Joe Besser
Joe Besser (August 12, 1907 – March 1, 1988) was an American comedian and actor renowned for his brief but distinctive stint as the third member of the Three Stooges comedy team from 1956 to 1959, where he appeared in 16 short films alongside Moe Howard and Larry Fine.[1] Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Besser began his career in vaudeville and burlesque as a teenager, initially assisting a magician before going solo as a comedian in 1928, and he built a reputation for his high-pitched voice, impish humor, and portrayals of wimpy, spoiled-child characters.[1] His film debut came in 1938 with the short Cuckoorancho, marking the start of a prolific career that spanned radio, Broadway (including the 1941 production Sons o' Fun), over 40 feature films with stars like Rock Hudson, and approximately 250 television appearances.[2] Besser also had a notable television role as the bumbling Stinky Davis on The Abbott and Costello Show (1952–1954). Besser's entry into the Three Stooges followed the death of Shemp Howard in 1955; he joined Moe and Larry for Columbia Pictures' final shorts, bringing his unique comedic style to roles that emphasized verbal gags over the team's traditional slapstick violence, a change he requested to accommodate his wife's health needs.[1] He left the group in 1958 to care for his ailing wife, Erna, to whom he had been married since November 18, 1932, until his death, and whom he often cited as the highlight of his personal life; she died on July 1, 1989.[2][3] After leaving the Stooges, Besser continued in television, including as Mr. Jillson, the Dimples apartment house manager, on The Joey Bishop Show (1962–1965).[1] In the 1970s, he provided voice work for Hanna-Barbera animated series, including characters in Yogi's Space Race and Galaxy Goof-Ups.[1] Besser died of heart failure on March 1, 1988, at his home in North Hollywood, California, at the age of 80, becoming one of the last surviving members of the Three Stooges; he had been ill for some time prior.[2] In 1983, he helped unveil the Three Stooges' star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, cementing his legacy in American comedy despite his relatively short time with the iconic trio.[2]Early Life
Family Background
Joe Besser was born on August 12, 1907, in St. Louis, Missouri, to Morris and Fannie Besser, who were Polish Jewish immigrants that arrived in the United States in 1895. He was the youngest of nine children, with seven older sisters and one older brother.[4][5] Raised in a working-class Orthodox Jewish family, Besser grew up in the vibrant Polish-American immigrant community of early 20th-century St. Louis, where his father worked as a baker to support the household.[4][6] The family's adherence to Orthodox traditions shaped his early years, instilling a strong sense of cultural and religious identity amid the economic challenges faced by many immigrant households of the era. Besser's childhood was marked by limited formal education, as family responsibilities and the demands of a large household often took precedence in such working-class environments. His initial exposure to entertainment came around age 10, when he began working as an errand boy for a song plugger in St. Louis, providing an early glimpse into the local theater and performance scene that would later influence his career path.[2]Entry into Show Business
Joe Besser's entry into show business began in his native St. Louis at the age of 12, when he ran away and stowed away in a trunk for magician Howard Thurston's annual touring show. This initial role provided Besser with his first exposure to professional performance, allowing him to assist behind the scenes during the magician's elaborate illusions and learn fundamental skills such as comedic timing and audience interaction.[2] Besser soon advanced to becoming Thurston's full-time assistant, incorporating comedic elements into the act through bumbling antics and physical humor that highlighted his emerging impish style. His work with Thurston, which lasted several years into the early 1920s, marked the start of his paid involvement in entertainment and laid the groundwork for his distinctive "wimpy" persona characterized by whining and exaggerated cowardice.[7][8] In the early 1920s, after parting ways with Thurston in 1923, Besser transitioned to local amateur theater groups and stock companies across the Midwest, where he experimented with impressions, pantomime, and slapstick routines in small venues. These informal performances, often as a solo comedian or in minor roles, allowed him to refine his physical comedy and high-pitched vocal delivery, foreshadowing the character types that would define his later career while earning his first modest paychecks in comedic bits.Professional Career
Vaudeville and Radio Work
Joe Besser entered the vaudeville circuit in the mid-1920s, initially working as a stooge for comedy teams such as Alexander and Olsen before transitioning to solo performances by 1928.[9] His act featured impish, whiny characters with childlike mannerisms and cowardly archetypes, often delivered through exaggerated vocal impressions that became his signature style.[10] In 1930, he toured as a comedy partner with Dick Dana, performing in major cities including New York and Chicago, where his routines emphasized comedic timidity and verbal antics to engage audiences during live stage shows.[10] During this period, Besser met dancer Erna Kay (born Ernestine Dora Kretschmer) on a vaudeville tour in 1928, marrying her on November 18, 1932; she occasionally contributed to his performances through choreography but did not form a formal duo act with him.[8] In 1932, he appeared in the Broadway revue The Passing Show of 1932, alongside emerging talents like Ted Healy and the Howard brothers, marking an early foray into larger theatrical productions.[10] As vaudeville thrived in the late 1920s, Besser headlined circuits with these character-driven sketches, but the Great Depression led to financial instability, prompting brief stints in burlesque houses and stock theater productions to maintain income amid declining bookings.[10] By the late 1930s, as vaudeville waned due to the rise of radio and film, he continued stage work, including the 1941 Broadway musical comedy Sons o' Fun.[11] Besser's radio career began in the late 1930s with guest appearances, including a 1939 episode of Avalon Time on CBS, where his whiny persona quickly gained traction.[12] By the 1940s, he secured more prominent roles, such as a guest spot on The Jack Benny Program in June 1943, spoofing game shows with his distinctive childlike voice.[13] His breakthrough came from 1945 to 1949 as the know-it-all character Mr. Know-It-All on the NBC comedy-variety show Let Yourself Go, hosted by Eddy Dowling, where routines highlighted his cowardly, bratty humor in scripted sketches and audience interactions.[10] These radio successes solidified his reputation as a versatile comedian, bridging the gap from live stage work to broadcast media during vaudeville's decline.[12]Early Film Roles
Joe Besser's transition to film began in 1938 with his debut in the Columbia short Cuckoorancho, where he portrayed a wanderer mistaken for a millionaire by the owner of a rundown hacienda.[14][15] This unassuming role marked his entry into cinema, building on his vaudeville experience to adapt his comedic timing for the screen. Throughout the late 1930s and early 1940s, Besser secured bit parts in various studios, including Universal's Hot Steel (1940), in which he played the bumbling Siggie Landers, a steel mill worker entangled in workplace mishaps.[16] His appearances often cast him as hapless sidekicks or comic relief in low-budget productions, such as the Monogram feature Hey, Rookie (1944), where he appeared as Pendleton amid army induction chaos.[17] In the mid-1940s, Besser continued refining his impish, whiny persona in supporting roles across Columbia and other studios, frequently embodying henpecked husbands or inept assistants. Notable examples include his turn as Professor Dingle in the Columbia musical Eadie Was a Lady (1945), a quirky academic in a showbiz comedy, and as Roly Q. Entwhistle in Talk About a Lady (1946), a flustered informant in a mystery farce.[17] By the late 1940s, he gained visibility in higher-profile comedies like United Artists' Africa Screams (1949), playing the timid Harry opposite Abbott and Costello on a jungle expedition fraught with slapstick perils.[18] These roles, often in B-movies and two-reel shorts directed by Jules White at Columbia—such as Feudin' Rhythm (1949), where he appeared as the cowardly Hotfoot—solidified his niche in fast-paced, economical humor but also highlighted the constraints of typecasting in supporting comedic parts.[19] Besser's film work faced increasing challenges in the low-budget comedy genre, where repetitive characterizations in shorts and B-features limited opportunities for dramatic range, though his radio-honed vocal inflections added distinctiveness to visual gags. By the mid-1950s, the decline of Hollywood short subjects due to television's ascendancy slowed his offers; Columbia's shorts department, a key venue for his output, ceased production in 1957. This shift prompted Besser to explore new ensemble possibilities, culminating in his consideration for a prominent comedy team role.[20]Tenure with The Three Stooges
In 1956, Columbia Pictures recruited Joe Besser to join Moe Howard and Larry Fine as the third member of The Three Stooges, replacing Shemp Howard following his sudden death in November 1955.[21] Besser, already under contract with the studio from prior comedic roles, debuted in the short subject Hoofs and Goofs, filmed in April 1956 and released on January 31, 1957.[22] Over the next three years, the trio produced 16 two-reel comedy shorts, concluding with Briefly in the Market in July 1959.[21] Besser's inclusion introduced a notable shift in the group's dynamic, as his contract prohibited physical slapstick, eliminating signature elements like eye pokes and aggressive violence that defined earlier eras.[21] Instead, he portrayed "Joe," a timid, whining everyman character with high-pitched complaints and childlike reactions, providing a softer contrast to Moe's bullying leadership and Larry's hapless support. This characterization emphasized verbal humor and situational comedy, often positioning Besser as the reluctant participant in the Stooges' misadventures, such as in Rusty Romeos (1957) where the trio navigates domestic chaos.[23] Behind the scenes, tensions arose from Besser's preference for less roughhousing, aligning with his established style from radio and Abbott and Costello work, which clashed with the Stooges' traditional rough-and-tumble approach. His tenure was further complicated by health concerns for his wife, Erna, who suffered a serious illness requiring his care. These factors contributed to his departure in late 1959, after the release of the feature film Have Rocket, Will Travel, which served as the capstone to his Stooges period and launched the group into longer-form features with a new third member.[23] The Besser-era shorts received mixed critical reception for their toned-down violence, which some reviewers saw as more family-friendly but lacking the raw energy of prior installments; however, they maintained commercial viability within Columbia's short-subject program, contributing to the Stooges' enduring popularity through theater runs and early television syndication. Fan reactions remain divided, with detractors citing the altered slapstick as diluted, while others praise the era's inventive plots and Besser's unique comedic timing, evidenced by steady audience draw during the late 1950s.[23]Post-Stooges Live-Action Work
After departing from The Three Stooges in 1959 due to his wife's ongoing health issues, Joe Besser returned to television work, leveraging his signature whiny, impish persona in sitcom roles.[24] He secured a recurring role as the henpecked building superintendent Mr. Jillson on The Joey Bishop Show from 1962 to 1965, appearing in over 80 episodes and providing comic relief through his exasperated reactions to the lead characters' antics.[25] This steady television presence marked a revival of his live-action career, allowing him to reprise similar bratty characters in a more relaxed format than the Stooges' slapstick shorts. Besser's post-Stooges film work was limited, consisting of character parts in a handful of features that capitalized on his comedic timing rather than leading roles. In 1959, he appeared as Joe Greb in the musical drama Say One for Me, sharing scenes with Bing Crosby in a rare dramatic turn. The following year, he played Charlie Lamont in Let's Make Love, a romantic comedy starring Marilyn Monroe, where his brief role highlighted his ability to deliver punchy one-liners. Subsequent films included supporting parts in Jerry Lewis's The Errand Boy (1961) as a harried talent agent and Hand of Death (1962) in a minor gangster role, though these opportunities dwindled as the decade progressed. By the 1970s and 1980s, Besser entered semi-retirement from live-action performing, taking on only sporadic television cameos that suited his aging frame and preferred low-energy style. He guest-starred as a neighbor in an episode of Love, American Style in 1971, again playing a comically flustered everyman.[26] Other brief appearances included roles on shows like Batman (1967) and That Girl (1969), often as quirky supporting characters.[27] As he advanced into his seventies, Besser's selection of roles shifted toward quick cameos, influenced by declining health that led to his full retirement in the mid-1980s.[24]Voice Acting Contributions
Joe Besser's voice acting career flourished in the animation industry during the 1960s and 1970s, particularly through his contributions to Hanna-Barbera Productions, where his signature whiny, childlike vocal style brought comedic energy to supporting characters.[28] His breakthrough came in the early 1960s with guest roles in flagship Hanna-Barbera series, including the rock star Jet Screamer in The Jetsons (1962), whose energetic performance highlighted Besser's ability to infuse youthful exuberance into animated personas.[29] He also provided additional voices for The Flintstones throughout its run (1960–1966), often portraying bumbling or timid figures that complemented the show's prehistoric slapstick. These early assignments built on his radio-honed comedic timing, allowing him to transition seamlessly into voice-over work without the physical demands of live performance. By the 1970s, Besser's output expanded significantly, amassing over 50 credited roles across Hanna-Barbera projects, many leveraging his distinctive timbre for hapless sidekicks and comic relief.[28] A standout was his portrayal of Babu, the inept genie-in-training in Jeannie (1973), a Saturday-morning series inspired by I Dream of Jeannie, where Besser's whiny delivery amplified the character's bungling mishaps with magic. He reprised Babu in crossovers like The New Scooby-Doo Movies (1972–1973), voicing the character alongside the Mystery Inc. gang in episodes such as "Mystery in Persia," and extended the role into Scooby's All-Star Laff-a-Lympics (1977–1978).[30] Other notable 1970s contributions included Putty Puss in The Houndcats (1972), a secret-agent cat with a cowardly streak, and Scare Bear in Yogi's Space Race (1978), a timid engineer paired with Yogi Bear in intergalactic adventures.[31] These roles showcased Besser's versatility in ensemble casts, often contrasting his nasal, petulant inflections against more boisterous leads. Besser's voice work involved typical Hanna-Barbera recording practices of the era, conducted in group sessions at the studio's Hollywood facilities, where actors like Daws Butler—voicing Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound—collaborated to layer dialogue tracks for efficiency in limited-animation productions.[29] Butler and Besser frequently overlapped on projects such as Laff-a-Lympics and Yogi's Treasure Hunt (1985), where their improvisational chemistry enhanced crowd scenes and character interactions.[32] Into the 1980s, archival recordings of Besser's voice appeared in compilations like The New Yogi Bear Show (1988), and later specials such as A Yabba Dabba Christmas (2020), utilizing his earlier Flintstones-era audio for nostalgic effect. This enduring utility underscored the longevity of his vocal contributions, enabling sustained involvement in animation despite his advancing age and physical frailty.Personal Life
Marriage and Family
Joe Besser met dancer Erna Kay, born Ernestine Dora Kretschmer, during a vaudeville tour in 1928 when she was performing as part of the Allan K. Foster Dancers.[8] Their professional acquaintance blossomed into a romance as they toured together, leading to their marriage on November 18, 1932.[4] Erna, who went by the nickname "Ernie" and had a background in performance, had previously worked as a choreographer on the 1929 film The Coconuts.[4] The couple enjoyed a long partnership spanning 56 years, remaining childless throughout their marriage.[7] Erna played a supportive role in Besser's career, handling household responsibilities and adapting to his irregular show business schedule while they resided in a home in North Hollywood, California.[4] In 1958, Erna suffered a heart attack, which prompted Besser to leave the Three Stooges to care for her.[8] Besser maintained connections with his siblings in St. Louis, including his older brother Manny, who was also involved in show business, though his career commitments limited frequent family gatherings.[33] The couple's close friendship with comedian Lou Costello, as neighbors in Hollywood, further enriched their social circle during Besser's early film work.[33]Health Issues and Death
In his later years, Joe Besser experienced declining health that contributed to his semi-retirement from active performance. He had been ill for six months prior to his death, limiting his public appearances.[24] Besser died of heart failure on March 1, 1988, at the age of 80, at his home in North Hollywood, California.[34][24] He was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.[8] His wife, Erna, to whom he had been married since November 18, 1932, died of a heart attack on July 1, 1989, at the age of 88; she was interred in the same plot as Besser.[8][3]Filmography
Feature Films
Joe Besser's feature film career spanned from the early 1940s to the 1970s, primarily consisting of supporting comedic roles that capitalized on his signature whiny, hapless persona. Often typecast as waiters, bartenders, or minor authority figures, his appearances contributed comic relief in diverse genres including mysteries, westerns, and musicals, evolving from uncredited bits in wartime-era productions to more prominent parts in post-Stooges comedies.[27] In the 1940s, Besser made his mark in Hollywood through small but memorable roles in major studio films. His feature film debut was as Pudge Pfeiffer in the musical comedy Hey, Rookie (1944), starring Ann Miller and Larry Parks. Later, in the Abbott and Costello vehicle Africa Screams (1949), he played Harry, a bumbling sidekick in this adventure comedy that drew on the duo's radio fame and achieved moderate box-office success amid post-war escapism. His role as Prince Sinbad in the swashbuckling The Desert Hawk (1950) showcased his physical comedy in a fantastical Arabian Nights setting, supporting Yvonne De Carlo in this Columbia Pictures release.[35] The 1950s marked a transition for Besser, with roles reflecting his vaudeville roots in lighter fare. Entering the 1960s, Besser's film work aligned with his television popularity, often in ensemble comedies. He appeared as Charlie Lamont, a hapless rehearsal pianist, in the Marilyn Monroe-starring musical Let's Make Love (1960), where his timing complemented the romantic farce directed by George Cukor. A highlight was his Stooges tenure in The Outlaws Is Coming! (1965), their final feature film, where Besser played the inept Sheriff Mushroom in this satirical western parody that parodied genre tropes while grossing modestly for Columbia. Later roles demonstrated Besser's enduring appeal in character parts. In the Jerry Lewis comedy The Errand Boy (1961), he had an uncredited cameo as a studio extra, fitting the film's chaotic Hollywood satire. He portrayed Mr. Gorvey, a comic tailor, in the Elvis Presley western Charro! (1969), adding levity to the otherwise serious revenge tale. Besser's final notable feature was as dock master in the Jerry Lewis anti-war comedy Which Way to the Front? (1970), a box-office disappointment that nonetheless highlighted his reliable comic support.Short Subjects
Joe Besser's career in short subjects primarily consisted of two-reel comedies produced by Columbia Pictures, a format that typically ran 16-20 minutes and emphasized fast-paced slapstick humor with minimal budgets and stock footage. These shorts often featured Besser in timid, bumbling roles that highlighted his signature whiny persona, differing from the more aggressive physical comedy of earlier Columbia productions by incorporating verbal gags and situational mishaps.[19] His work in this medium spanned from 1949 to 1959, with variations in style during his Three Stooges tenure that toned down eye-pokes and hair-pulling to accommodate Besser's preferences for less violent antics.[36] Before joining the Three Stooges, Besser starred in a series of solo Columbia shorts starting in 1949, where he played hapless everyman characters entangled in everyday absurdities. Notable examples include Waiting in the Lurch (1949), in which Besser portrays Eric Loudermilk Potts obsessing over firefighters and missing his wedding; Dizzy Yardbird (1950), featuring him as the scatterbrained Rodney Marblehead; and 'Fraidy Cat (1951), co-starring radio disc jockey Jim Hawthorne as Besser's straight-man partner in a detective mishap. These early efforts established Besser's comedic timing in domestic and professional blunders, often directed by Jules White with recurring supporting players like Christine McIntyre. A subset of Besser's pre-Stooges shorts formed an informal series pairing him with Jim Hawthorne, a Chicago-based DJ known for his radio comedy, in four comedic vehicles that blended slapstick with light parody of genres like mystery and military life. The series began with 'Fraidy Cat (1951), continued in Aim, Fire, Scoot! (1952), where Besser and Hawthorne play inept army recruits alongside Henry Kulky as a tough sergeant; Hook a Crook (1955), a remake of an earlier Stooges short involving jewel thieves; and Army Daze (1956), depicting their misadventures in a fictional foreign army.[37][38] These collaborations emphasized Hawthorne's deadpan reactions to Besser's cowardice, produced under Columbia's declining shorts department with reused sets and props for cost efficiency. Besser's most prominent short subject work came during his 1956-1959 tenure with the Three Stooges, yielding 16 Columbia two-reelers that marked his debut in the group's lineup after Shemp Howard's death. These productions adapted classic Stooges formulas but with moderated violence, focusing on verbal interplay and props-based gags, as Besser avoided the roughhousing that defined prior eras. Selected examples include Hoofs and Goofs (1957), the trio's first short together involving a horse racing spoof; Guns a Poppin (1957), a Western spoof; A Merry Mix-Up (1957), involving family impersonations; Space Ship Sappy (1957), a sci-fi parody; Rusty Romeos (1957), featuring dating mishaps; Oil's Well That Ends Well (1958), featuring oil prospecting chaos; Triple Crossed (1959), a spy parody; and Sappy Bullfighters (1959), their final Columbia short with matador mishaps.[39] Co-starring consistently with Howard and Fine, these shorts were filmed rapidly in 1956-1957 but released through 1959 after Columbia ceased production.[39] After leaving the Stooges, Besser's short subject output diminished, but he contributed to independent tributes and compilations, reflecting his enduring ties to classic comedy. One such effort was his narration for the 3-D short A Day in the Country (1953), a comedic story of two boys and their grandmother visiting a farm.[40] Specific post-1959 theatrical releases were limited amid the format's decline.[41]Television Appearances
Joe Besser's television career spanned over four decades, beginning with variety and comedy shows in the early 1950s and extending into animated series in the 1970s and 1980s. He frequently portrayed comic relief characters, leveraging his signature whiny, effeminate persona in both live-action and voice roles. While he received no major Emmy nominations, his animated performances, particularly in Hanna-Barbera productions, earned him a reputation as a fan favorite among viewers of Saturday morning cartoons.[27] In live-action television, Besser gained early prominence as Stinky Davis, a hapless neighbor, on The Abbott and Costello Show from 1952 to 1953, appearing in over 20 episodes alongside Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. He later had a recurring role as the bumbling Mr. Jillson on The Joey Bishop Show from 1962 to 1965, contributing to 88 episodes of the sitcom. Guest appearances included comic bits on The Colgate Comedy Hour (1951–1953), where he performed sketches in multiple installments, and vaudeville-style revivals on The Ed Sullivan Show throughout the 1950s. Other notable spots encompassed The Jack Benny Program (various episodes in the 1950s), Batman (1966, as a henchman), The Mothers-in-Law (1968, as a neighbor), and a cameo as a passenger on The Love Boat in 1979.[27][42] Besser's voice work dominated his later television output, particularly with Hanna-Barbera Studios, where he provided quirky, high-pitched characterizations for animated series. He voiced the incompetent genie Babu in Jeannie (1973, 16 episodes), a role he reprised in Scooby's All-Star Laff-A-Lympics (1977–1978). In The Houndcats (1972), he lent his voice to the cowardly cat Putty Puss across the series' run. Besser also voiced Scare Bear, Yogi Bear's anxious sidekick, in Yogi's Space Race (1978, 13 episodes) and the spin-off Galaxy Goof-Ups (1978–1979). Additional animated credits included Cupid and other smurfs in The Smurfs (1981–1987, multiple episodes), Elmo the Elephant in Shirt Tales (1982–1983), and guest voices in The New Scooby-Doo Movies (1972–1973). His radio-honed vocal style seamlessly transitioned to these TV animations, enhancing ensemble casts.[28][27][43]| Show | Years | Role | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Abbott and Costello Show | 1952–1953 | Stinky Davis | Live-action series (20+ episodes) |
| The Joey Bishop Show | 1962–1965 | Mr. Jillson | Live-action series (88 episodes) |
| Batman | 1966 | Henchman | Live-action guest |
| The Mothers-in-Law | 1968 | Neighbor | Live-action guest |
| Jeannie | 1973 | Babu (voice) | Animated series (16 episodes) |
| The New Scooby-Doo Movies | 1972–1973 | Various (voice) | Animated guest |
| Scooby's All-Star Laff-A-Lympics | 1977–1978 | Babu (voice) | Animated series |
| Yogi's Space Race | 1978 | Scare Bear (voice) | Animated series (13 episodes) |
| Galaxy Goof-Ups | 1978–1979 | Scare Bear (voice) | Animated series |
| The Smurfs | 1981–1987 | Cupid / additional voices | Animated series (multiple episodes) |
| Shirt Tales | 1982–1983 | Elmo the Elephant (voice) | Animated series |
| The Love Boat | 1979 | Passenger (cameo) | Live-action guest |