Showing posts with label Stan Laurel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Laurel. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Doll-A-Day 2019 #59: Oscar Week: Laurel and Hardy

  With the recent release of the movie "Stan and Ollie" there has been a renewed interest in Laurel and Hardy lately. They've always been favourites of mine.  Today's Oscar Week dolls are these two guys.


They are obviously Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy,otherwise known as Laurel and Hardy.





They were made by Premiere in 1997,and were Target stores exclusives.


The backs of their boxes contain an pretty accurate account of their pairing.


The back of the box has a flap that opens to show photos of the team.


The inside of the flap is a bit less accurate, although not surprisingly so. The actual quote Ollie frequently used on Stan is, "Here's another nice mess you've gotten me into.", in spite of the title of their 1930 short, "Another Fine Mess". For proof, you can watch a compilation of Oliver saying the famous line HERE. As for the rest of the phrases, none of them are quotes Laurel and Hardy are really known for. I would have gone more for, "You make me tired!", "Why don't you do something to help me?!","You can lead a horse to water, but a pencil must be led.", and "Yes, I never did."




The likenesses are pretty good. Oliver has his spit curl bangs and his tiny mustache.


I'm not so sure it isn't a little too tiny though.




Stan has his stretched smile and tiny eyes.

For films Stan lined his inner eyelids to make his eyes appear smaller. It was all part of his efforts to "look stupider", as was in keeping with the character of  'Stan'.


Their look is instantly recognizable, even if the faces aren't exactly right.

This is one of the few REAL colour pictures of Laurel and Hardy taken in their heyday. Taken by New York Daily News photographer Harry Warneke in 1938, during the shooting of "Blockheads", it hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in the Smithsonian.

 The dolls were a limited edition, numbered series and were called '70th Anniversary' editions on their packaging.


That's because 1997 was the 70th anniversary of their first official movie as a team, "Putting Pants on Phillip". They had both appeared in 1921's "Lucky Dog", but not as a team. "Lucky Dog" was a Stan Laurel vehicle, but Oliver Hardy appeared as a thief who robs him. (You can watch "Lucky Dog" HERE.) "Putting Pants on Phillip"  starred them both, but their usual characters weren't set yet. Oliver played a man whose nephew, Phillip, arrives from Scotland wearing a kilt, much to his uncle's embarrassment. Stan played Phillip. (You can watch "Putting Pants on Phillip" HERE.)


  The dolls come with accessories, including display stands decorated with facsimiles of their actual signatures.


Both have umbrellas


Molded ones that don't open.

  Stan comes with a suitcase.



 Oliver comes with a pie.



 

The fact that Laurel and Hardy dolls frequently come with pies kind of ticks me off. I realize Laurel and Hardy may be best known to some for their movie "The Battle of the Century", which contains a pie fight that the Guinness Book of World Records says as many as 10,000 pies were used in, (although 3000 is generally considered to be the real amount.).  But pie fights were more Mack Sennett comedies and the Three Stooges. Laurel and Hardy weren't known for their pie fights. Just saying. (If you want to read the full story of "The Battle of the Century", you can check out my post on my Stan Laurel figure HERE.) You can watch the reconstructed "Battle of the Century", which was thought to be lost for years, HERE.
  They share a hand sculpt.



"Hold my beer."



  I should note here that they are NOT the exact same hands as the Premiere Ingrid Bergman doll which I posted the other day. Hers are a different sculpt, and not nearly as big as these guys' hands. That puts to rest my theory that Premiere used the same hands for both it's male and female figures. The girls still have 'man hands' though.
  The dolls are 9" tall. Their clothes are removable, and have some nice detail.




Oliver's stand-up collar has disappeared down his jacket, and I'm not sure about that tie fabric either. Polka dots yes, plaid, no.

 Meanwhile, Stan's collar is swallowing his head.



 The little buttons and pockets are nice, but as with other Premiere dolls, the fabric used for the clothes is too heavy and bulky.

Definitely too much collar.


The hats are part of the heads, and do not come off.


  Stan was known to have very pale blue eyes, and this doll definitely doesn't. In fact, Stan's eyes were so pale that one studio turned him down as an actor because they thought his eyes wouldn't photograph well. (Certain types of early film photographed the light blue eyes as white!) His early films show Stan with huge black circles around his eyes, in an attempt to make his eyes show up!


There was another set of Laurel and Hardy dolls made by Premiere. That set of dolls was dressed in white shirts and overalls, as the team appeared in several shorts,(short subject films, that is.), including "The Finishing Touch"(1928),"Towed in a Hole"(1932),"Busy Bodies"(1933),and their Oscar winning short, "The Music Box"(1932). See? There is an Oscar connection to these dolls.



"The Music Box" concerns Stan and Ollie delivering a piano to a house that sits atop a very tall hill. The short won the first Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film (Comedy). For the whole story on "The Music Box" and biographies of Stan and Oliver, see my Oscar Week post on my Hamilton Laurel and Hardy dolls HERE. You can watch Laurel and Hardy's Oscar winning short HERE. The other Oscar connection to Laurel and Hardy is Stan's Lifetime Achievement Oscar, which was awarded to him in 1961. Unfortunately, Oliver had passed away in 1957. Stan passed away in 1965.



  Tomorrow we'll see another Oscar doll.

Friday, June 23, 2017

Doll-A-Day 2017 #174:Movie Icons Stan Laurel

  This post is a little late,as it was supposed to coincide with the 127th birthday of Stan Laurel,who was born on June 16th, 1890. But better late than never. So here is today's doll. (You can call him an action figure, if that makes you feel better.) He's this Stan Laurel figure.



 Stan was a gift from Emma a few years ago.She knows I love Laurel and Hardy. If you've been reading the blog for a while you'll remember a couple of other Laurel(and Hardy) dolls I posted about previously. You can see them HERE and HERE.



He was made in 2005.


He's made by SD Toys.There was also an Oliver Hardy figure to go with him.


The pamphlet that came with him describes him as a 6" figure, but I measured him as just over 7".



He comes in this cool film canister.


He has a stand that looks like a film reel.


He attaches to the stand by a peg on the reel that fits into a hole on the bottom of his right foot.

 
Unfortunately there is no articulation in this figure. It would have been nice if his arms could have moved.


 Instead of articulation, Stan comes with two different right hands...

This is his head scratching hand.


And this is his hat tipping hand.
  ...a clapper board...

I think it would have been better if the clapper board had been filled out with the most common people who worked on Laurel and hardy films, like their producer Hal Roach,and  their frequently used director,James Parrott.
...and a pie in mid throw.

It would have been nice if he could have held the pie,as if he were throwing it,(In which case it should have looked more intact.),or it could have attached to his head somehow,as if he'd been hit.


While pie throwing was not uncommon in early film comedies,Laurel and Hardy's films were less known for pie throwing than the comedies of Mack Sennett. Having said that, Laurel and Hardy starred in what is often called the all time greatest pie fight in movie history,1927's "The Battle of the Century".


 "The Battle of the Century" starts with Ollie trying to cause Stan an injury so he can collect on the insurance. When a pie maker slips on a banana peel intended for Stan,the pie maker throws a pie that starts what turns into an all out war,eventually involving the whole street. According to the Guinness Book of World records, as many as 10,000 pies may have been used for the pie fight,although the amount is usually stated as 3000. That's still a lot of pies,especially since in those days they were still actual pies, and not just the aluminum pans of whipped cream that are used now.


For years the only bit of the film that was known to exist was a condensed version of the pie fight,seen in Robert Youngstons's 1957 compilation film "The Golden Age of Comedy". In 1979 most of the first reel was discovered. (Short films in the early days of cinema were what were referred to as 'one reelers' or 'two reelers',a reel of film being approximately 15 minutes long.) In 2015 it was discovered that Robert Youngston had kept a 16mm print of the entire second reel,which contained the pie fight,made from the original negative.So there now exists a practically full copy of the film.

Stan's clothes have some fabric detail.


I especially like his shoes.


 Tomorrow is Shrunken Saturday,so we'll be looking at a mini doll.