The following essay is Thrilling Days of Yesteryear’s contribution to the Fabulous Films of the 1930’s Blogathon, hosted by The Classic Movie Blog Association and currently underway from April 27-May 1, 2015. For a list of the participating blogs and the movies/topics discussed, click here.
By the 1920’s, comedy producer Mack Sennett had begun to cede ground to the man he once acknowledged as his only true rival in the field of movie comedy shorts production: Hal Roach. Roach, who established his “Lot of Fun” back in 1915 producing comedies starring his friend Harold Lloyd, had usurped Sennett by creating a new style of movie mirth that, while certainly not skimping on physical comedy, phased out the manic Keystone slapstick in favor of what we might now acknowledge as the antecedent of the modern situation comedy. Roach’s roster of funsters included Lloyd, Charley Chase, Our Gang (The Little Rascals)…and two men that begun their acting careers in the 1910s until appearing together briefly in a 1921 comedy entitled Lucky Dog: Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
Five years later, the two men would appear in a Roach
“Comedy All-Stars” production entitled 45
Minutes from Hollywood—and several short comedies later, Laurel & Hardy
would go on to become the biggest stars at Hal Roach’s studio. Not only did they make a series of hilarious
silent two-reel comedies that still win over the audiences today (Two Tars, Big Business), they successfully transitioned into talkies—with
their natural speaking voices causing them no problems the way sound derailed the
careers of other stars from the silent era.
Even though displaying their names on a theater marquee guaranteed that
customers would pay admission just to chortle at their antics, Stan and Ollie’s
careers faced a formidable threat with the onslaught of the Great Depression.
The figures for movie theater attendance plummeted once
owners realized people were forced to cut back their time spent at the
“flickers” in favor of luxuries like food, clothing and shelter. To compensate for the loss, studios stepped
up their production of “B” pictures in order to be able to offer a
“two-for-one” experience at the movies.
As such, the traditional theater program of a main feature supplemented
by “extras” like cartoons, newsreels and serial chapters began to vanish from
some venues…and that also included two-reel comedies, which were Hal Roach’s
bread-and-butter. Roach was able to keep
his studio afloat by phasing Laurel & Hardy into feature films, such as
their 1931 starring debut Pardon Us. Hal continued to star The Boys in at least
two full-length features a year (while their two-reel subjects continued until
1935), and for those employees who weren’t able to duplicate L&H’s success,
they were forced to find work elsewhere.
Sons of the Desert
was the second of the two Laurel & Hardy feature films released in 1933
(the first was the comic operetta The
Devil’s Brother, also known as Fra
Diavolo). The title refers to a
fraternal lodge of which Stan and Ollie are loyal members, and during a special
meeting the Exalted Ruler (John Elliott)—Stan humorously refers to him as the
“Exhausted Ruler”—calls for the membership to swear a solemn oath: that all
brothers in good standing will attend the annual “Sons of the Desert”
convention in Chicago. On their way home
from the meeting, Stan is worried: he shouldn’t have taken the oath, because
he’s not certain his wife Betty (Dorothy Christy) will let him go.
Ollie is incredulous—Mrs. Laurel is going to have to let Stan go, since he swore an
oath. (Oliver: “Do you have to ask your
wife everything?” Stan: “Well, if I didn’t ask her I wouldn’t
know what she wanted me to do.”) Oliver
suggests that his pal pattern his life after his own; in the Hardy household,
he is “king of his [own] castle.” The
only problem is, Mrs. Lottie Hardy (Mae Busch) appears to have usurped her
husband’s scepter; she informs him he is most certainly not going to Chicago—the two of them will vacation in the
mountains. When Oliver protests, he
winds up on the receiving end of crockery aimed at his cranium…courtesy of the
little woman.
So Ollie resorts to a bit of subterfuge: he pretends to be
ill from a nervous breakdown, and he’s enlisted Stan to find a doctor (Lucien
Littlefield) to prescribe the remedy in the form of a sea voyage to
Honolulu. (Stan rounds up a veterinarian
by mistake; Oliver: “Why did you get a veterinarian?” Stan: “Well, I didn’t
think his religion would make any
difference…”) Dr. Littlefield diagnoses Ollie with “Canis Delirious,” and tells
Mrs. Hardy that Honolulu is the only thing that will cure him. Mrs. H hates the sea, so Oliver suggests that
Stan go with him. (This is the point in
the narrative where Stan refuses…only because his wife has said “yes” to his
attending the convention, and he plans to go.)
The two men wind up in Chicago, marching in a parade,
enjoying good fellowship…and sampling a generous helping of champagne and
dancing girls. On the day they’re due
back home in Los Angeles, a local newspaper screams out the headline: “Honolulu
Liner Sinking! Floundering in Typhoon!”
Well…here’s another nice mess they’ve gotten themselves into.
Still, one of the pleasures of Desert is that you don’t have to be familiar with the history of
Laurel & Hardy to enjoy the film, because their beloved personalities are
immediately established after the opening credits roll. Stan and Ollie are kids that have never
completely grown up; both of them are also not very bright—it’s just that Ollie
maintains a sense of superiority that he’s the smarter of the two (except he
isn’t), and Stan is blissfully content to be his partner’s one man fan
club. Critic Danny Peary mused in an
essay on the film that the duo were in some ways an adult version of Hal
Roach’s Our Gang, and if you’ve ever seen any of the Little Rascals shorts that
feature byplay with George “Spanky” McFarland and Scotty Beckett (and later
Carl “Alfalfa” Switzer), you’ll notice that much of their dialogue and
mannerisms mirror those of Stan and Ollie.
Oliver Hardy gets big laughs in Sons of the Desert asserting that he’s boss of his household when
he’s anything but. In his arguments with
his wife, he’s always wearing the look of a kid too embarrassed to admit the
truth to his mother or he fidgets nervously, drawing circles on the walls and
table with his index finger. He calls
Lottie “Sugar” and isn’t opposed to using baby-talk to soften his wife’s
anger. Stan is just as childlike: when
he refuses to back Oliver’s tall tale that the two of them really were in
Honolulu the entire time (despite the published newspaper evidence to the
contrary), Ollie blackmails his pal by threatening to tell Mrs. Laurel that
Stan was smoking a cigarette. “All
right, go ahead and tell her,” declares his friend. “Would you tell her that?” Stan then asks after a pause, on the verge of
tears.
Before her name became a catchphrase for Jackie Gleason’s
Stanley R. Sogg character (“The ever popular Mae Busch!”) the real Mae enjoyed a prolific
career in silent movies such as Foolish
Wives (1922) and The Unholy Three
(1925). Most classic film fans love Mae
for her work with Laurel & Hardy, however; she played Ollie’s wife in the
duo’s first talkie, Unaccustomed as We
Are (1929), and later in Their First
Mistake (1932) and The Bohemian Girl
(1936). While Mae may have perfected the
battle-axe stereotype working alongside Stan and Ollie, she still displayed
enough versatility to play other characters in L&H comedies like Chickens Come Home (1931—she’s a woman
from Ollie’s past who threatens to torpedo his political ambitions) and Oliver the Eighth (1934—as a murderous
widow who marries men named “Oliver”…and then dispatches them to the Great
Beyond). Dorothy Christie excels equally
as non-harridan Mrs. Laurel; Dorothy worked with such legendary
comedians in the likes of So This is
Paris (1930; with Will Rogers) and Parlor,
Bedroom and Bath (1931; with Buster Keaton).
L&H fans have another motivation for their love of Sons of the Desert: Stan and Ollie’s
fellow employee Charley Chase appears in a hilarious turn as an obnoxious
conventioneer. Aside from the occasional
feature film like The King of the Wild
Horses (1924) or Modern Love
(1929), Chase’s domain was pretty much the short subject, and when it came time
for Hal Roach to phase out two-reel comedies his longtime shorts star bore the
brunt of this decision, becoming briefly unemployed until he was hired by
Columbia’s short subjects department in 1937 (being a major studio, Columbia
was able to continue cranking out two-reel comedies because they weren’t
dependent on them as Hal was for their bottom line). So it’s a treat to see the three men interact
in this comedy—it wasn’t the first time they worked together (Hardy played the
heavy in many of Charley’s two-reelers before he was teamed with Stan, and the trio appeared in 1927's Now We'll Tell One and the Max Davidson short Call of the Cuckoo), but
with the exception of an L&H cameo in one of Roach’s last two-reel Chase
comedies, On the Wrong Trek (1936), Desert would function as their swan song.
Charley is unquestionably in his element as the convention’s merry
prankster, swatting attendees’ behinds with a paddle and executing lame
practical jokes like the old “squirting flower” routine.
By the oddest of movie coincidences, Charley happens to be
the wayward brother of Lottie Hardy, and there’s an amusing sequence where he
calls up his sis to catch up on what’s doin’ and eventually puts Ollie on the
phone with her. (The look on Hardy’s
face when he realizes whom he’s speaking with is priceless.) I agree with Danny Peary that Chase’s
participation in Desert is
all-too-brief; rather than having the wives learn that their spouses deceived
them by seeing them cavort in Chicago via a movie newsreel (it’s kind of an
awkward plot point, seeing as how Lottie and Betty are concerned about their
husbands dying in a shipwreck—who would go to a movie at that time?), it might
have been better for Chase’s character to show up in L.A. and spill the beans about
seeing Oliver in Chicago.
While I’m quite fond of Sons
of the Desert, I’ve never made any bones about the fact that my favorite
Laurel & Hardy feature remains Way Out West (1937)…but the economy of Desert’s
plot (it’s a time-tested one, which later turned up on TV shows like The Honeymooners), brevity with the
musical numbers (the featured tune is “Honolulu Baby,” one of musician Marvin
Hatley’s favorite compositions) and its utter lack of pretense make it a firm
favorite among the duo’s fans. Leslie
Halliwell called the movie “quintessential” and L&H biographer John McCabe
recorded that Stan Laurel’s impression of Desert
was that it was the “jolliest” of their collaborations.
Equally jolly was the idea that McCabe presented to Stan
Laurel in later years that an organization dedicated to the love of Laurel
& Hardy be patterned after the lodge in the film; Stan gave it his
blessing, but, as L&H biographer Richard W. Bann explains, “his sole
proviso was that the group should, at all times, maintain what he called ‘a
half-assed dignity,’ which objective has been met more than halfway! Stan also
suggested a motto, to be shown along with a pair of derby hats, to read, ‘Two
minds without a single thought.’" The
“tents” of the Sons of the Desert sweep the United States and worldwide, and
are named after the various shorts and feature films starring the duo (for
example, the “Berth Marks” tent is located in Augusta, GA). Over eighty years since it made its
appearance in movie theaters, Sons of the
Desert remains the apotheosis of Laurel and Hardy’s feature film career, a
marvelous testament to the greatest movie comedy team of all time.