Slippery Silks

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Slippery Silks
File:SlipperSilksTITLE.jpg
Title card
Directed by Preston Black
Produced by Jules White
Written by Ewart Adamson
Starring Moe Howard
Larry Fine
Curly Howard
Symona Boniface
Vernon Dent
William Irving
Eddie Laughton
Jack "Tiny" Lipson
June Gittelson
Lew Davis
Cinematography Benjamin H. Kline
Edited by William A. Lyon
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
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  • December 27, 1936 (1936-12-27)
Running time
17' 15"
Country United States
Language English

Slippery Silks is the 19th short subject starring American slapstick comedy team The Three Stooges. The trio made a total of 190 shorts for Columbia Pictures between 1934 and 1959.

Plot

The Stooges are furniture makers hired to duplicate a priceless antique Chinese cabinet on loan for a $50,000 bond from a local museum to a Mr. Morgan (Vernon Dent). Once the inept Stooges set to work, the valuable cabinet is quickly cut in half by Curly, and smashed to pieces by Moe, and the trio barely escape from the enraged Morgan. While on the run, the boys learn that they have inherited a fancy dress boutique, the "Madame de France," from their recently deceased Uncle Pete. They enter the fashion business, designing women's fashions which resemble the furniture they built when they were carpenters. They are hired to put on a fashion show by a woman who turns out to be Morgan's wife, Mrs. Morgan Morgan (Symona Boniface). When Mr. Morgan arrives, he recognizes the Stooges as the vandals who destroyed his cabinet, and pummels Curly vigorously. Moe throws a pastry but misses his target and hits one of the fashion show guests; more cream puffs are hurled and soon the entire room is engaged in a free-for-all. The fight ends when three women knock the Stooges unconscious with mannequin legs.

Production notes

Slippery Silks was filmed on June 10–15, 1936.[1] It marks the Stooges first bona fide pie/pastry fight. While the fight primarily consists of cream puffs, there is one pie launched during the melee when Curly accidentally steps in front of Moe's line of fire to grab a "lucky penny," and stands back up just in time to get hit in the face with a pie. The first short that featured a pie fight of sorts was in Pop Goes the Easel, in which sculptor's clay is thrown at unsuspecting targets.[2]

Moe Howard stated in his autobiography that over 150 pies were thrown.[3] The pie fight scenes were used in the Muppet Babies episode, "Good, Clean, Fun".[2]

The ending theme of "Listen to the Mockingbird" features different instrumentation.[2]

References

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External links