Laurel and Hardy Live on Stage In Color
From YouTube... L&H start a little under a minute in.
Labels: Laurel and Hardy, Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel
From YouTube... L&H start a little under a minute in.
Labels: Laurel and Hardy, Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel
A minute ago, I wouldn't have been able to tell you when I saw Blockheads at the Mermaid Theater, London. A quick search of the 'net, however, revealed that the play ran in 1984.
I'm guessing that Blockheads was not terribly successful, since it seems to have run for a total of only 17 days. And I'm guessing it's not terribly well-known, since a Google search turns up nearly nothing about it. I was lucky to see it; lucky to be in the right place at the right time.
As I recall, the show was set 'backstage' during one of Laurel and Hardy's British tours, which places the action in the late 40's or early 50's.
You can get a sense of the plot from the song titles, the first of which is Have We Still Got It, sung by Laurel and Hardy. Then we flash back to the early days.
Stan sings a number called Playin' The Halls and then sings Star Quality with his father, who had been a vaudeville comic in his own right. A number titled Is This Where The Rainbow Ends? is sung by "Hardy and Minstrels." Laurel sings Goodbye Mae, presumably to his vaudeville partner and common-law wife Mae Dahlberg at the moment Stan decides to break up the act and try his hand at movies.
Any full-fledged L&H fan will smile at the cast members who sing a song called Timing - Hardy, Finlayson, and Hall. And perhaps some Laurel and Hardy fan more fully-fledged than I can decipher the meaning of a number in Act II sung by "Laurel, Hardy, and Finlayson" that's titled G.A.
Labels: hal roach, Laurel and Hardy, Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel