When my dad was a child in the 1940s/50s(?) they came to his street in Belfast to call on an old friend. They were appearing in a theatre in town and arrived in dad's street in a taxi limousine. Word got around and the house quickly had a crowd waiting outside. They emerged to get back in their car, but stood smiling and chatting with the crowd for a while. Did a few skits with their hats and stanley fiddled with his hair.
How she is describing the story.. She is putting everything into it, almost like she is seeing the story in her head and relaying it & her little face so deep in thought. I like how she was able to tell almost the whole story & doing the bears voices, I was enjoying it myself lol. it's So real to life like a child does naturally. Stans response to her different voices is just absolutely out of this world lol, like he's hearing the story for the first time which I'm sure it isn't. I love how natural it was. My grandparents raised me since birth & my grandad used to fall asleep telling me a stories at night lol. I used to nudge him to wake him. My grandparents also lived in Ulverston xxx
I wish I could have met them. Ray Bradbury met them once, and remembered it as one of the happiest moments of his life. He dedicated two short stories to them.
The Girl is..... Jacquie Lyn (born Jaquelyn Dufton; 3 September 1928 - 21 March 2002) was a British-born American child actress, who had a brief yet notable career in motion pictures.
I just love this little girl in this film she is a little star.....when she tells stan the 3 bears story...lol, the part 5:37 were she starts to change her voice...well Stans reactions are amazing...LoL........Kings of Comedy Forever. r.i.p.
Yes, that's so funny how Stan responds haha & how that gorgeous little girl tells that story, so realistic like it's not a film, very natural indeed. Nothing can compare can it. Take care 🍀 🍀 🍀
Funny and just too cute,ha,ha ha!!! I used to love to hear my children retell a story their own ways with their own sometimes strange plots and ending,hilarious!!!
I love how they each slip into the stereotypical parent roles for the little girl - Ollie is the mom washing the clothes and Stan is the dad coming home from work exhausted and “telling” the bedtime story LOL.
The liitle girl in this clip - Jacquie Lyn (born Elizabeth Anne Mary Jacqueline Dufton; 3 September 1928 - 21 March 2002) was a British-born American child actress, who had a brief yet notable career in motion pictures. She was contacted by 'The Sons of the Desert' in 1990 becoming an honorary member of the organization.
If anybody watched the "Goldilocks" part on TV in the 1960s ( like I did) - at least today it has been restored; many times in the 1960s the 1st part of the story was missing, never showing when Stan was wide awake. It took me over 50 years to see this complete version!
The millions of emotions going across Stan's face in a matter of seconds never fail to make me cackle The sound effects too, they hit so hard you can almost feel them.
Story: The little girl's father was a friend and colleague of the L &H pair in the army. After he dies, the girl is orphaned. L & H are now in search of any of the girl's relatives. Finally they find her grand father, a rich tycoon and hand over her to him.
Equally i wonder how they even pulled of that stunt in the first place. The stuntman literally dives head first to the floor almost hitting the stove in the fall.. Todays cgi couldnt pull that of.
@STHFGDBY Sorry. (The phone rang and I didn't get time to write a proper reply). The girl was called Jacqui Lynn and appeared in this film with L&H, plus Bohemian Girl. Bit more info here: imdb.com/name/nm2028596/
Did anyone notice how after the 1920s and 1930s shorts, Ollie's voice begins to change from deep and vibrant to thin and higher pitched? Was it age? Health? Or just advancements in recording technology? I wouldn't really know, but I got so used to their work from their prime that watching their later stuff sound a bit, I don't know, unreal?
@@vapemcvaperson Too bad. Their earlier films just sound... I don't know. Fuller? You know how the Three Stooges don't have music in the background and a lot of the times, they are just quiet. Same with Olly and Stan. I guess I just like the hissing sound when their is no talking. It fills the silence. And the rough but full tone of old films when people talk just sounds... fluffier? Yeah, I'll go with that.