Laurel and Hardy

𝕋ℝ𝔸𝔾𝕀ℂ DETAILS ABOUT LAUREL AND HARDY

Eighty years after their heyday, Laurel and Hardy remain icons of comedy. Few performing acts successfully transitioned from the Silent Era into the age of sound, but Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel used a combination of visual contrast β€” the rotund and imposing Hardy standing next to the thin, angular Laurel β€” peerless physical comedy, and sharp comic timing to become one of the most popular comedy acts of the 1930s.

Those comedy fundamentals have allowed the duo to endure in popular culture long after their 𝕕𝕖𝕒π•₯𝕙. After winning an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Subject for 1931’s The Music Box, the comedy team proceeded to make hit after hit during the 1930s, mostly working in short films of forty minutes or less. After changing film studios in the early 1940s, their popularity fell (along with the perceived quality of their films), but television kept them in the public eye and ensured their work would never be forgotten.

As is often the case with our funniest performers, however, the lives of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were hardly free from π•₯π•£π•’π•˜π•–π••π•ͺ and 𝕀𝕠𝕣𝕣𝕠𝕨. In fact, as the 𝕋ℝ𝔸𝔾𝕀ℂ history of Laurel and Hardy will show, they might have had more than their fair share of both.

OLIVER HARDY π•ƒπ•†π•Šπ•‹ HIS FATHER AND BROTHER

Stan Lurel and Oliver Hardy

Norvell Hardy was born in Georgia in 1892. As noted by the encyclopedia Britannica, his father, Oliver Hardy, π••π•šπ•–π•• just a few months after his birth. His mother supported the family by managing hotels and boarding houses. Sometime in his teenage years, Hardy began using the name Oliver in honor of his father.

That wasn’t the only 𝕝𝕠𝕀𝕀 Hardy 𝕀𝕦𝕗𝕗𝕖𝕣𝕖𝕕 during his childhood. As the Union Recorder reports, when he was 17 years old, his older brother Sam visited home, and the brothers decided to go swimming at an old mill dam on the Oconee River. Sam, showing off for his kid brother, climbed a tree and dived into the river from an overhanging branch. π•‹π•£π•’π•˜π•šπ•”π•’π•π•π•ͺ, he misjudged the depth of the water and broke his neck on the rocks below the surface.

Oliver Hardy and his friends dived into the river and pulled Sam out. They carried him back to the hotel their mother ran, but it was too late: Sam was 𝕕𝕖𝕒𝕕. Decades later, when Hardy appeared on the television program β€œThis Is Your Life,” he became very emotional when the subject was brought up, showing how much of a mark the 𝕝𝕠𝕀𝕀 left on the young boy.

STAN LAUREL π•ƒπ•†π•Šπ•‹ HIS MOM AS A KID

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy

Stan Laurel was born Arthur Stanley Jefferson in 1890 in England. While Laurel had a relatively happy family life, as author Raymond Valinoti Jr. notes, he was frequently alone as a child. His parents were performers and theater managers, and they frequently traveled. They took their children with them β€” except Stan, who was weak and β€œsickly” as a child. Laurel wound up spending much of his childhood with his grandparents, George and Sarah Metcalfe.

According to Valinoti, the Metcalfes were kind to Laurel, but they were very strict, and he spent much of his time alone in a shack on their 𝕑𝕣𝕠𝕑𝕖𝕣π•₯π•ͺ being π•‘π•¦π•Ÿπ•šπ•€π•™π•–π•• for one thing or another. Still, Laurel grew into a performer just like his parents, and he quickly began writing his own plays and pursued theater. While this initially π••π•šπ•€π•’π•‘π•‘π• π•šπ•Ÿπ•₯𝕖𝕕 his parents, who hoped Laurel would come work with them, they supported his dreams.

Then, when Stan Laurel was just 18 years old, π•₯π•£π•’π•˜π•–π••π•ͺ struck: His mother, Madge, unexpectedly π••π•šπ•–π••. It’s suspected she suffered from a respiratory illness made 𝕨𝕠𝕣𝕀𝕖 by the air quality in Glasgow, where the family had relocated. Laurel, who had discovered his father was cheating on Madge some years before, blamed his father for breaking his mother’s will to live. According to his second wife, Virginia Ruth Rogers, Laurel was absolutely devastated by the 𝕝𝕠𝕀𝕀 of his mother, and in some ways, never recovered from it.

OLIVER HARDY WAS TEASED FOR BEING OBESE

Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel

Part of the magic that was Laurel and Hardy as a comedy act was their physical disparity. Stan Laurel’s weepy, rail-thin figure next to Oliver Hardy’s robust frame (he weighed more than 300 pounds for most of his life, per the Vintage News) was inherently charming to audiences. Hardy’s weight was part of his identity, and also the cause of his health problems later in life.

Hardy’s weight also caused him grief in his younger days. As reported by Lake Oconee Living, Hardy was known as β€œFatty” Hardy throughout his childhood β€” even after he became a famous Hollywood star, locals in his hometown in Georgia referred to him as β€œFatty.” His mother, who managed local boarding houses, made things even 𝕨𝕠𝕣𝕀𝕖 when she made young Hardy walk around town wearing a sandwich board advertising the food at her hotels.

His size continued to plague him as he got older. When America entered World π•Žπ•’π•£ I, Oliver Hardy sought to do his patriotic duty and went to a local enlistment office to join the army. According to author Raymond Valinoti, Jr., the officers took one look at Hardy’s size and began to make fun of him, calling other recruiters over to look at him. He left humiliated.

LAUREL AND HARDY WERE 𝔹𝔸𝔻 WITH MONEY

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy

Laurel and Hardy, the iconic comedy duo, wouldn’t exist without Hollywood producer Hal Roach. Both Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel were working actors during the 1920s, but neither had achieved any sort of breakout success. Roach saw their potential and put them together in 1927’s The Second Hundred Years.

From that point on, the pair rose to stardom under Roach’s guidance β€” but Roach was a sharp businessman, and Laurel and Hardy were … not. According to Smithsonian Magazine, Roach managed to keep the upper hand through shrewd negotiating. For example, he staggered the expiration dates of their contracts so they could never negotiate as a team, which allowed Roach to consistently undervalue them. He paid them a flat wage instead of a percentage of the profits. Roach also ensured that they never held any of the copyrights, or got any screenwriting credits, although they usually took a very active role in the writing and directing of their films.

As both men went through several divorces, alimony payments piled up, and Oliver Hardy developed a gambling problem. By the 1950s, Laurel and Hardy had to embark on a live tour of English music halls to try to pay some bills β€” which failed when Hardy took ill and the tour had to be canceled. Oliver Hardy π••π•šπ•–π•• surprisingly broke, and New Statesman reveals that in 1946, Stan Laurel was forced to admit he only had $2,000 in his bank account β€” and $200 a month to live on.

THEIR CAREER DECLINED IN THE 1940S

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy

For about 14 years, Laurel and Hardy were one of the most popular comedy duos in Hollywood. They often took an active role in shaping the films they worked on, writing and introducing physical gags. As the Los Angeles Times reports, they usually improvised much of their bits, and carefully planned and even directed scenes while working with producer Hal Roach.

But as Smithsonian Magazine notes, Roach was a hard negotiator who made sure Laurel and Hardy didn’t own the rights to their work, making certain they had to negotiate their deals separately. When they finally had the chance to break away, they leaped at it, signing new deals with 20th Century Fox and Metro-Goldwyn Mayer in 1941.

But as The Chicago Tribune notes, with Roach, Laurel and Hardy had enjoyed a great deal of creative control. When they moved to MGM in the 1940s, they were disappointed to find they’d 𝕝𝕠𝕀π•₯ that β€” they were treated as hired actors, with no input on the scripts or direction. As a result, their output in the 1940s is considered to be of lower quality, and their stars began to fade. InΒ 1945, they were dispirited enough to retire, returning briefly to make what most regard as their worst film, Atoll K, in 1951, per theΒ New Georgia Encyclopedia. By 1953, they were broke and out of the film business.

OLIVER HARDY WAS UNLUCKY IN LOVE

Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel with their wives in 1935

Oliver Hardy married Madelyn Saloshin in 1913 when he was just 21 years. The couple eloped to Macon, Georgia for the nuptials, claiming that since they were both a part of touring troupes of actors and musicians, they couldn’t wait until they were both home to hold a ceremony. The Hardy family reported that Hardy’s mother was enraged at the union because Saloshin was older than her son.

But as author Simon Louvish writes, the reason for the Hardy family’s opposition to the marriage was likely much 𝕨𝕠𝕣𝕀𝕖: Saloshin was Jewish. Hardy married her far away from his family to avoid an π•¦π•˜π•π•ͺ scene, and the couple left Georgia almost immediately.

The marriage lasted six years, and Hardy would describe it as a β€œsham” in his divorce application. He married Myrtle Reeves shortly after the divorce was granted, but once again marital bliss was denied him. As Louvish notes, Reeves was an alcoholic who was forced to stay in a sanitarium several times as she struggled with her π••π•šπ•€π•–π•’π•€π•–, leaving Hardy 𝕕𝕖𝕀𝕑𝕖𝕣𝕒π•₯𝕖 to leave the marriage.

He finally found contentment after divorcing Reeves in 1940. He married Virginia Lucille Jones, who remained by his side until his 𝕕𝕖𝕒π•₯𝕙 in 1957.

STAN LAUREL WAS UNLUCKY IN LOVE

Stan Laurel and wife Vera

Stories of Hollywood stars piling up marriages and divorces are common enough, but Stan Laurel stands out. He was married no fewer than six times β€” and even married one of his ex-wives twice.

According to New Statesman, first came Mae Dahlberg, an older woman from Australia he met in 1917; she was considered to be Laurel’s common-law wife. Dahlberg was difficult, and according to writer Simon Louvish, producer Joe Rock paid Dahlberg off to return to Australia. She returned years later to sue Laurel for financial support, and perΒ the Los Angeles Times, agreed as part of the settlement that they had never been married.

Laurel was happy to see Dahlberg go because he wanted to marry Lois Neilson. But he almost immediately cheated on Neilson, and they divorced eight years later. Laurel quickly married Virginia Ruth Rogers, but just two years into the marriage, he told her that he still had feelings for Neilson. They divorced in 1937. Neilson rejected Laurel (maybe he should have checked with her before filing for divorce), but Laurel didn’t let that get him down β€” he married Vera Ivanova Shuvalova in 1938.

Shuvalova drank heavily and 𝕒𝕔𝕔𝕦𝕀𝕖𝕕 Laurel of π•“π•šπ•«π•’π•£π•£π•– 𝕒𝕓𝕦𝕀𝕖, including an attempt to 𝕓𝕦𝕣π•ͺ her π•’π•π•šπ•§π•–. When he divorced her, he actually married RogersΒ again, with this second attempt lasting five years.

Laurel finally found love with Ida Kitaeva Raphael, who he married in 1946 and remained with until his 𝕕𝕖𝕒π•₯𝕙 in 1965.

STAN LAUREL RETIRED WHEN HARDY π••π•šπ•–π••

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in 1952

Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel were unique Hollywood comedians in many ways. One of the most surprising was the fact that they were very close friends in real life. As The Vintage News reports, they enjoyed a very healthy and balanced professional relationship, wherein Hardy trusted Laurel to shape the material in their films and went along with his ideas. This mutual respect extended to their career dealings as well. Producer Hal Roach forced them to negotiate their contracts separately in order to control how much he paid them. When they finally got out from under Roach’s control in the early 1940s, neither considered working alone.

Author Simon Louvish reports that their friendship was so close, in fact, that when Hardy became π•£π•–π•”π•π•¦π•€π•šπ•§π•– towards the end of his life, Laurel was part of a very small number of people who visited him π•£π•–π•˜π•¦π•π•’π•£π•π•ͺ. Hardy, concerned for his health, had 𝕝𝕠𝕀π•₯ more than 150 pounds and was sensitive about his appearance β€” but the crash diet was too late; he suffered a π•žπ•’π•€π•€π•šπ•§π•– 𝕀π•₯π•£π• π•œπ•– in 1957 and π••π•šπ•–π••. Stan Laurel was 𝕔𝕣𝕦𝕀𝕙𝕖𝕕 and chose to retire from show business rather than work without his friend of more than 30 years.Β 

THEIR FINAL FILM WAS A π”»π•€π•Šπ”Έπ•Šπ•‹π”Όβ„

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in 1952

The final phase of Laurel and Hardy’s film career was a lengthy decline. When they switched film studios in the 1940s and 𝕝𝕠𝕀π•₯ creative control over their work, their quality declined and public tastes shifted, leaving them less popular than they’d once been. They were virtually retired by 1945.

According toΒ Norbert Aping, after World π•Žπ•’π•£ II ended, Laurel and Hardy’s celebrity suddenly took off internationally as their films were finally widely distributed, and so it was decided that there was potential to relaunch their film careers with a French-Italian co-production that eventually became known as Atoll K.

The production was a π•—π•šπ•’π•€π•”π• . There were language barriers and a π•₯π•–π•£π•£π•šπ•“π•π•– script to contend with β€” but the truly 𝕋ℝ𝔸𝔾𝕀ℂ aspect was Laurel and Hardy’s health. Hardy was at his heaviest, and 𝕀𝕦𝕗𝕗𝕖𝕣𝕖𝕕 heart problems as well as a serious bout of the flu, while Stan Laurel was dealing with his π••π•šπ•’π•“π•–π•₯𝕖𝕀 π•’π•Ÿπ•• 𝕒 𝕑𝕣𝕠𝕀π•₯𝕒π•₯𝕖 condition. The Sunday Post reports that both men were considered heavy smokers in an era when π•€π•žπ• π•œπ•šπ•Ÿπ•˜ was common and accepted, which didn’t help their conditions. As Aping notes, when production had to be halted for the actors to recover, the result is scenes where Stan Laurel appears to age a decade in a matter of seconds. In a final humiliation, the producers found it impossible to get the film into theaters. In the end, the final film of Laurel and Hardy was a sad end to their brilliant careers.

OLIVER HARDY’S FINAL YEARS WERE HARD

Oliver Hardy

Oliver Hardy was a big man his whole life. In fact, as Lake Oconee Living reports, he was known as β€˜Fatty’ as a little kid, and when he grew up and launched his entertainment career he was initially known as β€˜Babe Hardy’ due to his size, which was usually well over 300 pounds.

His weight caused him many health concerns over the course of his life, and by the 1950s he finally decided to do something about it. As author Raymond Valinoti, Jr., notes, he embarked on a crash diet that led to a weight 𝕝𝕠𝕀𝕀 of 150 pounds. Hardy expected people to be supportive, but as author Simon Louvish says, the change in Hardy’s appearance was so drastic that friends and family were visibly upset at the sight of him. This bothered Hardy terribly, and he went into near-seclusion, seeing only a short list of trusted friends β€” including Stan Laurel.

Then, in September 1956, Oliver Hardy suffered a π•žπ•’π•€π•€π•šπ•§π•– 𝕀π•₯π•£π• π•œπ•– π•₯𝕙𝕒π•₯ 𝕝𝕖𝕗π•₯ π•™π•šπ•ž 𝕑𝕒𝕣𝕒𝕝π•ͺ𝕫𝕖𝕕 and π•žπ•¦π•₯𝕖. He was unable to concentrate on anything or communicate effectively with the people around him. When he became especially π•’π•˜π•šπ•₯𝕒π•₯𝕖𝕕 𝕠𝕣 𝕕𝕖𝕑𝕣𝕖𝕀𝕀𝕖𝕕, his wife would invite Stan to visit. He lingered on for almost a year, being π••π•šπ•’π•˜π•Ÿπ• π•€π•–π•• π•¨π•šπ•₯𝕙 π•”π•’π•Ÿπ•”π•–π•£ and suffering an additional two 𝕀π•₯π•£π• π•œπ•–π•€, and π••π•šπ•–π•• in August 1957.

STAN LAUREL WAS LONELY AND FREQUENTLY ILL

Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel

By the 1950s, Stan Laurel had been struggling with his own health. Laurel had chronic problems with his prostate, and per author Norbert Aping, he had to have an 𝕦𝕝𝕔𝕖𝕣 π•€π•¦π•£π•˜π•šπ•”π•’π•π•π•ͺ π•£π•–π•žπ• π•§π•–π•• π•—π•£π• π•ž π•™π•šπ•€ 𝕑𝕣𝕠𝕀π•₯𝕒π•₯𝕖. He was also a π••π•šπ•’π•“π•–π•₯π•šπ•”, and the π••π•šπ•€π•–π•’π•€π•– complicated his 𝕙𝕖𝕒𝕝π•₯𝕙.Β According to The Los Angeles Times, Laurel had a 𝕀π•₯π•£π• π•œπ•– in 1955 β€” which he π•€π•¦π•£π•§π•šπ•§π•–π••, but it left him π•¨π•–π•’π•œ.

When Oliver Hardy π••π•šπ•–π•• in 1957, instead of pursuing solo work, Laurel quietly retired. He was uninterested in working with anyone but his longtime friend. He moved into a small apartment in Santa Monica with his wife, Ida.

As New Statesman reports, Laurel spent his final years as a lonely man who spent his time writing letters β€” possibly thousands of them. Laurel spent hours every day corresponding with anyone he could, faithfully answering fan letters and sending missives off to his acquaintances. Some of these letters reveal 𝕋ℝ𝔸𝔾𝕀ℂ facts, as when he writes that after his 𝕀π•₯π•£π• π•œπ•– β€œof course I shall never be in a condition to work any more.” Some are heartbreaking in their lack of necessity. One written in 1964 reads in its entirety β€œJust a few more stamps β€” hope you’re feeling well β€” nothing much to tell you, everything is as usual here.”

Even more 𝕋ℝ𝔸𝔾𝕀ℂ , Stan Laurel penned something other than letters during his final years. He also wrote comedy routines designed for Laurel and Hardy β€” routines that would never be performed.Β As New Statesman notes, it was almost as if it was Laurel’s way of staying in touch with Hardy.

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