- 57
- 8 782 575
Laurel & Hardy Show
Приєднався 21 жов 2022
New Episodes Every Week! Entire collection will become available.
The Laurel and Hardy Show' is a syndicated version of The Boys. Showcased collections of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's genius work, as well as featurettes ending each episode dedicated to the bit-players seen in many shorts. Distributed and made by Hal Roach.
The Laurel and Hardy Show' is a syndicated version of The Boys. Showcased collections of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's genius work, as well as featurettes ending each episode dedicated to the bit-players seen in many shorts. Distributed and made by Hal Roach.
Way Out West | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1937, Slapstick
Laurel and Hardy are looking for a girl named Mary Roberts to tell her of her father's death and deliver her a huge inheritance, including a deed to a gold mine that her father left her. They find Mary at a cabaret in the West. But the owner of the cabaret and his wife --- who are Mary's legal guardians, but do not truly care about her as a person, and in fact are often rude and belittlingly belligerent towards her --- are trying to take over this wealth.
Stan and Ollie are traveling towards Brushwood Gulch; Stan on foot, leading a mule (called Dinah) dragging a travois, on which Ollie lies. As they ford a river, the travois detaches from the mule, leaving Ollie stranded in the water. He starts to wade then completely disappears into a sink hole in the river bottom. They hitch a ride on a stagecoach and attempt to flirt with a woman passenger (Vivien Oakland), not knowing that she is actually the local sheriff's wife. Upon arriving in Brushwood Gulch, she complains to her husband (Stanley Fields), who threatens the pair by coldly informing them that they will be leaving in a hearse if they do not catch the next coach out of town.
At Mickey Finn's saloon, The Avalon Boys are performing on the front porch and Stan and Ollie dance to their music. Inside, they clumsily reveal their supposedly secret mission to Mickey, including the fact that they have never seen Mary before. On Mickey's suggestion, his wife Lola pretends to be Mary and hijacks the deed from the boys, who then sing "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine" with the Avalon Boys. On their way out, Stan and Ollie encounter the real Mary, realize their mistake, and try to retrieve the deed from the couple, resulting in an extended chase and struggle. The Finns prevail and lock the deed in their safe when Lola gets the best of Stan with tickle torture. Ollie is briefly relieved by the arrival of the sheriff only to realize the sheriff is the angry husband who threatened them earlier, and who now forces them to leave town by running for their lives. Crossing the river, Ollie drops into the sink hole again.
Drying Ollie’s clothes that night, the pair resolve to return under the cover of darkness to retrieve Mary’s deed. After a series of mishaps (including the mule being belayed onto a balcony and Stan stretching Ollie's neck three feet as he tries to free him from a trapdoor), they finally manage to break into the saloon, where Stan finds Mary and explains the situation to her; she decides to run away with them. Mickey discovers them, but Ollie manages to grab Mickey's shotgun and force him at gunpoint to give the deed back to them. Mary, Ollie, Stan, and the mule make their getaway, trapping Mickey and Lola inside their own saloon by locking the front gate and entangling Mickey's head in the gate grill. Outside the town, the happy trio decide to head South to Mary's hometown and sing "I Want to Be in Dixie" as they begin their journey. When they ford the river, Ollie falls back into the sink hole.
Cast
Stan Laurel as Stanley
Oliver Hardy as Ollie
Sharon Lynn as Lola Marcel (credited as Sharon Lynne)
James Finlayson as Mickey Finn
Rosina Lawrence as Mary Roberts
Stanley Fields as Sheriff
Vivien Oakland as Sheriff's wife
The Avalon Boys as themselves
Dinah the mule as herself
Uncredited:
Harry Bernard as man eating at bar
Flora Finch as Maw
Mary Gordon as Cook
Jack Hill as Finn's employee
Sam Lufkin as stagecoach baggage handler
Fred Toones as Janitor
May Wallace as Cook
James C. Morton as Bartender
Way Out West is referenced in the 1979 film The Sheriff and the Satellite Kid when the Sheriff (Bud Spencer) ends up replicating Stan Laurel's thumb fire trick featured in the film.
The opening scene of the 2018 biopic Stan & Ollie depicts a shooting of the film, with Laurel and Hardy arriving on the set for one of the dance scenes.
The original BBC version of "Song of Summer", Ken Russell's 1968 biopic of Frederick Delius, begins with Eric Fenby (Christopher Gable) anachronistically playing cinema organ accompaniment to a silent showing of the "Commence to Dancin'" dance episode. It was cut from the 2001 DVD release, as permission could not be obtained to use it.
Directed by James W. Horne
Written by Contributing (uncredited):
Stan Laurel
James W. Horne
Arthur V. Jones
Screenplay by Charley Rogers
Felix Adler
James Parrott
Story by Jack Jevne
Charley Rogers
Produced by Stan Laurel
Hal Roach
Starring Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
Cinematography Art Lloyd
Walter Lundin
Edited by Bert Jordan
Music by Marvin Hatley
Production
company
Hal Roach Studios
Stan and Ollie are traveling towards Brushwood Gulch; Stan on foot, leading a mule (called Dinah) dragging a travois, on which Ollie lies. As they ford a river, the travois detaches from the mule, leaving Ollie stranded in the water. He starts to wade then completely disappears into a sink hole in the river bottom. They hitch a ride on a stagecoach and attempt to flirt with a woman passenger (Vivien Oakland), not knowing that she is actually the local sheriff's wife. Upon arriving in Brushwood Gulch, she complains to her husband (Stanley Fields), who threatens the pair by coldly informing them that they will be leaving in a hearse if they do not catch the next coach out of town.
At Mickey Finn's saloon, The Avalon Boys are performing on the front porch and Stan and Ollie dance to their music. Inside, they clumsily reveal their supposedly secret mission to Mickey, including the fact that they have never seen Mary before. On Mickey's suggestion, his wife Lola pretends to be Mary and hijacks the deed from the boys, who then sing "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine" with the Avalon Boys. On their way out, Stan and Ollie encounter the real Mary, realize their mistake, and try to retrieve the deed from the couple, resulting in an extended chase and struggle. The Finns prevail and lock the deed in their safe when Lola gets the best of Stan with tickle torture. Ollie is briefly relieved by the arrival of the sheriff only to realize the sheriff is the angry husband who threatened them earlier, and who now forces them to leave town by running for their lives. Crossing the river, Ollie drops into the sink hole again.
Drying Ollie’s clothes that night, the pair resolve to return under the cover of darkness to retrieve Mary’s deed. After a series of mishaps (including the mule being belayed onto a balcony and Stan stretching Ollie's neck three feet as he tries to free him from a trapdoor), they finally manage to break into the saloon, where Stan finds Mary and explains the situation to her; she decides to run away with them. Mickey discovers them, but Ollie manages to grab Mickey's shotgun and force him at gunpoint to give the deed back to them. Mary, Ollie, Stan, and the mule make their getaway, trapping Mickey and Lola inside their own saloon by locking the front gate and entangling Mickey's head in the gate grill. Outside the town, the happy trio decide to head South to Mary's hometown and sing "I Want to Be in Dixie" as they begin their journey. When they ford the river, Ollie falls back into the sink hole.
Cast
Stan Laurel as Stanley
Oliver Hardy as Ollie
Sharon Lynn as Lola Marcel (credited as Sharon Lynne)
James Finlayson as Mickey Finn
Rosina Lawrence as Mary Roberts
Stanley Fields as Sheriff
Vivien Oakland as Sheriff's wife
The Avalon Boys as themselves
Dinah the mule as herself
Uncredited:
Harry Bernard as man eating at bar
Flora Finch as Maw
Mary Gordon as Cook
Jack Hill as Finn's employee
Sam Lufkin as stagecoach baggage handler
Fred Toones as Janitor
May Wallace as Cook
James C. Morton as Bartender
Way Out West is referenced in the 1979 film The Sheriff and the Satellite Kid when the Sheriff (Bud Spencer) ends up replicating Stan Laurel's thumb fire trick featured in the film.
The opening scene of the 2018 biopic Stan & Ollie depicts a shooting of the film, with Laurel and Hardy arriving on the set for one of the dance scenes.
The original BBC version of "Song of Summer", Ken Russell's 1968 biopic of Frederick Delius, begins with Eric Fenby (Christopher Gable) anachronistically playing cinema organ accompaniment to a silent showing of the "Commence to Dancin'" dance episode. It was cut from the 2001 DVD release, as permission could not be obtained to use it.
Directed by James W. Horne
Written by Contributing (uncredited):
Stan Laurel
James W. Horne
Arthur V. Jones
Screenplay by Charley Rogers
Felix Adler
James Parrott
Story by Jack Jevne
Charley Rogers
Produced by Stan Laurel
Hal Roach
Starring Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
Cinematography Art Lloyd
Walter Lundin
Edited by Bert Jordan
Music by Marvin Hatley
Production
company
Hal Roach Studios
Переглядів: 193 573
Відео
Block-Heads | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL MOVIE | 1938 | Slapstick
Переглядів 206 тис.Рік тому
Twenty years after World War I, soldier Stan is finally discovered still monitoring his post. He's rescued and now has to reintegrate into the regular world. Block-Heads is a 1938 American comedy film directed by John G. Blystone and starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. It was produced by Hal Roach Studios for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The film, a reworking of elements from the Laurel and Hardy sh...
Thicker Than Water | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | Slapstick
Переглядів 119 тис.Рік тому
Thicker than Water is a short film starring Laurel and Hardy, directed by James W.Horne, produced by Hal Roach, and released in 1935 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The short also features James Finlayson and Daphne Pollard in supporting roles. It was the last two-reel comedy starring the comedy team, as Hal Roach decided to end Laurel and Hardy short films and move them solely into feature films. Stan...
Their First Mistake | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1932, Slapstick
Переглядів 105 тис.Рік тому
Their First Mistake is a 1932 American pre-Code comedy short starring Laurel and Hardy. Directed by George Marshall, the film was produced by Hal Roach and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Plot Mrs. Hardy is annoyed that her husband Oliver seems to spend more time with his friend Stanley than with her. After a furious argument, Mrs. Hardy says that she will leave him if Ollie goes out with S...
Hog Wild | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1930 | Slapstick, Classic Comedy
Переглядів 166 тис.Рік тому
Ollie can't find his hat and accuses his wife of losing it. Only when he looks in the mirror does he see it on his head. Ollie wants to join Stan for an afternoon of fun, but his wife has other ideas. She demands he install the radio antenna atop their roof, a job he has been neglecting for three months. Stan drives up and offers to help Ollie. After destroying Hardy's chimney and falling from ...
Utopia | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1950 | Slapstick
Переглядів 10 тис.Рік тому
Atoll K is a 1951 Franco-Italian co-production film-also known as Robinson Crusoeland in the United Kingdom and Utopia in the United States - which starred the comedy duo Laurel and Hardy in their final screen appearance. The film co-stars French singer/actress Suzy Delair and was directed by Léo Joannon, with uncredited co-direction by blacklisted U.S. director John Berry. Stan Laurel - Stan O...
Towed in a Hole | Laurel & Hardy Show | 1932 | Slapstick
Переглядів 98 тис.Рік тому
Towed in a Hole is a 1932 pre-Code comedy film starring Laurel and Hardy. The "two-reeler" short was produced by Hal Roach, directed by George Marshall, and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Plot Laurel and Hardy are in the fish business. They drive around town seeing if they can sell any. Stan suggests they catch their own fish and keep all the profits. Ollie likes the idea of cutting out th...
Our Wife | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1931 | Classic Comedy
Переглядів 73 тис.Рік тому
Oliver is making plans to be married to his sweetheart Dulcy (Babe London) with Stan as his best man, but the plans are thwarted when Dulcy's father (James Finlayson) sees a picture of Ollie and forbids the marriage. The couple plan to elope, and steal away at night to a Justice of the Peace. After typical Laurel and Hardy blundering, they manage to sneak the girl away from her father's house. ...
Me and My Pal (1933) | Laurel & Hardy Show | Slapstick Comedy Classic
Переглядів 98 тис.Рік тому
Oliver Hardy plays a character who is preparing for his wedding day to the daughter of a wealthy oil magnate, Peter Cucumber. His friend, played by Stan Laurel, is the best man. While visiting Ollie in the morning, Stan reveals his wedding present - a jigsaw puzzle. The boys soon become preoccupied with the puzzle, as do other people - a taxi driver, Ollie's butler, a telegram delivery boy, eve...
Unaccustomed As We Are | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1929
Переглядів 60 тис.Рік тому
Unaccustomed As We Are is the first sound film comedy starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, released on May 4, 1929. The title, Unaccustomed As We Are..., was a spoofing reference to the fact that its two stars had never before spoken in their films. And in point of fact, although it was a film with dialogue, the soundtrack mostly carried music, and sound effects, with dialogue a long way thir...
Twice Two | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1933
Переглядів 89 тис.Рік тому
A year prior to the first scene, Stan Laurel married Oliver Hardy's sister (played by Oliver), and Oliver married Stan's sister (played by Stan) in a double wedding. They all live together and Stan and Ollie work in the same office. After some gags involving telephones, the wives are seen making preparations for a surprise party to celebrate their first anniversary during which a cake lands on ...
Pardon Us | Laurel & Hardy | FULL MOVIE | 1931 | Slapstick
Переглядів 288 тис.Рік тому
Pardon Us is a 1931 American pre-Code Laurel and Hardy film. It was the duo's first starring feature-length comedy film, produced by Hal Roach and Stan Laurel, directed by James Parrott, and originally distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1931. As with its predecessor, Blotto, the film is set during the Prohibition. The film starts with Stan and Ollie listing ingredients outside "Malt and Hops...
Berth Marks | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1929 | Slapstick, Classic
Переглядів 83 тис.Рік тому
Stan and Ollie are musicians traveling by sleeper train to perform in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, a popular vaudeville location at the time. They manage to board, but Stan drops a lot of their music, much to Ollie's annoyance. They antagonize a very short passenger (Sammy Brooks) by sitting on him and then frighten a woman who is getting undressed, after entering a private car when looking for th...
Pack Up Your Troubles | Laurel & Hardy | FULL MOVIE | 1932
Переглядів 354 тис.Рік тому
Pack Up Your Troubles is a 1932 pre-Code Laurel and Hardy film directed by George Marshall and Raymond McCarey, named after the World War I song "Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit-Bag, and Smile, Smile, Smile". It is the team's second feature-length film. Upon enlisting in the Army in World War I, Stan (Stan Laurel) and Ollie (Oliver Hardy) soon end up in jail when they offend both the cook...
The Fixer Uppers | Laurel & Hardy Show | FULL EPISODE | 1935
Переглядів 103 тис.Рік тому
Christmas card salesmen Stan and Ollie are persuaded to help a woman (Mae Busch) spice up her loveless marriage by making her husband jealous. The spouse involved, a temperamental artist played by (Charles Middleton), is however made rather too jealous for comfort, and puts Ollie in peril when he challenges him to a duel to the death at midnight and pledges to track him "to the end of the world...
Hayden Panettiere,, Happy Valentines Day Sincerely, Neal Patrick Fry ❤😊
02 05 2025 the very best and honey mooner i wish be born back 20 30s
No actor could ever portray a comic dunce better than Stan Laurel. Mae Busch, Laurel and Hardy, an unbeatable comedy.
Movie has big mistake, puncture was in front wheel and they tried fix rare wheel.
Every time Stan played a maid, his name was Agnus lol
What the fuck is sassafras’s ?
1:00 I wonder what park looks like now ?
They were very good!
The secret is minimal dialog - Mostly sight gags . . .
Disgusting commercial garbage 🤮🫵🏻🐒💩
Stan and Ollie forever! 😊
9:20 I DIED OF LAUGHTER THAT FACE!
this the only thing that gets my mind off trumps take over of our government
That little swinging privacy door in Ollies hospital room separate from the main door was pretty interesting, never seen that before. Did hospitals back then have that normally?
My favorite movie ever, the smoking his hand part couldn't happen though
Neither do I too! 😆
"Come out of there ya big bozo!" 😆
Classic great stunt when they crash into the house with the door look like laurel tripped and fell coming in or the stunt man good vibe s
Silence when men are working!! mm mmm mm!!!
Me? Professor Theodore von Schwatzenhoffen should WALK AROUND!? Billy Gilbert😅
This movie was hilarious from beginning to end-pure genius!
I love watching Laurel and Hardy, but I can't understand why they always shared the same bed!
37:02 Stan, Ollie and Charley Chase all in one scene. Pure gold!
I remember when TNT network had the Laurel and Hardy marathons on Saturday’s. Me, my dad and my cousin would laugh the entire time.
9:16 / 19:04 "I have nothing to say."
Not only was this short a sequel to Them Thar Hills featuring Charley Hall and Mae Busch as the same couple, but it was a classic comedy short of retaliation. Plus there's the running gag of a thorough shop-lifter who keeps taking an item or two to several then finally cleaning out Stan & Ollie's store with a final "How do you do?" Then long after Ollie flicks some potato salad into Mr. Hall's face, he later does the same to both Stan and Ollie. Slapstick at its best!
almost one hundred years ago
I literally laughed till I cried on the phone booth scene😂😂😂😂😂
These two Gentlemen/Gypsies hadn't kidnapped the young Girl. All they'd done, was love her, and cared for her, the best way, that they knew how. Therefore, yeah...set 'em free. And that's the tall, and the short of it!
Gertrude Sutton (1903-1980), who played the Housemaid, had a long career in bit parts. She is in "King Kong" as the woman Kong captures while climbing the Empire State 🗽 Building... thinking she's Fay Wray, then let's fall from his hand after realizing she's not... the scene was cut ✂️ from the movie after 1938, but reinstalled in the late 1970's... she is also in "Son of Kong".
You do realize that the war in "Men O' War" refers to World War 1. World War 2 was still a decade in the future when this episode was recorded.
This one is my FAVORITE!!
Hard boiled eggs and nuts sounds like a description of my family when I was a kid when ..but I still 😊 wonder why I’m screwed up😂😂
13:23
One of the funniest comedy shorts ever made.
This is a very good 1931 Pardon Us, Laurel and Hardy comedy treasured film!!
Hahahahaha
Just imagine what the boys would think if you would’ve told him them that 90 years from now we would be able to watch their work from a portable , full color device that fits in our pocket. It’s really mind blowing honestly.
Mate? Was mate used in the American dialect of English?
I wore out my VHS rewinding when the cat ran by Stan. Now I’m wearing out my finger rewinding it again. Timelessly funny. 😂😂
The judge in this short was also the escaped criminal Nick Grainger in Saps At Seas[The last Laurel & Hardy film produced by Hal Roach]where he calls Stan "Dopey" and Ollie "Dizzy". Notice that he arrives home wearing a bowler hat like the boys. My favorite Leroy Shield piece "Bells" is played twice in this short. The first time where they try to climb the window and the second time when Stan, Ollie and the Judge's wife[Vivien Oakland]have a laughing jag. Which is why Dick Van Dyke cites Stan Laurel as his influence. Character actor Dick Wilson[Mr. Whipple} often portrayed a drunkard on the Bewitched series patterned after Arthur Housman. The freeze-frame glare from Richard Cramer is priceless.
The ever-popular Mae Busch looked so hot in that shoulder-baring dress and the way she had her hair made up was just as hot[Like in Oliver The Eighth]. Her eyes were full of passion and determination. I liked when she had hair dyed blonde for Sons Of The Desert and Going Bye Bye. Also note that the end title card was similar to the one used in the Rascals' short Bedtime Worries. There's nothing like this series and every other Hal Roach-produced series involving their set of acting regulars such as Charley Chase, Charlie Hall, James Finlayson, Billy Gilbert, Harry Barnard, James C. Morton and all of the rest.
The music from L&H movies on cd by the beaux hunks many to choose from I got mine on music app Spotify……….
Look at all the Oil Derricks onbthe Hills when Ollie is on the roof
6:59--😂😂😂
It was because of the snowfall here in Plainfield, NJ this past Sunday and the bitter cold weather recently that bought me here! Plus the music hater here is none other than Charlie Hall[as he was the dog hater in Laughing Gravy]. Worse yet, the woman who destroys Stan & Ollie's instruments was Blanche Payson[Ollie's wife in Helpmates and Wheezer and Dorothy's wicked step-mother in the Rascals' short Dogs Is Dogs].
If you notice real close, Ollie has a false 'tache on in the scene where Stan suggests they put down the clock only to have a truck run over it. It was probably filmed after the last scene following the blood transfusion mix-up once Ollie shaved his 'tache off and Stan had a false one on for that concluding scene. Not only that I liked the movie screen transitions three times in all! Especially where Stan frantically rushes off to the hospital scene causing it to slip out of his hands! I loved this final short of L&H and so did my Dad.
God theres nothing better to make me smile when im sick and tired of existing in this messed up liberal society.
Yes, I feel the same way about Laurel and Hardy. They are like good friends who will always kindly welcome fans as friends into the make believe home of their films. On top of this, they had a truly beautiful friendship that lasted as long as they were alive!
'Foist' tells me Alabama, not NY. And the fun muzak behind it all. 😊