My latest book,
The Funny Parts, is now available. You can click on the links below to purchase the book.
Amazon is listing the book as "Temporarily out of stock," but I looked into this and found that the book is expected to be available from Amazon in a week.
The Funny Parts, which deals with a wide range of gags and routines, is recommended to anyone who is a fan of classic comedy. Below is a table of contents.
Table of Contents
Preface 1
Introduction 3
1 And Then There Were Pies 7
2 Mannequins and Other Dummies 16
3 Animals 34
4 Adventures in Eating 77
5 Attack of the Vamps 99
6 Indecent Exposure 107
7 Spooky Apparitions 118
8 Bombs and Burglars 130
9 How to Disguise Yourself as Furniture and Fool Your Friends 135
10 The Amazing Trapdoor Chase 145
11 Science and Magic 151
12 Tooth Extraction and Laughing Gas 158
13 Into the Looking Glass 162
14 Sleepless Nights 168
15 Fathers to Sons of the Desert 178
16 The Big Jangly Box, the Sliding Ladder and Other Comic Props 183
17 The Buster Keaton Variations 192
18 The Harold Lloyd Variations 222
19 Hysterical History 229
20 Bugs 241
21 Scared Black Servants, Dice-Playing African Cannibals, and the Most Racist Comedy in Silent Cinema History 245
22 Other Variations 259
Chapter Notes 299
Bibliography 303
Index 305
The chapter titles should give away most of the subject matter. For instance, the "Hysterical History" chapter involves costume farces.
The "Sleepless Nights" chapter deals with comedians struggling to sleep in Murphy beds, hammocks and train berths.
Full chapters are devoted to Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd and Laurel & Hardy. Other comedians featured prominently in the book include Charlie Chaplin, Lupino Lane, Harry Langdon, Larry Semon, The Marx Brothers, Abbott & Costello, and The Three Stooges.
Thanks to generous photo contributors, the book features more than 100 photos, many of which have never before appeared in print. I actually had more photos than I could use, which is the reason that I am using a few of the extra photos in this article.
This shaving routine is from
Hello, Pardner! (1923).
Harold Lloyd has trouble shaving in a communal washroom during a train trip in
Now or Never (1921).
Harry Langdon later found himself in the same situation in
The Luck o' the Foolish (1924). Both
Now or Never and
The Luck o' the Foolish also include berth travails.
Here is Lloyd involved in other stock comedy business, including animal antics, vamp intrigue and mass transit hassles.
I hope that everyone enjoys the book.