Shemp! |
While gearing up for the release of his new book, Marlon Brando: Hollywood Rebel, author (journalist and television and film producer) Burt Kearns already has another book ready to be launched in 2024. After his acclaimed biography of tough guy actor Lawrence Tierney, his forthcoming study of Brando’s influence on popular culture, what other actor and iconic Hollywood figure could round out this trio of giants? None other than Shemp! Shemp Howard of the Three Stooges.
Publishing giant Rowman & Littlefield has announced that Kearns's book (and second of 2024), SHEMP! The Biography of The Three Stooges’ Shemp Howard, The Face of Film Comedy, will be unleashed on October 1. Like Hollywood Rebel (due April 2, the day before Brando’s centennial), Shemp! is on the publisher's Applause Theatre and Cinema Books imprint.
The publisher describes the book:
Shemp Howard is one of the most recognizable faces of the twentieth century. He was also one of Hollywood’s most influential comic actors. An original member of the Three Stooges, Shemp, along with his brother Moe and vaudeville violinist Larry Fine, perfected a brand of raucous, lowbrow, slapstick comedy that had audiences rolling in the aisles of vaudeville houses, Broadway theatres, and movie palaces, and left an indelible imprint on the face of popular entertainment. Then he walked away... and the new Three Stooges – Moe, Larry, and brother Curly – made history.
But Shemp didn’t disappear. He made Hollywood history on his own, in a successful and -- until now –- unexplored career in more than a hundred movie shorts and features. He appeared in comedies, dramas, mysteries, Westerns, and musicals -- alongside the biggest stars of the Golden Age, including W.C. Fields, John Wayne, James Stewart, William Powell, Abbott & Costello, Lon Chaney, Jr., Myrna Loy, and Marlene Dietrich.
Shemp! is the first book to challenge the “official” version of Three Stooges history that’s been repeated for decades, shattering myths as it uncovers the surprising and often unsettling facts behind the man’s unlikely story: how the child of Jewish immigrants, racked with severe anxiety and a supposed fear of automobiles, dogs, and water—could conquer vaudeville, Broadway, and Hollywood. And it’s more than a biography: author Burt Kearns digs into the shorts and feature films he did on his own—more than a hundred of them—and, through interviews with fans, family members, scholars, experts, filmmakers, and celebrities, examines the “cult of Shemp” that thrives today.
We’re told to "expect to be surprised” in this new, critical, and journalistic look at an often-overlooked comedy star.