Glenn - Rio Rita was reissued in 1932 in a cut version. Unfortunately, this is 
the only print that still exists. It was recently released on Warner Brothers' 
website only line of DVDs. I have never seen any posters from this reissue. Oh, 
as you well know, I used to collect W&W poster and lobbies - and I still have a 
huge still collection on them.
- Bruce Carteron

From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Glenn Taranto
Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2010 10:29 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Wheeler Woolsey

Richard -

The first film I can recommend is DIPLOMANIACS.  I believe many consider it to 
be their best film.

Others would be HIPS, HIPS, HOORAY, COCKEYED CAVALIERS, NITWITS and as 
previously mentioned the heavily censored SO THIS IS AFRICA.

Bert and Bob only made 21 features. 20 at RKO and 1 at Columbia. They didn't 
start out as a team. Each had been successful in Vaudeville. Woolsey worked 
with WC Fields in the legit stage hit POPPY.

Bert and Bob found themselves together in RIO RITA for Ziegfeld and were a 
smash. When RKO bought the rights to the film the boys were the only ones from 
the original to go to Hollywood.  Audiences loved then and RKO paired them. 
They lasted as a team until Robert Woolsey's death in 1937.

One reason paper is so scarce on them may be the fact that their movies were 
likely never rereleased afterward. I've never seen or heard of any rereleases. 
Nor have I ever seen any rerelease paper.

Bert Wheeler kept working up until the mid-60's when he passed away. He also 
made a couple of solo films. Most notably LAS VEGAS NIGHTS in which Frank 
Sinatra made his feature debut.

Best -

Glenn


----- Original Message -----
From: Richard Evans<mailto:[email protected]>
To: Glenn Taranto<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2010 8:11 AM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Wheeler Woolsey

Someone recently posted a very nice Ben Turpin lobby on NSFGE, and along with 
it, pointed out the depressing fact that he'd be almost entirely unknown now.

While I'm very familiar with Turpin, Keaton, Laurel and Hardy etc from the BBC 
in my childhood (WC Fields I had to track down, they didn't put on for the 
kids), I have no recollection of Wheeler and Woolsey, and as far as I'm know 
first became aware of them through your posts.

Can you recommend a film to track down Glenn?

Read today that Britain's Morecambe and Wise were influenced by them.
Be interesting to see how much, other than the tall funny one with the glasses 
dying too young.



On 5 Jul 2010, at 22:49, Glenn Taranto wrote:


Regarding Wheeler and Woolsey -

Am I the only one on this list who has any material on this comic duo?

I don't seem to recall anyone else talk about collecting them.

Glenn
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