The final Marx Brothers film generally is considered to be “Love Happy.” Premiering in San Francisco in 1949, it was released throughout the U.S. 65 years ago this past March. Since Groucho, Chico and ...
Mention the Marx brothers, and most people's minds go immediately to the feature films of Groucho, Chico, Harpo and Zeppo. We're talking enduring comedies like "Duck Soup," "A Day at the Races," "A ...
Harpo Marx once conducted a Riverside Symphony concert. The so-called “silent partner” in the Marx Brothers — he never spoke, instead whistling, using props and performing pantomime — behaved as ...
The 1955 episodes have been colorized and seamlessly blended into one hour-long special, which finds Lucy trying to fool her visiting New York friend Caroline Appleby into believing she really knows ...
For Marx Brothers fans, the posthumous publication of Susan Fleming Marx's memoir, "Speaking of Harpo," raises a glimmer of hope that other holy grails in the comedy team's mythology - their long-lost ...
This is a 1933 file photo of the Marx Brothers, from left, Zeppo, Harpo, Chico and Groucho. The movie "Horse Feathers" is a Marx Brothers classic. The new president of Huxley College recruits players ...
Born 130 years ago today was Leonard "Chico" Marx, the piano-playing "Italian" Marx Brother who uttered one of the most famous lines in film history: "You can't fool me! There ain't no Sanity Claus." ...
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If the trustees of Princeton or any other U. S. university which lacks a president had met last month to choose one, they would surely not have chosen Groucho Marx. He lacks the manner, the appearance ...
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