Moe Howard
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| Known for: |
Punch Drunks, Men in Black, Disorder in the Court |
| Birth name: |
Moses Horwitz |
| Birthday: |
19 June 1897,
Brooklyn, New York, USA |
| Height: |
5' 4" (1.63 m) |
Trivia

Interred at Hillside Memorial Park, Culver City, California, USA.

Determined to get into movies, Moe (then going by his middle name, Harry) went to the Brooklyn-based American Vitagraph studios in May, 1909, and volunteered to run errands for the stars and crews without charging for the service. This impressed
Maurice Costello, who brought Moe inside and introduced him to the company. Soon, he was appearing in dramas with Costello and comedies with
John Bunny and
Flora Finch. At first, he didn't tell his family about his movie work. But, when they thought he was losing his mind because he was acting like his characters at home, he told them about his extracurricular activities. Most of his films from this period were lost when the Vitagraph film library burned on 2 July 1910.

Moe of the Three Stooges

(See
Ted Healy.)

Moe had a legal agreement with his fellow Stooges stating that he reserved the right to choose Stooge replacements (
Curly Howard was replaced by
Shemp Howard; Shemp was replaced by
Joe Besser; Joe was replaced by
Joe DeRita).

His wife, Helen Schonberger, was a cousin of
Harry Houdini.

Daughter:
Joan Howard

Son: Paul Howard

He,
Emil Sitka and
Joe DeRita ("Curly Joe") were slated to appear in the R-rated film comedy "The Jet Set" (eventually retitled
The Jet Set). However, because he was suffering from lung cancer Moe was forced to drop out of the film.
The Ritz Brothers replaced Moe, Sitka and De Rita.

Brother of actors
Curly Howard,
Shemp Howard.

Was working on his autobiography when he died. Its working title was "I Stooge to Conquer," it was published posthumously as "Moe Howard and the Three Stooges."

Father-in-law of
Norman Maurer, with whom he was partnered in Normandie Productions.

Grandfather of
Jeffrey Scott and
Michael Maurer.

In contrast to his roughneck public persona, Moe was, in private life, a quiet, dedicated family man, whose hobbies included reading, playing bridge and making hooked rugs. The only one of the Stooges who really understood the value of a dollar, investments during his salad days left him a wealthy man at the time of his death.

When the 'Three Stooges' shorts began to appear on local childrens shows in the late 1950s, there was a wave of kids poking each other in the eyes. When Moe heard about this, it was The Stooges who came to the rescue. They went on many local television shows, as well as national TV and showed how the eye-pokes were done in a way that nobody got hurt. To the kids watching, it was like learning a magic trick.

Has two older brothers, Jack Horwitz and Irving Horwitz.

Moe was the business-minded one of the group. He knew that Curly liked to spend his money on partying and women, and Larry liked to spend his at the racetrack. So he drew up an agreement where Larry and Curly turned over a certain percentage of their salaries to him. He in turn invested it for them. The result was that, while Larry and Curly were not as wealthy as Moe was (he invested far more of his own money and was quite well off), he ensured that their spendthrift habits did not result in their being broke when their careers ended.

Son of
Sol Horowitz

According to Moe, in sixty years he never missed a performance.

His famous "bowl" haircut came by accident. As a child, his mother always wanted a girl, and with Moe being the youngest at the time, she would play dress up with him, putting him in dresses and bologna curling his long hair. One day, after being picked on for months in school, he and some friends hid in the shed and he chopped all of the hair off using a bowl as a guide. After doing so, he was so afraid to face his mother he hid for hours. Finally coming out, after seeing his hair she cried out that she was so happy he did so, simply because she couldn't bring herself to. His hair stuck with him all his life.

He was very protective of his brother
Curly Howard, who was in reality quite shy and not known to stand up for himself.

Is portrayed by
Paul Ben-Victor in
The Three Stooges

Skinned his nose in a fall down the stairs of his home as a child. His nose was rebuilt by a doctor, but when the doctor turned out to be a phony, he had to have his nose rebuilt all over again by another doctor, whom his mother paid by giving him some of her old copper pots.

Most of his investments were in real estate.

The Stooges' contract with Columbia gave the studio the right to use their likenesses in perpetuity. This means that no one else can legally use the Stooges' likenesses in any form of media without the studio's permission.
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