Mo Howard Popular Books

Mo Howard Biography & Facts

Moses Harry Horwitz (June 19, 1897 – May 4, 1975), better known by his stage name Moe Howard, was an American comedian and actor. He is best known as the leader of the Three Stooges, the farce comedy team who starred in motion pictures and television for four decades. That group initially started out as Ted Healy and His Stooges, an act that toured the vaudeville circuit. Moe's distinctive hairstyle came about when he was a boy and cut off his curls with a pair of scissors, producing an irregular shape approximating a bowl cut. Early life Howard was born as Moses Harry Horwitz on June 19, 1897, in the Brooklyn, New York neighborhood of Bensonhurst, the fourth of five sons born to Jennie Gorovitz and Solomon Horwitz. They were of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry. He was called Moe as a child and later called himself Harry. His parents and brothers Benjamin ("Jack") and Irving weren't involved in show business, but he, his older brother Shemp Howard, and his younger brother Curly Howard eventually became known as members of the Three Stooges. He loved to read, as his older brother Jack recalled: "I had many Horatio Alger books, and it was Moe's greatest pleasure to read them. They started his imaginative mind working and gave him ideas by the dozen. I think they were instrumental in putting thoughts into his head to become a person of good character and successful." This helped him in his acting career; he could memorize his lines quickly and easily. Howard's "bowl cut" hairstyle became his trademark, despite his mother initially refusing to cut his hair in childhood, letting it grow to shoulder length. He secretly cut his hair in his backyard shed after being frequently teased in school. During one appearance on The Mike Douglas Show in the 1970s, he stated, "I used to fight my way to school, in school, and back home from school." Howard developed an interest in acting that caused his grades to worsen and spurred him to play hookey from school: "I used to stand outside the theater knowing the truant officer was looking for me. I would stand there 'til someone came along and ask them to buy my ticket. An adult needed to accompany a juvenile into the theater. When I succeeded, I'd give him my ten cents—that's all it cost—and I'd go up to the top of the balcony where I'd put my chin on the rail and watch, spellbound, from the first act to the last. I would usually select the actor I liked the most and follow his performance throughout the play." Despite his waning attendance, Howard graduated from P.S. 163 in Brooklyn but dropped out of Erasmus Hall High School after only two months, ending his formal education. He took an electric shop course to please his parents but quit after a few months to pursue a career in show business. Howard started off running unpaid errands at the Vitagraph Studios in Midwood, Brooklyn and was rewarded with bit parts in movies in production there, until a 1910 fire destroyed the films done there, and with it, most of Howard's work. Already in 1909, he had met a young man named Ernest Lea Nash (later known as Ted Healy), who was later to provide a significant boost for his career aspirations. In 1912, they both held a summer job working in Annette Kellermann's aquatic act as diving "girls". Career Howard continued his attempts at gaining show-business experience by singing in a bar with his older brother Shemp until their father put a stop to it, and in 1914, by joining a performing minstrel show troupe on a Mississippi River showboat for the next two summers, with an act they called "Howard and Howard—A Study in Black". At the same time, they worked for a rival vaudeville circuit without makeup. In 1922, he joined Ted Healy in a vaudeville routine. In 1923, Moe saw Shemp in the audience during a theater performance and yelled at him from the stage. Shemp responded by heckling Moe, and the two brothers' amusing bickering during the performance resulted in Healy's immediately hiring Shemp Howard as a permanent part of the act. Moe retired in June 1925 after his marriage to Helen Schonberger and went into real estate with his mother. Meanwhile, Healy's act with frequent stooge Shemp Howard went on to national fame in the Shubert Brothers' A Night in Spain, which had a successful Broadway run, as well as a national tour. During A Night in Spain, and at the end of a four-month run in Chicago, Healy recruited vaudeville violinist Larry Fine to join the troupe in March 1928. After the show ended in late November, Healy signed for the Shuberts' new revue A Night in Venice and recruited Moe Howard out of retirement to rejoin the act in December 1928. In rehearsals in early 1929, Howard, Larry Fine, and Shemp Howard came together for the first time as a trio. When A Night in Venice closed in March 1930, Healy and the trio toured for a while as "Ted Healy and His Racketeers" (later changed to Ted Healy and His Stooges). Ted Healy and His Stooges Ted Healy and His Stooges were on the verge of hitting the big time and made their first movie, Soup to Nuts (1930), featuring Healy and his four Stooges: Moe (billed as "Harry Howard"), Shemp, Larry, and Fred Sanborn (Sanborn had been with Healy's troupe since January 1929, as one of the stooges in "A Night in Venice")—for Fox Films (later 20th Century Fox). A disagreement with Healy led Moe, Larry, and Shemp to strike out on their own as "Howard, Fine, and Howard," and on August 28, 1930, they premiered that act at L.A.'s Paramount Theatre. Joining the RKO vaudeville circuit, they toured for almost two years, eventually dubbing themselves as "Three Lost Souls" and taking on Jack Walsh as their straight man. In July 1932, Moe, Larry, and Shemp were approached by Healy to rejoin him for the new Shubert Broadway revue Passing Show of 1932, and the three accepted the offer. On August 16, 1932, during Passing rehearsals in New York, Ted walked out on the Shuberts over a contract dispute. On August 19, 1932, Shemp gave his notice, having not seen eye-to-eye with the hard-drinking and sometimes belligerent Healy, and decided to remain with Passing which closed in September after pan reviews of its first roadshow performances in Detroit and Cincinnati. Shemp landed at Vitaphone Studios in Brooklyn in May 1933, where he stayed for almost four years. On August 20, the day after Shemp's departure, Moe suggested adding his youngest brother Jerome ("Babe" to Moe and Shemp) to the act; contrary to some sources, no search for a replacement was conducted. Healy initially passed on Jerry, but Jerry was so eager to join the act that he shaved off his luxuriant auburn mustache and hair and ran on stage during Healy's routine. That finally got Healy to hire Jerry, who took the stage name Curly. The new lineup of Moe, Larry, and Curly premiered with Ted on stage at Cleveland's RKO Palace on August 27, 1932. Early 1933 during appearances in Los Angeles, Healy and the Stooges were hired by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as "nut" comics to l.... Discover the Mo Howard popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Mo Howard books.

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  • Commerce Trust Company v. Ronald Howard synopsis, comments

    Commerce Trust Company v. Ronald Howard

    Supreme Court of Missouri

    The parties will be referred to as appellants and respondent. The respondent is a banking corporation organized and existing under the laws of Missouri and authorized to...

  • Notes from Underground and the Double synopsis, comments

    Notes from Underground and the Double

    Fyodor Dostoyevsky & Ronald Wilks

    'That sense of the meaninglessness of existence that runs through much of twentiethcentury writing from Conrad and Kafka, to Beckett and beyond starts in Dostoyevsky's work' Mal...

  • State Missouri v. Howard Young synopsis, comments

    State Missouri v. Howard Young

    Supreme Court of Missouri Division 2

    Appellants, Douglas W. Roling and Mary J. Roling, Jack E. Young, Jr. and Janice L. Young, Larry Keith West and Karen A. West, Kevin L. Wisch and Karen M. Wisch, and Archie F. McDan...

  • State Missouri v. Howard Lee Mcdaniel synopsis, comments

    State Missouri v. Howard Lee Mcdaniel

    Supreme Court of Missouri

    All parties appeal following the trial courts distribution and division of the assets of a dissolved family partnership. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

  • Jo Ann Howard v. Ford Motor Company synopsis, comments

    Jo Ann Howard v. Ford Motor Company

    Kansas City District Missouri Court of Appeals

    We have here a claim and suit for workmen's compensation benefits. After an extended hearing the referee denied the claim. The Industrial Commission affirmed as did the ...

  • Howard C. Ohlendorf v. Bernard Feinstein synopsis, comments

    Howard C. Ohlendorf v. Bernard Feinstein

    Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District

    Plaintiff, Howard C. Ohlendorf, is appealing a judgment against him in a court tried case on a crossclaim to wind up a partnership in which the plaintiff and the defendants, Bernar...

  • Carl G. Sims v. Howard Motor Homes synopsis, comments

    Carl G. Sims v. Howard Motor Homes

    Eastern District, Division Three Court of Appeals of Missouri

    Claimant, Carl G. Sims, appeals from a final award of the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission. The Commission reversed the awards of the Administrative Law Judge ...

  • The Cook, the Crook, and the Real Estate Tycoon synopsis, comments

    The Cook, the Crook, and the Real Estate Tycoon

    Liu Zhenyun, Sylvia Li-chun Lin & Howard Goldblatt

    The Cook, the Crook, and the Real Estate Tycoon, by prizewinning Chinese novelist Liu Zhenyun is a novel of Beijing that paints a microcosm of contemporary China, dealing with clas...

  • Jungle Tales synopsis, comments

    Jungle Tales

    John Quinn

    Years of tradition crashed around the ears of Celtic supporters when the Jungle was demolished and replaced by seating to conform with the Taylor Report. It might never have been t...

  • Matter Howard Mechanic v. Robert synopsis, comments

    Matter Howard Mechanic v. Robert

    Supreme Court of Nebraska

    In this proceeding petitioners seek review of their convictions for contempt of court for violation of a temporary restraining order issued by the Circuit Court of St. Louis County...

  • State Missouri v. Derrick Howard synopsis, comments

    State Missouri v. Derrick Howard

    Court of Appeals of Missouri

    Derrick Howard (Howard) appeals after he was tried by a jury, convicted and sentenced for sale of a controlled substance under § 195.020 RSMo 1986. He also appeals a denial of Rule...

  • State Missouri v. Dale Howard synopsis, comments

    State Missouri v. Dale Howard

    Eastern District, Division Three Court of Appeals of Missouri

    Kent E. Karohl, Judge Defendant appeals after convictions for the crimes of first degree murder, Section 565.003 RSMo 1978 (now repealed and replaced by Section 565.020 RSMo Cum. S...

  • Howard Skaggs v. State Missouri synopsis, comments

    Howard Skaggs v. State Missouri

    Court of Appeals of Missouri

    Howard Skaggs (movant) appeals a denial of his Rule 24.035 motion for post conviction relief without an evidentiary hearing. The motion court imposed consecutive four year sentence...

  • John W. Sall v. Dr. Howard J. Ellfeldt and synopsis, comments

    John W. Sall v. Dr. Howard J. Ellfeldt and

    Supreme Court of New Hampshire

    The plaintiffs Sall, husband and wife, sued for personal injury to the husband and loss of consortium to the wife from the medical negligence of defendant physicians Ellfeldt, Hunt...

  • Howard Johnson v. State Missouri synopsis, comments

    Howard Johnson v. State Missouri

    Supreme Court of New Mexico

    Howard Johnson pleaded guilty to distributing marijuana in February of 1994. Although the sentencing Judge found Mr. Johnson to be a persistent offender, he did not specifically re...

  • State Missouri v. Samuel Howard and Steve synopsis, comments

    State Missouri v. Samuel Howard and Steve

    Southern District, Division One Court of Appeals of Missouri

    In December 1991, defendant Samuel Howard shot and killed Terry Easley and Billy Joe Luttrell during a fight involving the victims and another defendant, Steve Allen Bowen. 1 The s...

  • Howard T. Cluck v. Edward Snodgrass synopsis, comments

    Howard T. Cluck v. Edward Snodgrass

    Springfield District Missouri Court of Appeals

    This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained in a vehicular collision. The jury has returned a verdict for the plaintiff and against both defendants in the amount ...