Deflating
Hitler
By
Ed Garea
You
Nazty Spy! (Columbia,
1940) – Director: Jules White. Writers: Felix Adler & Clyde
Bruckman (story). Cast: Moe Howard, Larry Fine, Curly Howard, Don
Beddoe, Richard Fiske, Lorna Gray, & Dick Curtis. Short, B&W,
18 minutes.
It
has become an item of accepted wisdom that Charlie Chaplin was the
first artist to take on Adolf Hitler with his comic masterpiece The
Great Dictator, which premiered in New York on October 15, 1940.
But that wasn’t the case at all. In fact, some nine months prior to
the release of Chaplin’s film, on January 19, 1940, a short by the
Three Stooges beat him to the punch. Before there was Adenoid Hynkel,
there was Moe Hailstone.
Both
films were conceived roughly around the same time. During the late
‘30s, Hitler was frequently noted as looking like Chaplin’s
Little Tramp. When producer Alexander Korda told Chaplin of the
resemblance at a party in 1937, it supposedly gave Chaplin the idea
for a satire of Der Fuehrer. Korda wasn’t the only one: In 1939,
British comedian Tommy “It’s That Man Again” Handley released a
song called “Who Is That Man (Who Looks Like Charlie Chaplin)?”
Though
Chaplin was inspired, he took his time preparing a script and getting
the film off the ground. Part of his problem lay with his company,
United Artists, who told him that such a film wasn’t a good idea as
Germany was a major market and it would also alienate the many around
the world who sympathized with Hitler. In 1938, Joseph Breen, the
Production Code’s chief bluenose, wrote German Consul George
Gylissing in response to Gylissing’s letter asking whether such a
film was actually being planned that his office had not heard of
anything and that any script would first have to be approved before
it could be produced.
However, by the summer of 1939 it was a
foregone conclusion that Europe would soon be at war. Hitler marched
into what was left of Czechoslovakia, and in August signed the
infamous peace pact with Stalin that effectively sealed Poland’s
fate by dividing it between Germany and the U.S.S.R. Chaplin began
writing the script for The Great Dictator in June
1939 and production began shortly after on September 9, finishing in
June 1940.
Chaplin
was not the only person that could resemble Hitler. The story is that
in 1939, between takes of a Three Stooges short, Moe did a hilarious
impression of Hitler. According to Lynn Rappaport in The San
Diego Jewish Journal, it gave Jules White, the head of Columbia’s
Shorts Department and producer-director of many of the Stooges
shorts, the idea of a Hitler parody of his own. Also in the summer of
1939, White came to his brother Sam’s office and announced his
plans to make a comedy about Hitler. Moe would be Hitler, Larry would
play Goebbels, and Curly would be Goering. Sam’s reply was that the
situation in Europe was pretty grim; could Jules make it funny? Jules
told Sam not to worry on that account; he’d make it plenty funny.
Filming
on the short began December 5, 1939, and lasted for seven days.
Cutting was finished on December 26, 1939, and on January 19,
1940, You Nazty Spy (a play on the popular “You
nasty man” catchphrase of radio comic Joe Penner) became the
44th Three Stooges comedy released by the studio. Moe Howard
thus became the first American actor to lampoon Hitler.
As
the film opens we are in the fictional country of Moronica. A meeting
is taking place among munitions manufacturers Messers. Ixnay (Fiske),
Ohnay (Curtis) and Amscray (Beddoe). Complaining that business is on
the decline, they come to the conclusion that they need to oust the
king who is for peace and establish a dictatorship so they can start
a war. “We must find someone who is stupid enough to do what we
tell him,” says Ohnay. “But where can we find anyone that
stupid?” Amscray asks. “I’ve got the very man and he’s in
this house right now,” says Ixnay. “His name is Moe Hailstone. He
and his two helpers are papering my dining room right now.”
Cut
to the dining room, where the Stooges are working. Ixnay introduces
his companions to Moe Hailstone, Curly Gallstone, and Larry Pebble,
who answer “Shalom aleichem” in unison. Rarely did the Stooges
ever make reference to their Jewish roots, but here they decided it
was essential.
Ixnay
asks Moe is he’d like to be dictator. When Moe asks what a dictator
is, Ixnay explains it to him: “A dictator? Why, he makes love to
beautiful women, drinks champagne, enjoys life and never works. He
makes speeches to the people promising them plenty, gives them
nothing, then takes everything! That's a dictator." “Hmm,”
says Curly. “A parasite! That's for me!" Moe tells the
munitions men he must think about it and leans back on a table. His
fingers accidentally pick up a swatch of dark wallpaper. When he
raises his hand to his lips, the paper attaches itself like a
mustache. Brushing his hair back at the same time, Moe looks almost
exactly like Hitler.
But
Moe won’t do it without his friends: “Our motto has always been
all for one and all for me.” Ixnay says that’s no problem –
Curly can be Field Marshal of all the armies and Larry can be
Minister of Propaganda. When Larry asks what propaganda is, Curly
answers by saying that a papa gander marries a mama gander and they
raise a lot of little goslings. Moe says, “We’ll take the job.
What do we do?” “First,” says Ixnay, “you start a beer
putsch.” “How?” asks Larry. Curly explain it thusly” “You
putsch your beer down and wait for the pretzels.”
So
far the short is following the popular perceptions of both Hitler and
how he rose to power. It was widely assumed the time that munitions
manufacturers and other industrialists were responsible for putting
Hitler in power, and there’s truth in this assumption, for Hitler
was actually given the position of Chancellor by those in the
Reichstag that represented the business classes. Led by Franz Von
Papen, it was thought they could control him, an assumption that
proved disastrously wrong – and shown during the course of the
short, when Moe, Larry, and Curly spiral out of control. It was also
commonly thought that Hitler was a paperhanger in Austria before the
First World War, a belief that persisted well beyond the Second World
War as well. The truth was that paperhanging was work, and work was
the last thing on Hitler’s mind. Even then, the future Fuehrer
imagined he was too important for ordinary work. He lived off a small
bequest from his mother and from earnings painting watercolors for
tourists.
As
Moe speaks to the masses with Larry and Curly at his side, the
resemblance to Hitler is remarkable, especially in reference to
Hitler’s gestures and speech pattern. Curly and Larry stand
alongside, with Curly in uniform posing more like Mussolini than
Goering and Larry holding up cue cards for the audience. Moe tells
the throng that, “We must lend our neighbors a helping hand! We
must lend them two helping hands, and help ourselves to
our
neighbors!” Larry holds up the cue card that says “Cheer,” and
the crowd cheers. Later, when Moe is promising the masses goodies,
Larry accidentally holds up “Hiss.” The reaction surprises Moe
who sees Larry with the wrong card and bonks him. Larry then turns
the card around to read “Applause.” Moe then tells the crowd that
“we must throw off the yoke of monarchy, and make our country safe
for hypocrisy!"
Back
at Hailstone’s office, Moe catches Curly reading a book. He tells
Curly that he should be burning books, not reading them. Looking at
the wall behind Moe’s desk, we see the new flag of Moronica – two
snakes intertwined into the shape of a swastika – and below the
flag a motto, “Moronica for Morons,” a parody of the Nazi slogan
“Deutschland fur Deutschen” (“Germany for Germans”). They are
informed that Matte Herring (Gray) has arrived and Moe tells the
secretary to "marinate her and send her in.” The name is
a play not only on the famous World War I spy, but also on the
Yiddish and German name for pickled herring, matjeshering.
(In fact, there are several Yiddishisms used throughout the course of
the film, as Yiddish is a High German language, originating with the
Ashkenazi Jews. The Stooges were of Ashkenazi origin, being from
Lithuania.)
Matte
has come to read their fortunes. They sit at a table while she pulls
out a large 8-ball. As she tells their fortunes, both Moe and Curly
stick their hands under the table for Matte’s but end up holding
each other. Moe discovers what’s going on and breaks the 8-ball
over Curly’s head. They find a note inside for Matte. It turns out
she’s the daughter of the deposed king and has orders to kill them.
They arrest her, and as Curly takes her out to be shot, he tells her
they’ll shoot the works, a ‘30s reference to injecting morphine
and a slap at Goering’s morphine addiction. Curly takes Matte into
the hall and asks her “Blindfold?” She agrees and proceeds to tie
it around Curly’s head. He tells her he’ll take 10 paces, turn,
and fire. While he paces, she runs away. “We must catch her,”
says Moe, “before she reports to her father, the King, and the
people turn on us.”
Delegates
from Moronica’s neighbors now enter to begin a peace conference.
When Moe demands a corridor through the country of DoubleCrossia to
the Bay of Window, the conference breaks down into a brawl. Moe and
Curly shoot golf balls off the delegates’ heads while they are busy
pummeling Larry. Knocking out the delegates, the trio plans to throw
them to the lions when noise is heard outside. It’s the people,
coming to overthrow Moe. The Stooges run into the arena and lock the
door, but realize too late that they’ve locked themselves in with
the lions, who then proceed to chase them around the corner into a
back room. Roars and screams are heard and only the lions emerge.
One, wearing Moe’s cap, proceeds to belch (possibly from
indigestion) as the short ends.
There
are several interesting points about the film. One is that, while the
Hays Office objected to Chaplin’s film (FDR himself helped push it
through), You Nazty Spy passed through unscathed,
perhaps because the censorship requirements were not as stringent for
shorts as for full-length features. (Article X of the Production Code
stated: "The history, institution, prominent people and
citizenry of all nations shall be presented fairly. No picture shall
be produced that tends to incite bigotry or hatred among peoples of
differing races, religions or national origins.") During the
autumn months of 1941, a Senate Subcommittee on the motion picture
industry and war, led by several Isolationist senators, began looking
into what it termed “anti-Nazi propaganda films” coming out of
Hollywood. (Congress always enjoyed looking into Hollywood from time
to time, as many in the film industry – actors and moguls –
lacked the intellectual wherewithal to properly fight back.) The
Great Dictator was subjected to close scrutiny while You
Nazty Spy was overlooked, despite its popularity at the box
office. The hearing mercifully came to an end on the morning of
December 8, 1941, after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and turned
isolationists into traitors.
While
everyone praises Chaplin’s portrayal of Hitler, it must honestly be
admitted that Moe Howard did it better. Whenever I watch The
Great Dictator, I come away with the impression that if only
Germany – and Hitler – would listen to the sweet reason of
Chaplin’s speech at the end, they might be convinced to do good.
Nothing of this sort happens with You Nazty Spy, for Moe
did a better job of channeling Hitler’s lower-class origins and
manic rage. Chaplin’s Hynkel speaks with a soft voice and almost
breaks into an English accent at times while Moe shrieks,
substituting nonsensical gibberish sprinkled with a few Yiddish
phrases, more closely imitating the real Fuehrer in his irrationality
and pure rage. More to the point, like Hitler – and unlike Hynkel –
Moe Hailstone is undone by farce. Hitler was living a farcical
existence during the last months of his life trapped underground in
Berlin. Moe and associates retreat to a bunker of sorts in their
attempt to escape the lions. The image of the one lion emerging
wearing the Fuehrer’s cap and belching almost approaches the level
of an editorial cartoon in its sharpness.
The
short did well in theaters, even playing in first-run houses that did
not normally run Stooge shorts. It became so popular, in fact, that
the ending was forgotten in favor of a sequel, titled I’ll
Never Heil Again (July 1941). In this sequel, the
industrialists Ixnay (Vernon Dent), Amscray (Lynton Brent), and
Umchay (Bud Jamison) approach the exiled King Herman VI 7/8 of
Moronica to seek his help in getting rid of Moe Hailstone and his
associates. The king sends his daughter, Gilda, to assassinate Moe,
Larry and Curly with an explosive billiard ball – to be used when
they play pool. This is somewhat close to the real attempt on
Hitler’s life at the Wolf’s Lair in East Prussia when Von
Stauffenberg placed a briefcase loaded with explosives under Hitler’s
conference table. I’ll Never Heil Again reaches
its climax when, during a conference of the Axis powers, Hailstone
declares the world to be his, which results in an all-out brawl
during the course of which Curly detonates the explosive pool ball.
The king is restored and the heads of Moe, Larry and Curly are
mounted on his trophy wall.
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