KK Zadar and Moe Howard: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Basketball club
{{Infobox actor
| name = Moe Howard
| color1 =#333399
| image = Horowitzmosesphoto.jpg
| color2 =#FFFFFF
| imagesize = 200px
| name =KK Zadar
| nickname =
| caption = Howard in 1933.
| birthname = Harry Moses Horwitz
| logo =kkzadarlogo.gif
| birthdate = {{birth date|1897|6|19|mf=y}}
| imagesize =100 x 100
| birthplace = [[Brownsville, New York]]
| leagues =[[NLB League]]<br>[[A1 Liga]]
| deathdate = {{death date and age|1975|5|4|1897|6|19}}
| founded =[[1945]]
| deathplace = [[Los Angeles, California]]
| history =1945 - present
([[Lung Cancer]])
| arena =[[Krešimir Ćosić Hall]]
| yearsactive = 1909-1975
(capacity: 9,200)
| spouse = [[Helen Schonberger]]<BR>(1925-1975)
| location =[[Zadar]], [[Croatia]]
| colors =White and Blue
| president ={{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Kristijan Magaš]]
| coach ={{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Aleksandar "Aco" Petrović]]
| championships =6 Championships of Yugoslavia<br>1 Yugoslavian Cup<br>6 [[Krešimir Ćosić Cup|Croatian Cups]]<br>2 [[A1 Liga|Championships of Croatia]]<br>1 [[NLB League|Adriatic League Championship]]
| website =[http://www.bczadar.com// www.bczadar.com]
| h_body = 000099
| h_pattern_b = _thinsidesonwhite
| h_shorts = ffffff
| h_pattern_s =
| a_body = 000099
| a_pattern_b = _thinwhitesides
| a_shorts = 000099
| a_pattern_s =
}}
}}


'''Moe Howard''' ([[June 19]], [[1897]] – [[May 4]], [[1975]]) was one of the [[Three Stooges]], the [[slapstick]] comedy team who starred in motion pictures and television for four decades. His distinctive hairstyle came about when he was a boy and cut off his curls with a pair of [[scissors]], producing a ragged shape approximating a [[helmet]].
'''KK Zadar''' is a [[Croatia]]n [[basketball]] team from the city of [[Zadar]]. The club currently plays in the [[NLB League]], [[A1 Liga]] and the [[ULEB Cup]].


==Biography==
Zadar is the place where Croatian basketball was born in 1930. Zadar's reputation has been of a basketball hotbed with a team that can capture trophies at any given moment. Zadar is also known for its fanatical die hard supporters, Tornado.
===Early life===
Moe was born '''Moses Harry Horwitz''' in the [[Brooklyn, New York]] neighborhood of [[Brownsville]] to Solomon Horwitz and Jennie Gorovitz. He was the fourth of the five Horwitz brothers and of [[Levite]] and [[Lithuanian Jews|Lithuanian Jewish]] ancestry. In his younger years, he got the nickname Moe. Although his parents were not involved in show business, Moe, his older brother [[Shemp Howard|Samuel]], and younger brother [[Curly Howard|Jerome]], all eventually became world-famous as members of the Three Stooges.


In school, Moe originally did quite well, aided by a prolific memory, able to quickly memorize anything. In later years, this helped him in his acting career, making memorizing his lines quick and easy. Moe loved reading, as his older brother Jack commented: "I had many [[Horatio Alger]] books and it was Moe's greatest pleasure to read them. They started his imaginative mind working and gave him ideas by the dozen. I think they were instrumental in putting thoughts into his head to become a person of good character and to become successful."<ref name="Moe"/>
== History ==
=== Early years ===
The first basketball ball and game rules of basketball were brought to Zadar by Italian soldiers during [[World War II]], a time at which Zadar was occupied by the Italians. At that time all basketball games being played in Zadar were played on an outdoor, concrete court. KK Zadar was formally founded after World War II in 1945 as FD Zadar (''Fiskulturno Društvo Zadar'' - Physical Culture Club of Zadar). Shortly after this clubs founding, its basketball section went independent and became what is today's KK Zadar. [[Giuseppe "Pino" Giergia]] played his first game for Zadar in 1945; he later became one of the clubs most famous players.


Although his "[[bowl-cut]]" hairstyle is now widely recognized, as a child his mother refused to cut his hair, letting it grow to shoulder length. One day, he could not take his classmates' years of teasing any longer, sneaked off to a shed in his parents' back yard, and with the help of a friend and a mixing bowl, cut his hair. Moe was so afraid his mother would be upset (she enjoyed curling his hair) that he hid under the house for several hours, causing a panic. He finally came out and his mother was so glad to see him that she did not even mention the hair.
The 1949, KK Zadar entered [[SFRY|Yugoslavia's]] first basketball division, remaining there until the country's break-up in 1990.


Moe began to develop an interest in acting and, as a result, his schoolwork suffered. He began playing hooky from school in order to attend theater shows. Moe said, "I used to stand outside the theater knowing the truant officer was looking for me. I would stand there 'til someone came along and then ask them to buy my ticket. It was necessary for an adult to accompany a juvenile into the theater. When I succeeded I'd give him my ten cents — that's all it cost — and I'd go up to the top of the balcony where I'd put my chin on the rail and watch, spellbound, from the first act to the last. I would usually select the actor I liked the most and follow his performance throughout the play."<ref name="Moe">{{cite book
=== 1960-1970 ===
| last = Howard
On November 28th 1964, [[Krešimir Ćosić]] played his first game for Zadar, while being only 16 years old.
| first = Moe
| authorlink = Moe Howard
| coauthors =
| title = ''Moe Howard and the Three Stooges''
| publisher = Broadway Publishing
| date = 1977, rev. 1979
| location =
| pages =
| url = http://www.amazon.com/dp/0806507233
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = 978-0806507231}}</ref>


Despite his decreasing attendance Moe graduated from P.S. 163 in Brooklyn, but he dropped out of [[Erasmus Hall High School]] after only two months. This was the end of his formal education. To mollify his parents he took a class in electric shop, but quit after a few months to pursue a career in show business.<ref name="Moe"/>
In 1965 KK Zadar won a national championship. They again became champions in 1967 and 1968. In that championship year Kreso Cosic often knew to score even a 60 points per game. The clubs new arena, [[Jazine]], was built in 1968 in only 70 days. Also in 1966, Zadar played in the Euroleague final four; they were beaten in the semi finals and ended the tournament in third place. In 1969 Krešo Ćosić left for the United States to play college basketball at [[Brigham Young University]] from 1971 to 1973.
[[Image:Munich 1972.jpg|thumb|Krešimir Ćosić vs. Petr Novicky of Czechoslovakia]]


Moe began by running errands for no fee at the [[Vitagraph Studios]] in [[Midwood]], Brooklyn (currently the home of the [[CBS]] daytime serial ''[[As the World Turns]]''), where he was rewarded with bit parts in movies being made there. Unfortunately, a fire at the studios in 1910 destroyed the film of most of Moe's work done there. In 1909 he met a young man named [[Ted Healy|Lee Nash]] who would later provide a significant boost to Moe's career aspirations. In 1912, they both held a summer job working in [[Annette Kellerman]]'s aquatic act as diving "girls."<ref name="Moe"/>
=== 1970-1980 ===
In 1973, Zadar was almost relegated from the Yugoslav first division. In this time of crisis, Kreso Cosic returned to the club and with 36-year-old Giuseppe "Pino" Giergia Zadar once again became Yugoslav Champions, only to repeat this success two years later.


===Career===
In 1976 Giuseppe Pino Giergia retired and Krešo Ćosić left the club to fulfill his obligations toward the [[Yugoslav Peoples Army|Yugoslav Army]] (At this time, conscription was mandatory). During that time club was in a very difficult situation and once again were close to relegation. The club was once again saved by Krešo Ćosić who, after his military service, became the coach of Bresto in Italy. While he was the coach of Bresto he played basketball games for KK Zadar and once again saved the club from relegation.
Moe continued his attempts at gaining show business experience by singing in a bar with his older brother [[Shemp Howard|Shemp]] until their father put a stop to it, and in 1914 joining a performing troupe on a [[Mississippi River]] showboat for the next two summers. In 1921, he joined [[Ted Healy|Lee Nash]], who was now firmly established in show business as [[Ted Healy]], in a vaudeville routine. In 1923, Moe spotted Shemp watching the show and yelled at him from the stage. Shemp and Moe heckled each other to a large positive response from the audience and Healy hired Shemp as a permanent part of the act. Next, Healy recruited a vaudeville violinist, [[Larry Fine]], in 1925, to join the comedy troupe, which was billed as "Ted Healy and His Racketeers" (later changed to Ted Healy and His Stooges).<ref name="Moe"/>


On June 7, 1925, Moe Howard married Helen Schonberger, a cousin of magician [[Harry Houdini]]. The next year, Helen pressured Moe to leave the stage, as she was pregnant and wanted Moe nearer to home. Moe attempted to earn a living in a succession of "normal" jobs, none of which was very successful. He soon returned to working with Ted Healy.<ref name="Moe"/>
=== 1980-1990 ===
In the 1981/1982 season another legendary Zadar play made his debut: [[Stojko Vranković]]. During that season club has made it to the semifinals of [[Korać Cup]]. They repeated this success the very next season. In 1986 another milestone for the club was achieved: the club got its first world record holder, Zdenko Babić, who has scored 144 points against Apoel form Cyprus in the Korać cup.


By 1930, Ted Healy and his Stooges were on the verge of "the big time," and made their first movie, ''[[Soup to Nuts]]'' — featuring Ted Healy, and his four Stooges (Moe, Shemp, Larry, and one-shot Stooge Fred Sanborn) — for Fox Films (later [[Twentieth Century-Fox]]). Shemp had never seen eye-to-eye with the hard-drinking and sometimes belligerent Healy, and left the group shortly after filming in order to pursue a solo film career. After a short search for a replacement, Moe suggested his youngest brother, Jerome ("Jerry" to his friends, "Babe" to Moe and Shemp). Healy originally passed on Jerry, but Jerry was so eager to join the act that he shaved off his luxuriant auburn mustache and hair and ran on stage during Healy's routine. Healy hired Jerry, who took the stage name of "Curly."<ref name="Moe"/>
[[Arijan Komazec]] made his debut for Zadar in 1986, and he, along with Stojko Vranković, would play a crucial role in the years to follow. After 11 years of waiting, Zadar won its sixth national championship in 1986. In the finals of that year, KK Zadar met [[KK Cibona]], and in a historic and legendary match, KK Zadar beat KK Cibona by 111:110. They won the game after two overtimes and thanks to an excellent performance by Petar Popović who scored 35 points. In 1987 the club won fourth place in the Euroleague. In 1989 Krešo Ćosić and Giuseppe "Pino" Giergia took charge of the club.


Healy and the Stooges were hired by [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]] as "nut" comics, to liven up feature films and short subjects with their antics. After a number of appearances in MGM films, Healy was being groomed as a solo character comedian. With Healy pursuing his own career, his Stooges (now christened '''The Three Stooges''') signed with [[Columbia Pictures]] where they stayed until December 1959, making 190 short films.<ref name="Moe"/>
=== 1990-2000 ===
Krešo Ćosić left the club in August 1990 because of a disagreement with the rest of club leadership. Ćosić yould never return to the club, as soon was diagnosed with cancer, only to pass away shortly thereafter, in 1995. In the first, newly founded, [[A1 Liga|Croatian national championship]], in the 1991/1992 season, the club has played in the finals. That year club has also played in the Euroleague. They were the finalist of the [[Krešimir Ćosić Cup|national cup]] in the season of 1992/1993.


With Healy's departure, Moe's character assumed Healy's previous role of the aggressive, take-charge leader of the Three Stooges: a short-tempered bully, prone to slapstick violence against the other two Stooges. In many ways, this was the antithesis of Moe Howard's real personality; he was quiet, loving, and generous to his friends and family. He was also a shrewd businessman, and invested the money made from his film career wisely. However, the Stooges got no subsequent royalties from any of their many shorts: they were paid a flat amount for each one and Columbia owned the rights (and profits) thereafter.<ref name="Moe"/>
In years to come club began to stagnate in the national championship and European competitions. In 1996 with a new coach on the helm, [[Danijel Jusup]], Zadar reached the playoffs of the national championship, where they lost to KK Cibona. They repeated this success the following year with [[Emilio Kovačić]] as Zadar's key player, yet Cibona won the title once again.


In 1934, Columbia released its first Three Stooges short, ''[[Woman Haters]]'', where their stooge characters were not quite finalized. It was not a Stooge comedy in the classic sense, but rather a romantic farce; Columbia was then making a series of two-reel "Musical Novelties" with the dialogue spoken in rhyme, and the Stooges were recruited to support comedienne [[Marjorie White]]. Only after the Stooges became established as short-subject stars were the main titles changed to give the Stooges top billing. The version seen on TV and video today is this reissue print.<ref name="Moe"/>
In 1998 Zadar won the Krešimir Ćosić Cup, Croatia's basketball cup competitions. [[Marko Popović (born 1982)|Marko Popović]], the son of Petar Popović made his debut in 1998 for Zadar at age 16. In the summer of the 1999 Arijan Komazec returned to Zadar from [[Virtus Bologna]], and the club had also signed [[Dino Rađa]] from Panathinaikos. In the season 1999/2000 Zadar had won its 2nd Krešimir Ćosić cup and had played, once again, in the semifinals of national championship and Saporta cup. Dino Rađa and Arijan Komazec proved as crucial players for the success in that season.


Their next film, ''[[Punch Drunks]]'', was the only short film that was written entirely by the Three Stooges, with Curly as a reluctant boxer who goes ballistic every time he hears "[[Pop Goes the Weasel]]." Their next short, ''[[Men in Black (1934 film)|Men in Black]]'' (a parody of the hospital drama ''Men in White'') was their first and only film to be nominated for an [[Academy Award]] (with the classic catchphrase, "Calling Dr. Howard, Dr. Fine, Dr. Howard"). They continued making short films at a steady pace of eight per year, such as ''[[Three Little Pigskins]]'' (with a very young [[Lucille Ball]]), ''[[Pop Goes the Easel]]'', ''[[Hoi Polloi (1935 film)|Hoi Polloi]]'' (where two professors make a bet trying to turn the Three Stooges into gentlemen), and many others.<ref name="Moe"/>
=== 2000-present ===
In the seasons of 2000/ 2001, 2001/2002 Zadar played in the playoffs of national championship twice and once in Krešimir Ćosić Cup, yet they didn't win any of the possible 3 titles. In the season of 2002/2003 Danijel Jusup returned to the club as Head Coach. During that season, with Marko Popović as a lead player, Zadar won its third Krešimir Ćosić Cup, as well as the newly established regional league [[NLB League|Goodyear Adriatic League]], founded on the ashes of the Yugoslav league and containing the best teams from the former Yugoslav republics. Zadar beat [[Maccabi Tel Aviv]] in the final.


[[Image:Emilstooge.jpg|thumb|200px|left|A promotional picture taken in 1975 (after Larry Fine's death), from left to right, Curly Joe DeRita, Moe Howard (who died shortly thereafter) and [[Emil Sitka]].]]
In the summer of 2003 Marko Popović left Zadar as Emilo Kovačić returned. Going into the [[ULEB Cup]] for a third season in 2004-05, Zadar once again missed the playoffs by a single win. In the season of 2004/2005 Zadar finally won the Croatian national championship, after a 19 year wait. That season Zadar has also won their fourth Krešimir Ćosić Cup in a truly historical season. In 2006, they repeated their success from previous season in the Krešimir Ćosić Cup winning their fifth cup. Zadar returned to the national league final in each of the last two seasons, but KK Cibona stood on its way to another league title.
In the 1940s, the Three Stooges became topical, making several anti-Nazi movies including ''[[You Nazty Spy!]]'' (Moe's favorite Three Stooges film), ''[[I'll Never Heil Again]]'', and ''[[They Stooge to Conga]]''. Moe's impersonation of [[Adolf Hitler]] highlighted these shorts, the first of which preceded [[Charles Chaplin]]'s controversial film satire, ''[[The Great Dictator]]'', by months.<ref name="Moe"/>


On [[May 6]], [[1946]], during the filming of ''[[Half-Wits Holiday]],'' brother Curly suffered a [[stroke]]. He was replaced in the Three Stooges by Shemp, who agreed to return to the group until Curly would be well enough to rejoin. Although Curly recovered enough to appear in ''[[Hold That Lion!]]'' in a cameo appearance (the only Three Stooges film to contain all three Howard brothers; Moe, Curly, and Shemp), he soon suffered a series of strokes which led to his death on [[January 18]], [[1952]].<ref name="Moe"/>
In 2008 Zadar became the Croatian champion for the second time, beating KK Split 3-2 in the best of 5 series. The final game of the series, which Zadar won 89 to 65, was the last game ever played at [[Jazine Basketball Hall|Jazine]], affectionately called "The Temple of Croatian Basketball" by many fans and basketball aficionados.


The Three Stooges' series of shorts continued to be popular through the 1950s; Shemp co-starred in 73 comedies. (The Stooges also co-starred in a [[George O'Brien (actor)|George O'Brien]] western, ''[[Gold Raiders]]'', in 1951.) Moe also co-produced occasional western and musical films in the 1950s.
== Basketball Hall ==
The club currently plays out of a newly completed multi-purpose venue located in Zadar's Višnjik neighborhood. The recently built hall can seat 9000 spectators and carrys the name of Krešimir Ćosić.


On [[November 22]], [[1955]], Shemp died of a [[myocardial infarction|heart attack]], necessitating the need for another Stooge. Producer [[Jules White]] used old footage of Shemp to complete four more films with Columbia regular [[Joe Palma]] filling in for Shemp, until [[Harry Cohn]] hired [[Joe Besser]] in 1956. According to Moe's autobiography, Howard wanted a "two stooge" act, and that it was Cohn's idea, not Moe's, to replace Shemp as part of the act. Joe, Larry, and Moe filmed 16 shorts through December 1957. With the death of Columbia head [[Harry Cohn]], the making of short subjects came to an end, and Howard was forced to take a job as a [[gofer]] at Columbia.<ref name="Moe"/>
==Famous players==


Fortunately for the Stooges, Columbia sold the Three Stooges' library of short films to television under the "Screen Gems" brand. With this, the Three Stooges quickly gained a new audience of young fans. Ever the businessman, Moe Howard put together a new Stooges act, with [[burlesque]] and screen comic [[Curly Joe DeRita|Joe DeRita]] (dubbed "Curly-Joe" due to his resemblance to Curly Howard) as the new "third Stooge." The revitalized trio starred in several feature-length movies: ''[[Have Rocket, Will Travel]]'', ''[[Snow White and the Three Stooges]]'', ''[[The Three Stooges Meet Hercules]]'', ''[[The Three Stooges in Orbit]]'', ''[[The Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze]]'', and ''[[The Outlaws Is Coming!]]''.<ref name="Moe"/>
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Krešimir Ćosić]] ( member of the [[Basketball Hall of Fame]] )
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Josip Đerđa]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Stojko Vranković]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Tomislav Knežević]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Emilio Kovačić]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Stipe Šarlija]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Arijan Komazec]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Branko Skroće]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Veljko Petranović]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Petar Popović]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Marko Popović (born 1982)|Marko Popović]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Damir Tvrdić]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Hrvoje Perinčić]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Dino Rađa]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Marko Banić]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Goran Kalamiza]]
*{{flagicon|Serbia}} [[Dejan Bodiroga]]


Moe, Larry and Curly-Joe continued to make live appearances, many notable "guest appearances", notably in ''[[It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World]]'' and ''[[4 for Texas]]''. The boys tried their hand at a children's cartoon show titled ''[[The New 3 Stooges]]'', with the cartoons sandwiched between live action segments of the boys. However, by 1965, the three had aged too much to continue performing slapstick comedy. They did receive royalties from their features with Curly-Joe, and income from the volume of Three Stooges merchandising.
===Famous coaches===


[[Image:oldmoe75.jpeg|thumb|right|Moe Howard in February 1975, three months before his death.]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Enzo Sovitti]]
Moe sold [[real estate]] when his show-business life slowed down, although he still did minor roles and walk-on bits in movies (''Don't Worry, We'll Think of a Title'', ''Dr. Death: Seeker of Souls'') and television appearances (''[[Here's Hollywood]]'', ''[[Toast of the Town]]'', ''[[Masquerade Party]]'', ''[[Truth or Consequences]]'' and several appearances on ''[[The Mike Douglas Show]]''). The Stooges also made several appearances on late night television, particularly ''[[The Tonight Show]]''.
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Luciano Valčić]]
*{{flagicon|Serbia}} [[Vlade Đurović]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Vladimir Vanjak]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Ivica Burić]]
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} [[Danijel Jusup]]


The Stooges attempted to make a final film in 1969, ''[[Kook's Tour]]'', which was essentially an early "reality TV" show of Moe, Larry and Curly-Joe, out of character, touring the country and interacting with fans. On January 8, 1970, Larry suffered a major [[stroke]] during filming, and died on [[January 24]], [[1975]], at age 72. Moe asked long-time Three Stooges supporting actor [[Emil Sitka]] to replace Larry but this final lineup never recorded any material before Moe's death on [[May 4]], [[1975]], just a month shy of his 78th birthday.<ref name="Moe"/>
===Current roster===
''updated on September 2008''


Moe and the Three Stooges received a Star on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]] on [[August 30]], [[1983]], at 1560 Vine Street. Moe was portrayed by actor [[Paul Ben-Victor]] in ''The Three Stooges'', a made-for-TV biopic that focused on trio's years in show business and their offscreen lives.
{| width="800px"
|----- bgcolor="#DDDDDD"
|'''Name'''
!No.
!Nationality
!DOB
!Height
!Former club
|----- bgcolor="#EEEEEE"
| colspan="6" align="left" | '''Coach'''
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Aleksandar "Aco" Petrović]] ||align="center"| ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}} ||align="center"| 16.02.1959. ||align="center"| 1,92 ||align="center"| [[Scafati Basket]]
|----- bgcolor="#EEEEEE"
| colspan="6" align="left" | '''Guards'''
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Rok Stipčević]] ||align="center"| 6 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 20.05.1986. ||align="center"| 1,83 ||align="center"| KK Zadar youth
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Marlon Garnett]] ||align="center"| 7 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|USA}}||align="center" ||align="center"| 1,87 ||align="center"| [[KK Split]]
|[[Malik Dixon]] ||align="center"| 7 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|USA}}||align="center"| 07.09.1975. ||align="center"| 1,87 ||align="center"| [[Hapoel Holon]]
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Damir Rančić]] ||align="center"| 41 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 23.06.1983. ||align="center"| 1,97 ||align="center"| [[Panellinios_Gymnastikos_Syllogos|Panellinios]]
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Toni Prostran]] ||align="center"| 10 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 09.04.1991. ||align="center"| 1,81 ||align="center"| KK Zadar youth
|----- bgcolor="#EEEEEE"
| colspan="6" align="left" | '''Forwards'''
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Julius Juby Johnson]] ||align="center"| 8 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|USA}}||align="center"| 08.11.1981. ||align="center"| 1,98 ||align="center"| [[Miami RedHawks men's basketball|Miami RedHawks, Ohio (NCAA)]]
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Hrvoje Perić]] ||align="center"| 5 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 25.10.1985. ||align="center"| 2,03 ||align="center"| [[KK Split]]
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Šime Olivari]] ||align="center"| 00 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 1990. ||align="center"| 1,98 ||align="center"| KK Zadar youth
|----- bgcolor="#EEEEEE"
| colspan="6" align="left" | '''Centers'''
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Todor Gečevski]]||align="center"| 11 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Macedonia}} ||align="center"| 28.08.1978. ||align="center"| 2,09 ||align="center"| KK Rabotnički Skopje
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Tomislav Ružić]] ||align="center"| 13 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 02.07.1986. ||align="center"| 2,07 ||align="center"| [[Antalya Kepez Belediyesi]]
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Jere Macura]] ||align="center"| 15 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Croatia}}||align="center"| 07.01.1980. ||align="center"| 2,03 ||align="center"| KK Kvarner Novi Resort
|----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF"
|[[Dejan Ivanov]] ||align="center"| 00 ||align="center"| {{flagicon|Bulgaria}}||align="center"| 11.03.1986. ||align="center"| 2,04 ||align="center"| [[KK Split]]
|----- bgcolor="#EEEEEE"
| colspan="6" align="left" |
|}


===Death===
==Squad Transfers 2008/2009==
A lifelong smoker, Moe Howard died of [[lung cancer]] on [[May 4]], [[1975]]. He was interred at [[Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery]] in [[Culver City, California]]. His wife died of a heart attack in October 1975 and is buried next to him.
'''In:'''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Tomislav Ružić]]''' - '''From''' ''[[Antalya Kepez Belediyesi]]''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Damir Rančić]]''' - '''From''' ''[[Panellinios_Gymnastikos_Syllogos|Panellinios]]''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Hrvoje Perić]]''' - '''From''' ''[[KK Split]]''
*{{flagicon|Bulgaria}} '''[[Dejan Ivanov]]''' - '''From''' ''[[KK Split]]''
*{{flagicon|USA}}{{flagicon|Mexico}} '''[[Romel Beck]]''' - '''From''' ''[[Orlandina_Basket|Pierrel Capo d'Orlando]]''
*{{flagicon|USA}} '''[[Malik Dixon]]''' - '''From''' ''[[Hapoel Holon]]''


Moe and [[Helen Howard|Helen]] had two children: [[Joan Howard Maurer]] (born 1927) and Paul Howard (born 1935).
'''Out:'''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Pankracije Barać]]''' - '''To''' ''[[Spirou Charleroi]]''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Jure Lalić]]''' - '''To''' ''[[Spirou Charleroi]]''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Andrej Štimac]]''' - '''To''' ''[[KK Zagreb]]''
*{{flagicon|USA}} '''[[Shammell Stallworth]]''' - '''To''' ''[[Zhejiang Cyclones]]''
*{{flagicon|USA}} '''[[Corey L. Brewer]]''' - '''To''' ''[[ASK Riga]]''


==References==
'''On loan:'''
{{reflist}}
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Marino Šarlija]]''' - '''To''' ''[[KK Borik Puntamika]]''
*{{flagicon|USA}}{{flagicon|Mexico}} '''[[Romel Beck]]''' - '''To''' ''Unknown''
*{{flagicon|Croatia}} '''[[Pavle Marčinković]]''' - '''To''' ''Unknown''


==Further reading==
== External links ==
* ''The Columbia Comedy Shorts''; by [[Ted Okuda]] with Edward Watz [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0786405775/], (McFarland, 1986).
*[http://www.bczadar.com/ Official website of KK Zadar]
* ''The Complete Three Stooges: The Official Filmography and Three Stooges Companion''; by Jon Solomon [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0971186804], (Comedy III Productions, Inc., 2002).
*[http://www.tornado-zadar.hr/ Tornado Zadar - Official Zadar fan site]
* ''The Three Stooges Scrapbook''; by Jeff Lenburg, Joan Howard Maurer, Greg Lenburg [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0806509465](Citadel Press, 1994).
* ''The Three Stooges: An Illustrated History, From Amalgamated Morons to American Icons''; by Michael Fleming [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0767905563](Broadway Publishing, 2002).
* ''One Fine Stooge: A Frizzy Life in Pictures''; by Steve Cox and Jim Terry [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1581823630], (Cumberland House Publishing, 2006).


==External links==
{{bb start}}
* [http://www.3-stooges.com/text/moe.html Biography at 3-stooges.com]
{{A1 Liga}}
* [http://web2.airmail.net/willdogs/ My Pal Moe by Bob Bernet] (featuring letters and rare photos of Moe Howard at home)
{{ULEB Eurocup}}
{{bb end}}
* {{imdb|0002935}}
* {{ibdb|88613}}
* {{Find A Grave|id=512}}


{{ThreeStooges}}
[[Category:Basketball teams in Croatia|Zadar]]
[[Category:Zadar]]
[[Category:Sports clubs established in 1945|Zadar]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Howard, Moe}}
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[[Category:1897 births]]
[[es:KK Zadar]]
[[Category:1975 deaths]]
[[Category:American film actors]]
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[[Category:American television actors]]
[[hr:KK Zadar]]
[[Category:American stage actors]]
[[lt:Zadar]]
[[Category:American voice actors]]
[[Category:People from Brooklyn]]
[[Category:American comedians]]
[[Category:American Jews]]
[[Category:Jewish comedians]]
[[Category:Deaths from lung cancer]]
[[Category:Three Stooges members]]
[[Category:Vaudeville performers]]
[[Category:Cancer deaths in California]]

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Revision as of 09:47, 10 October 2008

Moe Howard
File:Horowitzmosesphoto.jpg
Howard in 1933.
Born
Harry Moses Horwitz
Years active1909-1975
SpouseHelen Schonberger
(1925-1975)

Moe Howard (June 19, 1897May 4, 1975) was one of the Three Stooges, the slapstick comedy team who starred in motion pictures and television for four decades. His distinctive hairstyle came about when he was a boy and cut off his curls with a pair of scissors, producing a ragged shape approximating a helmet.

Biography

Early life

Moe was born Moses Harry Horwitz in the Brooklyn, New York neighborhood of Brownsville to Solomon Horwitz and Jennie Gorovitz. He was the fourth of the five Horwitz brothers and of Levite and Lithuanian Jewish ancestry. In his younger years, he got the nickname Moe. Although his parents were not involved in show business, Moe, his older brother Samuel, and younger brother Jerome, all eventually became world-famous as members of the Three Stooges.

In school, Moe originally did quite well, aided by a prolific memory, able to quickly memorize anything. In later years, this helped him in his acting career, making memorizing his lines quick and easy. Moe loved reading, as his older brother Jack commented: "I had many Horatio Alger books and it was Moe's greatest pleasure to read them. They started his imaginative mind working and gave him ideas by the dozen. I think they were instrumental in putting thoughts into his head to become a person of good character and to become successful."[1]

Although his "bowl-cut" hairstyle is now widely recognized, as a child his mother refused to cut his hair, letting it grow to shoulder length. One day, he could not take his classmates' years of teasing any longer, sneaked off to a shed in his parents' back yard, and with the help of a friend and a mixing bowl, cut his hair. Moe was so afraid his mother would be upset (she enjoyed curling his hair) that he hid under the house for several hours, causing a panic. He finally came out and his mother was so glad to see him that she did not even mention the hair.

Moe began to develop an interest in acting and, as a result, his schoolwork suffered. He began playing hooky from school in order to attend theater shows. Moe said, "I used to stand outside the theater knowing the truant officer was looking for me. I would stand there 'til someone came along and then ask them to buy my ticket. It was necessary for an adult to accompany a juvenile into the theater. When I succeeded I'd give him my ten cents — that's all it cost — and I'd go up to the top of the balcony where I'd put my chin on the rail and watch, spellbound, from the first act to the last. I would usually select the actor I liked the most and follow his performance throughout the play."[1]

Despite his decreasing attendance Moe graduated from P.S. 163 in Brooklyn, but he dropped out of Erasmus Hall High School after only two months. This was the end of his formal education. To mollify his parents he took a class in electric shop, but quit after a few months to pursue a career in show business.[1]

Moe began by running errands for no fee at the Vitagraph Studios in Midwood, Brooklyn (currently the home of the CBS daytime serial As the World Turns), where he was rewarded with bit parts in movies being made there. Unfortunately, a fire at the studios in 1910 destroyed the film of most of Moe's work done there. In 1909 he met a young man named Lee Nash who would later provide a significant boost to Moe's career aspirations. In 1912, they both held a summer job working in Annette Kellerman's aquatic act as diving "girls."[1]

Career

Moe continued his attempts at gaining show business experience by singing in a bar with his older brother Shemp until their father put a stop to it, and in 1914 joining a performing troupe on a Mississippi River showboat for the next two summers. In 1921, he joined Lee Nash, who was now firmly established in show business as Ted Healy, in a vaudeville routine. In 1923, Moe spotted Shemp watching the show and yelled at him from the stage. Shemp and Moe heckled each other to a large positive response from the audience and Healy hired Shemp as a permanent part of the act. Next, Healy recruited a vaudeville violinist, Larry Fine, in 1925, to join the comedy troupe, which was billed as "Ted Healy and His Racketeers" (later changed to Ted Healy and His Stooges).[1]

On June 7, 1925, Moe Howard married Helen Schonberger, a cousin of magician Harry Houdini. The next year, Helen pressured Moe to leave the stage, as she was pregnant and wanted Moe nearer to home. Moe attempted to earn a living in a succession of "normal" jobs, none of which was very successful. He soon returned to working with Ted Healy.[1]

By 1930, Ted Healy and his Stooges were on the verge of "the big time," and made their first movie, Soup to Nuts — featuring Ted Healy, and his four Stooges (Moe, Shemp, Larry, and one-shot Stooge Fred Sanborn) — for Fox Films (later Twentieth Century-Fox). Shemp had never seen eye-to-eye with the hard-drinking and sometimes belligerent Healy, and left the group shortly after filming in order to pursue a solo film career. After a short search for a replacement, Moe suggested his youngest brother, Jerome ("Jerry" to his friends, "Babe" to Moe and Shemp). Healy originally passed on Jerry, but Jerry was so eager to join the act that he shaved off his luxuriant auburn mustache and hair and ran on stage during Healy's routine. Healy hired Jerry, who took the stage name of "Curly."[1]

Healy and the Stooges were hired by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as "nut" comics, to liven up feature films and short subjects with their antics. After a number of appearances in MGM films, Healy was being groomed as a solo character comedian. With Healy pursuing his own career, his Stooges (now christened The Three Stooges) signed with Columbia Pictures where they stayed until December 1959, making 190 short films.[1]

With Healy's departure, Moe's character assumed Healy's previous role of the aggressive, take-charge leader of the Three Stooges: a short-tempered bully, prone to slapstick violence against the other two Stooges. In many ways, this was the antithesis of Moe Howard's real personality; he was quiet, loving, and generous to his friends and family. He was also a shrewd businessman, and invested the money made from his film career wisely. However, the Stooges got no subsequent royalties from any of their many shorts: they were paid a flat amount for each one and Columbia owned the rights (and profits) thereafter.[1]

In 1934, Columbia released its first Three Stooges short, Woman Haters, where their stooge characters were not quite finalized. It was not a Stooge comedy in the classic sense, but rather a romantic farce; Columbia was then making a series of two-reel "Musical Novelties" with the dialogue spoken in rhyme, and the Stooges were recruited to support comedienne Marjorie White. Only after the Stooges became established as short-subject stars were the main titles changed to give the Stooges top billing. The version seen on TV and video today is this reissue print.[1]

Their next film, Punch Drunks, was the only short film that was written entirely by the Three Stooges, with Curly as a reluctant boxer who goes ballistic every time he hears "Pop Goes the Weasel." Their next short, Men in Black (a parody of the hospital drama Men in White) was their first and only film to be nominated for an Academy Award (with the classic catchphrase, "Calling Dr. Howard, Dr. Fine, Dr. Howard"). They continued making short films at a steady pace of eight per year, such as Three Little Pigskins (with a very young Lucille Ball), Pop Goes the Easel, Hoi Polloi (where two professors make a bet trying to turn the Three Stooges into gentlemen), and many others.[1]

File:Emilstooge.jpg
A promotional picture taken in 1975 (after Larry Fine's death), from left to right, Curly Joe DeRita, Moe Howard (who died shortly thereafter) and Emil Sitka.

In the 1940s, the Three Stooges became topical, making several anti-Nazi movies including You Nazty Spy! (Moe's favorite Three Stooges film), I'll Never Heil Again, and They Stooge to Conga. Moe's impersonation of Adolf Hitler highlighted these shorts, the first of which preceded Charles Chaplin's controversial film satire, The Great Dictator, by months.[1]

On May 6, 1946, during the filming of Half-Wits Holiday, brother Curly suffered a stroke. He was replaced in the Three Stooges by Shemp, who agreed to return to the group until Curly would be well enough to rejoin. Although Curly recovered enough to appear in Hold That Lion! in a cameo appearance (the only Three Stooges film to contain all three Howard brothers; Moe, Curly, and Shemp), he soon suffered a series of strokes which led to his death on January 18, 1952.[1]

The Three Stooges' series of shorts continued to be popular through the 1950s; Shemp co-starred in 73 comedies. (The Stooges also co-starred in a George O'Brien western, Gold Raiders, in 1951.) Moe also co-produced occasional western and musical films in the 1950s.

On November 22, 1955, Shemp died of a heart attack, necessitating the need for another Stooge. Producer Jules White used old footage of Shemp to complete four more films with Columbia regular Joe Palma filling in for Shemp, until Harry Cohn hired Joe Besser in 1956. According to Moe's autobiography, Howard wanted a "two stooge" act, and that it was Cohn's idea, not Moe's, to replace Shemp as part of the act. Joe, Larry, and Moe filmed 16 shorts through December 1957. With the death of Columbia head Harry Cohn, the making of short subjects came to an end, and Howard was forced to take a job as a gofer at Columbia.[1]

Fortunately for the Stooges, Columbia sold the Three Stooges' library of short films to television under the "Screen Gems" brand. With this, the Three Stooges quickly gained a new audience of young fans. Ever the businessman, Moe Howard put together a new Stooges act, with burlesque and screen comic Joe DeRita (dubbed "Curly-Joe" due to his resemblance to Curly Howard) as the new "third Stooge." The revitalized trio starred in several feature-length movies: Have Rocket, Will Travel, Snow White and the Three Stooges, The Three Stooges Meet Hercules, The Three Stooges in Orbit, The Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze, and The Outlaws Is Coming!.[1]

Moe, Larry and Curly-Joe continued to make live appearances, many notable "guest appearances", notably in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and 4 for Texas. The boys tried their hand at a children's cartoon show titled The New 3 Stooges, with the cartoons sandwiched between live action segments of the boys. However, by 1965, the three had aged too much to continue performing slapstick comedy. They did receive royalties from their features with Curly-Joe, and income from the volume of Three Stooges merchandising.

File:Oldmoe75.jpeg
Moe Howard in February 1975, three months before his death.

Moe sold real estate when his show-business life slowed down, although he still did minor roles and walk-on bits in movies (Don't Worry, We'll Think of a Title, Dr. Death: Seeker of Souls) and television appearances (Here's Hollywood, Toast of the Town, Masquerade Party, Truth or Consequences and several appearances on The Mike Douglas Show). The Stooges also made several appearances on late night television, particularly The Tonight Show.

The Stooges attempted to make a final film in 1969, Kook's Tour, which was essentially an early "reality TV" show of Moe, Larry and Curly-Joe, out of character, touring the country and interacting with fans. On January 8, 1970, Larry suffered a major stroke during filming, and died on January 24, 1975, at age 72. Moe asked long-time Three Stooges supporting actor Emil Sitka to replace Larry but this final lineup never recorded any material before Moe's death on May 4, 1975, just a month shy of his 78th birthday.[1]

Moe and the Three Stooges received a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on August 30, 1983, at 1560 Vine Street. Moe was portrayed by actor Paul Ben-Victor in The Three Stooges, a made-for-TV biopic that focused on trio's years in show business and their offscreen lives.

Death

A lifelong smoker, Moe Howard died of lung cancer on May 4, 1975. He was interred at Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California. His wife died of a heart attack in October 1975 and is buried next to him.

Moe and Helen had two children: Joan Howard Maurer (born 1927) and Paul Howard (born 1935).

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Howard, Moe (1977, rev. 1979). Moe Howard and the Three Stooges. Broadway Publishing. ISBN 978-0806507231. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

Further reading

  • The Columbia Comedy Shorts; by Ted Okuda with Edward Watz [1], (McFarland, 1986).
  • The Complete Three Stooges: The Official Filmography and Three Stooges Companion; by Jon Solomon [2], (Comedy III Productions, Inc., 2002).
  • The Three Stooges Scrapbook; by Jeff Lenburg, Joan Howard Maurer, Greg Lenburg [3](Citadel Press, 1994).
  • The Three Stooges: An Illustrated History, From Amalgamated Morons to American Icons; by Michael Fleming [4](Broadway Publishing, 2002).
  • One Fine Stooge: A Frizzy Life in Pictures; by Steve Cox and Jim Terry [5], (Cumberland House Publishing, 2006).

External links