Whoever provided voice for Curly in this show did a really good excellent job because it actually sounds just like the real life Curly Howard from the original Three Stooges TV show.
Believe it or not,this was the very first time that I watched the three stooges before I even knew that they were real people and the very first time that I discovered the three stooges black and white movie short was the one where Curly was fighting with the clam soup and I became a stooge nut ever since.NYCK,NYCK,NYCK.
Fun Fact: The real Three Stooges, Moe Howard & Larry Fine and fake Curly - Curly Joe DiRita voiced their own cartoon characters on The New 3 Stooges show in 1965. The Robonic Stooges (voiced by Paul Winchell, Joe Baker and Frank Welker) premiered on the 1977 CBS Saturday morning series, The Skatebirds with Woofer And Whimper from CBS's Clue Club (who are shown on the wallpaper The Stooges are trying to install) before graduating to their own series in 1978. The Three Stooges met Scooby-Doo on The New Scooby-Doo Movies in 1972 in two episodes voiced by Pat Harrington Jr, Daws Butler and Frank Welker even though Moe, Larry and Curly Joe were still alive at the time. Joe Besser who took the place of Shemp after he died, voiced the character of Babu ("Yapple Dapple!") on the 1973 animated version of I Dream Of Jeannie where Jeannie's master was voiced by Mark Hamill from Star Wars and Batman The Animated Series. The Three Stooges have appeared in comic books beginning in 1949 and have been published by Jubilee, St. John, Gold Key, Whitman, Eclipse, Bluewater Productions, Fox, Papercutz and American Mythology. Gold Key Comics also published a short lived comic called The Little Stooges about The Three Stooges teenaged sons in 1972. American Mythology released a Robonic Stooges comic in 2021 (one cover features Shemp as a robonic stooge).
SAME, I saw the show before I saw the 2012 movie, so I thought that the stooges were supposed to be robots. I remember being confused in the movie when they were humans.
Curly - Hey Moe, there ain't no page nine see it goes from page eight to Paga Ninny (Page 9) Moe - That's page nine you ninny 🤣🤣🤣 Love this show when I was a kid
Scooby-Doo’s cameo appearance on page 8 in Stooges’ “Paint By Numbers” coloring book @ 1:07. Also, the Clue Club dogs make cameo appearances on Larry, Moe & Curly’s wallpaper @ 0:46-0:58.
It feels so weird hearing the voice of Tigger, Paul Winchell, do this cartoon! Never seen a single episode of this show despite me loving the Three Stooges!
That's Paul Winchell doing the voice of Moe, who ironically was in a Stooge project in 1960. The Columbia Pictures compilation "Stop , Look ,& Laugh" with Winchell & his dummies Jerry Mahoney and Knucklehead Smith. Unfortunately, the movie was released without proper permission from the Stooges (Moe, Larry, & Curly Joe DeRita) who were away over at 20th Century Fox on loan filming "Snow White & The Three Stooges." As a result, the Stooges contacted their lawyers to make sure the boys got paid in full for usage of their likenesses from old Columbia shorts used in the film, and a fund for Curly Howard's family, whose father and husband (to Valerie, Curly's fourth and last wife) was dead since 1952. Winchell was best known for hosting a children's show in the 1960's, and as the voices of Tigger and Gargamel the Wizard. Paul's daughter, April Winchell also is a cartoon voiceover in her own right, voicing characters since 1972 as the voice of Angela on "Kid Power", an animated adoption of Morrie Turner's comic strip "Wee Pals", animated by Rankin-Bass. She later did other voices, including Peg Pete, Pepper Ann's mother Lydia and Wander Over Yonder's faithful zbornak sidekick Sylvia.