Robert Emmett Keane was a vaudeville and musical comedy straightman before turning to a career in talkies as a prolific supporting player. He is best remembered by Laurel & Hardy fans as the closest thing to a regular cast member in 3 of the team's Fox features. Droll Charles Butterworth had a much more successful career as comic relief in numerous films of the 1930s. Here it's nice to see Keane and Butterworth making fun of the hokey material used in these "Broadway" comic strips.
"Broadway" comic strips - Robert Emmett Keane & Charles Butterworth
"Broadway" comic strips - Robert Emmett Keane & Charles Butterworth
"Of course he smiled -- just like you and me." -- Harold Goodwin, on Buster Keaton (1976)
Re: "Broadway" comic strips - Robert Emmett Keane & Charles Butterworth
Robert Emmett Keane returns, without Butterworth.
A variation on the first joke was used a few months later by W.C. Fields in his first talkie, THE GOLF SPECIALIST (1930). In Fields' film, a 5-year-old girl substitutes for the young lady seen here, giving the gag a non-suggestive (though no less funny) meaning:
A variation on the first joke was used a few months later by W.C. Fields in his first talkie, THE GOLF SPECIALIST (1930). In Fields' film, a 5-year-old girl substitutes for the young lady seen here, giving the gag a non-suggestive (though no less funny) meaning:
"Of course he smiled -- just like you and me." -- Harold Goodwin, on Buster Keaton (1976)
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