Classic Comedians - Laurel & Hardy, Marx Brothers, Stooges, Hope/Crosby, Martin/Lewis

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

I finally had some time to take some shots of the Laurel and Hardy heads. Not to toot my own horn but I think I've managed to take some shots that really show off how good these sculpts really are.

This is a multi-media presentation so... Click on the Youtube link and enjoy some of the Leroy Shield music while you enjoy some pics of the boys.

[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KlPWQKhxKPs[/ame]

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

And... Just for fun...

"Abbott and Hardy Meet Frankenstein"

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Wow,....great pics! You have managed to capture them really well...I love the last one with the Universal gang!

Thanks for posting them...I needed a respit from that Kumik disaster. Boy, it sure makes one appreciate these L & H sculpts all the more. All credit should continue to go to Spenser on these...he did a superb job.

I believe that they are not only the best sculpts that I own (and I own quite a few), but knowing the path Spenser took to get everything right says a lot about him as well. The Stan and Ollie characters are such lovable ones that as you well said in a previous post, if you are sitting on the fence about these...don't any longer! They are like the gift that will continue to give, with every new outfit and diorama.

Thanks again for posting these, Jungle!!!
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Thanks a lot Jerry! Oh, try not to bring up that Kumik travesty again it just hurts too much.

Well after living with these guys for a few days there is only one problem with them...

Mr Hardy's hat tends to slip off his head a lot while posing the derby on his head. It is really no big deal because with a little piece of Blu Tack the problem is easily solved. It is great fun to pose the hats with different tilts which really can give the figures certain attitudes and different looks, as you can see in the shots above. The Blu Tack really helps with that.
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Hey, great minds think alike! I use the same technique...

In looking at your photos, I never realized how much a tilt of a hat can change a mood or convey a different message. I especially like your pics of the boys with their hats tilted forward. When Oliver brushes his hat forward in some of the shorts, it conveys a sense of accomplishment or a sense of confidence that things will get done. Just with a flick of the hat...

Oh, by the way, both of us will be looking for hats for our Charlie figures..maybe Ollie's will fit. If so, maybe Spenser will agree to cast a couple of extras for us. Then, the only problem we will have is what to use the other one for...maybe use for a Wyatt Earp goes to Oxford diorama...
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

I was thinking about Spencer's hats for Charlie. It is good to know he may be willing to sell us just a hat for the little tramp. Now we'll just have to see if the hat is the right size.

I've also been thinking about different possible outfits once I get their initial ones done. Pajamas comes to mind as well as striped prison outfits. I also have visions of making "The Son's of the Desert" Fez's.
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Nice pics! Spenser did a beautiful job on these. I'd love to see him tackle the Marx Brothers some day (well, maybe not Zeppo :monkey1).
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Oh! One more... I forgot.

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Grea job!! I am looking for these figures for ages.
Now after this great job why don't you start making Fred Sanford "Redd Foxx"? I would sell my launch to buy him :).
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Hey, Sanford and son! Another great comedy team. According to this picture, we could theoretically reuse Stan and Ollie's cloths...all we need are the head sculpts....someone else will have to take up the charge on getting them done:rotfl...any takers?

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Loving those Laurel And Hardy's! Although he's not technically "Classic", I would love a Denis Leary Sculpt. Just a thought, Keep up the good work!
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

As a point of reference, a couple of years ago, I realized that the Sheriff from the old Marx "Best of the west" figures made in the 60's resembled Dean Martin. With a little facial adjustment and a paint job, Dean became a reality in the 1/6 world:

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Only recently did I realize that the old Marx "Mike Hazard" figure could be adjusted to look like Jack Benny...he is still a work in progress, but what do you think? Does he look like Jack?

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Dino looks great! Where is Jerry? Hey Lady!

I'd like to see more pics of him.

Your Jack Benny is not to bad of a match. I hope the glasses are just a place holders. They seem to be a bit wrong for him. Otherwise, I think you are on to something.
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Jerry, after that terrible Kumik Chaplin Hat, I just want to thank both you and Spencer for getting the Laurel and Hardy derbies totally right. I know he made many revisions at your direction and put in a great deal of work to get them right. The result: Perfection.

Thanks to both of you again.

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Just look at the texture on them.
 
Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Yeah, he got them spot on...those are great pics! Post more if you have them...!

Below is a short article on how these hats and derbies played an important role for these comedians (it even mentions Chaplin as well (ouch, sorry, let's not rethink about what we're getting):

Is it a Bowler, or a Derby?


The Bowler Hat, along with the Top Hat, is probably the most commonly known of hat styles of the current day. The top Hat was essential headwear for men throughout the 1800s and no man was well dressed, day or night, without wearing this style of Hat. The top hat lost its appeal as a daily fashion accessory for men by the dawn of the 20th century, and was replaced by other forms of headwear, such as derby hats, and then the fedora.

A bowler hat is also known as a derby hat. It’s a rounded, hard-topped hat with a small brim. Black is the classic color of this hat and the hat may have a matching band around its crown, or middle. Wool felt is the classic fabric used to make derby hats.

Sheep's wool is usually the only wool used to make wool felt derby hats, as it gives a nice, hard strength to the hat. Rabbit fur felt and beaver felt are used when softer hats are wanted and are not usually used to make this hat style.

The derby hat was originated in 1850. It was invented for British game warden, James Coke of Norfolk, as he wanted a sturdy hat to wear while he was on horseback looking for poachers on his property. The Top Hat was then in vogue so my guess is that the rounder style would have been more practice.

They first called it a Coke hat, which was actually made by the Bowler family of Southwark and the hat gradually took their name as its popularity grew. Soon, all types of men were wearing derbies, from bankers to bus drivers. Men of every social and economic class wore these hats and the derby is noted as being the first hat that was mass produced to be affordable for all men.

The derby hat was one of the most popular men's hats for almost seventy years. Men began wearing these hats rather than top hats in the 1850s and then began wearing fedora hats rather than derby hats in the 1920s. However, comedy stars Laurel and Hardy each wore a derby hat throughout the 1920s and 1930s in their movies and it was their signature style. Even stores selling hats today have names for their derbies such as the Laurel and Hardy Bowler and the Laurel and Hardy Derby Hat.

Silent film star Charlie Chaplin also wore a signature derby hat. It represented the pathetic vulnerability of the man whose dignity derives from his hat. Coupled with his shabby suit, crooked walking stick and absurdly cocky walk, Chaplins hat signalled to cinema audiences that here was an embattled little man using his hat to give him solidity and importance. The fact that both hat and man were always being knocked off their pedestals made the character irresistible.

Some women also wore derby hats even though originally they were sold as men's hats. Women who performed in the circus or in cabarets were known to wear these hats and they were later sold as a woman's hat.

Hats express social attitudes and are as limited by convention as any other item of dress, says Colin McDowell, in his book "Hats, status, style and Glamour". Hats proclaimed the man - his status, attitudes and beliefs - and the woman - her class, breeding and even matrimonial state. The poke bonnet and the mob cap survived much longer on unmarried (or widowed) heads than on those of married women or girls.

What women wore was a question of fashion, but men's clothes were dictated by convention. As the St James' Gazette commented in 1890, 'When we are told, "He's a fellow who wears a pot hat and frock coat" we know sufficiently well what sort of fellow he is'. It was understood that no member of polite society would wear a frock coat without the appropriate and sanctioned top hat, keeping the pot hat, or bowler, for less formal wear.

It was a nineteenth rule, as flexible and immutable, it seemed, as the edict that 'On the Sabbath all respectable men sport a Topper'. Wall Street and the City were the place where, in honour of the god of money, formality was rigidly applied to the rules of dress, yet after World War 1 the inconceivable began to happen even there. Men were seen wearing morning coats with Bowlers, a combination that in pre-war days would have been the unforgivable sartorial sin. No that the Bowler was an unacceptable hat, it was simply not formal enough for morning coats.

As the twentieth century progressed more and more women took up hunting as a sport. The rules of headwear were predictably strict and wore copies of men's hats. In 1953 one guide to hunting dress was still insisting that a lady wearing a hunting silk hat should also wear a veil. When not hunting, a fashionable lady would ride in the Bios du Boulogne, Central Park or Rotten Row, in order to be seen.

These women were not all 'ladies'. The Achilles Statue in Rotten Row had long been the congregation point for high-class prostitutes, magnificently dress, in beautifully turned out carriages or mounted on the most high mettled horses. Known to their clients as 'the pretty horse-breakers', these women were London fashion leaders. When Skittles, one of Victorian London's most famous prostitutes, appeared in a snappy round topped riding bowler, all the ladies who condemned her and her trade rushed to follow her lead and a new fashion was created.

This fashion has still been retained through to the current day, even though a hat is rarely worn in comparison to that time. Like the Top hat, the rounded style of the Bowler is often pictured in Bridal magazines as an alternative to the wedding veil for the bride.

Bowler

Let's promote the wearing of beautiful Fashion hats!

SBI!
 
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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

3/4's View of the Laurel and Hardy 1/6 head sculpts.

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Laurel and Hardy in...Men O'War!

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Hey Jungle (and everyone),

I received my Chaplin (comical) and replaced the hat with Spenser's Olllie hat and it looks much better. I posted the text and pics below on a thread in the One Sixth forum. What do you think of the hat?:



"I received my Chaplin (comical) figure today. One thing about the pants; they seem to be just a fraction long. They would fall much better (without bunching or wrinkling) if either the openings at the bottoms of the pants leg were opened just a bit so they could be rolled up inwardly, or shorten the pants legs just a bit...

I have tried to pull the pants up, and also roll them up inwardly from the bottom. The rolling can be done, but difficult because the openings are small. I believe on the prototype picture the openings where just a bit wider on the bottom.

Anyway, just a recommemdation and not a big problem. With the replacement parts that are coming, this will be a real nice figure...I'm excited about finally having Chaplin in 1/6!

Here are some pics; the first one uses the hat that came with Charlie (that will be replaced). The rest use a derby from another figure that I have, and I believe it fits him nicely. I turned his pant legs up, and ironed that pants. Your comments on this would be appreciated..."

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Re: Classic Comedians Thread - starting with Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy

Laurel and Hardy in...Men O'War!

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I just got home from a cruise to the Bahamas, and believe it or not the first thing I did after starting the laundry was to check in on this thread!

"Men O'War!" look just fantastic, I'm jealous once again, the sailor suits are great. Where did you find them?

Stan and Ollie are acquiring quite the wardrobe. I've got to play some catch up real quick. I didn't want to start ordering things until I got back.

We had a great time. One strange thing that happened was that on my last vacation which was in Sedona Az, I lost the lens cap to my Nikon camera. Flash forward a year and I'm in the Bahama...

What do I find floating close to shore?

A lens cap to a Nikon camera! It just so happens it fit mine. No kidding!

Anyway, I found the Bahamas equivalent of the stairs in "The Music Box". It's called The Queens Staircase. Here is a shot...

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And here I am about midway up... Why doesn't someone do something to help me!

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I also found a full size collar of the type that the boys wore. I hope to copy it in 1/6th.

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