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Smoked Hams

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 19m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
128
YOUR RATING
Shemp Howard, Daphne Pollard, and Harry Shannon in Smoked Hams (1934)
ComedyShort

A vaudeville team convinces an agent to book their new act, which uses a Civil War theme.A vaudeville team convinces an agent to book their new act, which uses a Civil War theme.A vaudeville team convinces an agent to book their new act, which uses a Civil War theme.

  • Director
    • Lloyd French
  • Writers
    • Jack Henley
    • Dolph Singer
  • Stars
    • Daphne Pollard
    • Shemp Howard
    • Lionel Stander
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    128
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lloyd French
    • Writers
      • Jack Henley
      • Dolph Singer
    • Stars
      • Daphne Pollard
      • Shemp Howard
      • Lionel Stander
    • 7User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast8

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    Daphne Pollard
    Daphne Pollard
    • Emma Pollard
    Shemp Howard
    Shemp Howard
    • Henry Howard
    Lionel Stander
    Lionel Stander
    • Mr. Ivanitch
    Harry Shannon
    Harry Shannon
    • The Landlord
    The Model Bakers
    • Jolly Bakers
    Harry Akst
    • Orchestra conductor
    Charles Lane
    Charles Lane
    • Man in audience
    Donald MacBride
    Donald MacBride
    • Stagehand
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lloyd French
    • Writers
      • Jack Henley
      • Dolph Singer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    5.5128
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    Featured reviews

    5SnoopyStyle

    trying to be bad

    Henry Howard (Shemp Howard) and Emma Pollard (Daphne Pollard) are a vaudeville team. Howard has a new gag. They try to convince agent Mr. Ivanitch (Lionel Stander) of their new act.

    I don't know Pollard. She's short and trying very hard. She's like a tiny Shemp. I can see her as a sassy side character. In this one, they are trying to be dumb and dumber or maybe a bad Two Stooges. I can see them doing this act to a scattered tiny crowd in the middle of the afternoon at an old rundown theater. For some, they could be so bad that they're funny. The best act may be the clay sculptor.
    4boblipton

    Add Shemp Howard To Daphne Pollard And Get A Negative Comedy

    Shemp and Dphne sell their Civil War sketch to impresario Lionel Stander on the basis of a cannon in the act, and on they go with the mismanaged performance.

    It's one of those skits we're supposed to laugh at because it is so inept, but this one doesn't work at all. Both of the leads were quite capable of producing some laughs on their own, but together there is no chemistry; the sort of wrangling that each could make audiences laugh is somehow distinctly unfunny. Add in an erratic set-up -- a nasty landlord, a crazy neighbor who wanders in bringing fresh butter -- and the only reason to watch this is for the act that precedes them in the bill.
    2planktonrules

    Painfully unfunny

    I am sure there are worst comedy shorts out there than "Smoked Hams"....but I think you'd be hard pressed to find many. Despite having an interesting cast, this Vitaphone short manages to be unfunny...painfully unfunny as well as tedious and tough to watch.

    Daphne Pollard and Shemp Howard play a husband-wife vaudeville-style comedy act. Sadly, their Civil War act is supposed to be bad...and that's the joke...but it's just bad!!! Seeing them performing it is an exercise in masochism.

    A mind-bogglingly bad film. Among Vitaphone's lowest points in the history of comedy. Add to that the racially offensive ending and you have a recipe for a lousy short.
    6wmorrow59

    Low comedy for a wet afternoon

    This is the sort of comedy short that used to pop up on TV on rainy Sunday afternoons when I was a kid. It's pleasant and painless, nothing great, but as long as you keep your expectations fairly low Smoked Hams may provide a chuckle or two. The story concerns a husband-and-wife Vaudeville team, obviously small-timers, who live in a crummy hotel for performers where they struggle to come up with a new act. (Apparently nobody told them Vaudeville was already dead!) The wife is played by feisty Daphne Pollard, best remembered by Laurel & Hardy buffs as the spouse so combative she put Ollie in the hospital in Thicker Than Water. Daphne's husband here is the one and only Shemp Howard, erstwhile stooge to Ted Healey who would eventually replace his brother Curly in dozens of Three Stooges shorts in the post-war years. At this point in his career Shemp was working solo in two-reel comedies and occasional features. In the mid-'30s he teamed up with Pollard for a handful of Vitaphone shorts, and in Smoked Hams they make a pretty good team. They play off each other well and seem to be ad-libbing at times, especially Shemp, and they're on the same low comedy wavelength. Daphne's character is a lot nicer than her Mrs. Hardy, hapless and accident-prone, with just a touch of Gracie Allen-style dizziness.

    The opening sequence is set in the couple's hotel, a grubby place that's one step up from a flop-house. Shemp lathers up to shave, while Daphne secretly uses his straight razor to open a tin can. Once he retrieves his razor Shemp shaves himself at high speed in a routine that looks very much like the sort of thing he would do later on with the Stooges. Daphne, meanwhile, violates hotel rules by attempting to cook a meal, creatively using a suit of armor from their act as a makeshift stove. All of this is accompanied by jaunty music and exaggerated sound effects that lend the proceedings a cartoon-like quality, which is helpful when, for instance, Daphne sits on the hot plate. Slapstick of this variety always feels unreal and safe to laugh at in silent comedy, but in a talkie we need the music and sound effects to keep painful-looking gags harmless. In this short the world of reality is far, far away, and we might as well be watching Flip the Frog. Incidentally, when Shemp and Daphne confront the grungy landlord of their grungy lodgings there's a nice little inside joke with the music: underscoring the scene is the melody from the Busby Berkeley musical Footlight Parade, "Honeymoon Hotel."

    Having worked up a new act, and fully convinced that it's brilliant, Howard & Pollard head for the talent agency run by Ivanitch, who turns out to be gravel-voiced character actor Lionel Stander wearing a highly unconvincing goatee. The team's sketch has a Civil War setting and is grandly entitled "Justice Triumphs, or The Drummer Boy's Revenge." In the course of demonstrating the act they manage to trash Ivanitch's office, but despite everything he somehow believes that the finale, which involves shooting off a big cannon, is a genuine sensation. We never find out exactly why he thinks the cannon bit is so great, but when Howard & Pollard perform their act before an audience it's a safe bet that the cannon routine will—so to speak—misfire, and that Ivanitch will be on the receiving end.

    That's Smoked Hams in a nutshell, and I guess it's not going to win any awards for comic genius, but for those who enjoy movies with backstage settings, especially from the days of Vaudeville, this one is fun if you catch it in the right mood. And for Shemp fans it's a must!
    3bkoganbing

    The tePainfully unfunnyam of Pollard and Howard

    Future Stooge Shemp Howard who passed on a chance to be an original in the 3 Stooges, but later joined the act when Curly fell ill is teamed with Daphne Pollard for this film Smoked Hams.

    Pollard and Howard did a few short subjects in the early 30s and I hope Smoked Hams wasn't one of their better efforts.

    The title comes from the two trying to cook some hams in their boadinghouse. The landlord has a rule no cooking in his establishment. But the team's got to eat.

    Later on they try to convince theater owner Lionel Stander to book their act. Stander should have gone with his first instinct.

    For Shemp's fans only.

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    Related interests

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    Short

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The stock shot of the audience, with a youngish Charles Lane very noticeable, turns up in other Vitaphone shorts with a theatrical setting, such as "The Policy Girl."
    • Quotes

      Henry Howard: Emma, c'mere and shave the back of my neck, will ya?

    • Soundtracks
      Tammany
      (uncredited)

      Music by Gus Edwards

      Played after Emma gives Henry the razor

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 20, 1934 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Big V Comedies (1934-1935 Season) #4: Smoked Hams
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 19m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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