankee events. My wife (who is not a baseball fan) says she thinks she saw him picking up food from an Italian restaurant a few weeks ago. Then once when my dad was in the emergency room, he was there with I'm guessing his mom.

I watched them film a scene from GHOSTBUSTERS when I was a student at Columbia University -- Bill Murray and Dan Ackroyd. Also met Bill Murray at a Sons of the Desert meeting.


Wow, you've seen a lot more celebrities than I did when I lived in NYC!

26 Broadway wouldn't let anyone film until after 6pm and I usually didn't leave the office until 7p or 7:30p in those days so I had to walk right through the "film set" all those times in the lobby.