In addition to existing as the home of The Stoogeum museum, Ambler, PA is also home to The original Three Stooges Fan Club. With consent from Moe Howard and Larry Fine, the official Three Stooges fan Club was formed in 1974.
Today, The Three Stooges Fan Club is recognized as one of the nation’s oldest fan clubs, and holds a total of over 2,000 fan club members worldwide.
Hey There, Boo-Boo
As the Three Stooges gained more and more popularity in television and the movies, they soon turned to music as a new platform to display their multi-faceted talents. In 1959, with the rising popularity of the Stooges among children, the three Stooges would embark on their career as recording artists. Though many different rival record companies fought over the rights to release the Stooges’ first record, after much negotiation, it was the record division of Columbia Pictures that emerged victorious, thus earning the right to publish the Stooges’ first music record. And so, in 1959, the Stooges’ first musical record was released. Titled, Have Rocket, Will Travel, the trio’s first recorded song was taken from one of their musical numbers involving the Three Stooges entering the Space Race.
While this record, originally titled Race for the Moon, did not in fact make the nation’s Top 40 songs that year, despite the songs ranking, the Stooges’ first album still sold remarkably well. While not among the top songs, as a result of the record’s positive record sales, the Stooges gained much needed exposure within the music industry. Thus, the Stooges’ image as profitable, talented emerging vocal artists became increasingly know among many other top record companies in the music business. Following Columbia Pictures’ release of their first record, many others would follow. The Stooges’ next record would be released under Golden Records, who distributed three more singles, plus the groups’ first album. Of the many musical albums recorded and released by the Stooges, perhaps the most notable is the release of a comedy collaboration record featuring the voice of Yogi Bear, titled “Yogi Bear and The Three Stooges Meet the Mad, Mad, Mad Dr. No-No.”
Who Doesn’t Scooby-Doo Know? - And Other Stooge Cameos
Throughout the Stooges’ career, in addition to their own television work, the trio was also featured in several television show cameos. Most notable of the Stooges’ television cameos, was their guest appearance on ABC’s Off to See the Wizard. This television cameo led to many others, including their role as “Three Men in a Tub” during the television episode, Who’s Afraid of Mother Goose?—another ABC show—which was broadcast on October 13, 1967.
Though the names and likeness of the Three Stooges were used in Scooby-Doo movies, “Ghastly Ghost Town” and “The Ghost of the Red Baron,” the voices of the Stooges were actually played by skilled voice imitators, and not the original Stooges themselves.
The Three Stooges Video Games
Later on in their career, after conquering the areas of performance, film, television and music, the Stooge brand would next enter a fairly new realm of technology: the world of video games. In 1984, Mylstar Electronics released the Three Stooges very first video game, an arcade game titled, The Three Stooges in Brides is Brides, also known by its shortened name, The Three Stooges.
Based on the Stooges’ comedy act of the same name, this game allowed the Stooges to expand their fan base further than ever before. In 1987, they received their second Three Stooges Game, this one available on a number of home gaming systems, including the Nintendo Entertainment System. The goal of the game? To prevent the closure of an orphanage.
Stooges Lost in Foreign Translation
Interestingly enough, The Three Stooges, when directly translated into different languages around the world, holds some very different, often strange meanings. For instance, in China, the Stooge trio is idiomatically known as either Sānge Chòu Píjiàng or Huóbǎo Sānrénzǔ. The direct translation of The Three Stooges? The ‘Three Smelly Shoemakers.’
Equally as strange, when translated into Japanese, the Three Stooges are known as San Baka Taishō, otherwise known as ‘Three Idiot Generals.’ Even stranger is the Spanish translation: ‘Los tres chiflados’, which roughly translates to, ‘The Three Crackpots.’