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The Music Box (1932) (short)
In this 29-minute Oscar-winning Best Short film from
director James Parrott:
- the introduction of the Transfer Company deliverymen
Stan (Stan Laurel) and Ollie (Oliver Hardy), who were contracted
to transport merchandise (in large crates) in a horse-drawn cart,
with the logo: "TALL OAKS FROM LITTLE ACORNS GROW"
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Laurel & Hardy Transfer Co.
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- their consternation and reaction when told by a helpful
postman (Charlie Hall) that the address of a house they were looking
for was up a steep set of stairs ("right on top of the stoop")
- the sequence of their laborious moving of an uncooperative
crated upright piano up the stairs - purchased
as a birthday gift; "the
music box" continually
wanted to find its way to the bottom of the steps; as they pushed the
crate, they alternately repeated: "Heave!" "Ho!" "Heave!" "Ho!"
- their first encounter was with a sassy
Nursemaid (Lilyan Irene) pushing a baby carriage who asked to pass by:
("Will
you please let me pass?"); when the two
obliged and moved aside, the piano bounced back down the steps
- at the bottom of the stairs, Stan kicked the Nursemaid's
backside after she chuckled at them insultingly and exclaimed: ("Of
all the dumb things");
she retaliated with a punch to Stan's face - and when Ollie
laughed uproariously, the Nursemaid smashed a large glass baby bottle
over his head
- further encounters were with an
irate cop (Sam Lufkin) who reprimanded the movers for hitting the
Nursemaid during her "daily
duty": ("What do you mean by molesting that girl?");
the officer kicked Ollie in the rear and then went on his way ("Now
let that be a lesson to ya!"), but returned for a second kick
(or "lesson")
to Ollie; he also gave a third "lesson" to Stan by poking
him with his night-stick
- they also had to deal with an
angry, distinguished and pompous customer Professor Theodore von
Schwartzenhoffen (Billy Gilbert) who wanted them to remove the obstacle
on the stairs: ("I should like to pass") and refused to walk
around ("Walk around? Me? Professor Theodore Von Schwarzenhoffen?
M.D., A.D, D.D.S, F.L.D, F.F.F und F should walk around? Get that thing
out of my way! Get out of my way, come on, get out of the way!");
when Stan slapped his hat down the stairs, it bounded down the steps
into the street where it was flattened by a passing truck; he made
more threats: "I'll have you arrested for this! I'll have you
thrown in jail! I'm professor T.D.A!"
- after finally getting the crate to the top of the
stairs (where Ollie was dunked in a small fountain), the forces of
gravity pulled the crate back down to the bottom of the stairs;
once they were able to get it back to the home's front door, the helpful
postman suggested to the two: ("You
didn't have to do that. You see that road down there?...All you had
to do was to drive around that road to the top here"); amazingly,
they took the postman's advice and returned the piano to the street,
and then drove it around to the entrance; when no one answered the
door, Stan suggested taking the crate back to the store, but Ollie
disagreed and insisted: "Where there's a will, there's a way"
- the absurd sequence of the implementation of Ollie's
suggestion to use a block
and tackle to hoist the piano crate into the second story window,
resulting in further disasters when they lost control of the crate
on the indoor stairs and it crashed through a balcony window into
an outdoor fountain; when the crate was opened inside the house,
a flood of water cascaded from inside the crate
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2nd Story Window Hoist With a Block and Tackle
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Bringing the Crate Down the Indoor Flight of Stairs
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Losing Control of the Crate
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- after destroying the floor (water damage), the chandelier,
and shorting out the electrical plug, the two tested the player piano
by playing a 'medley of patriotic songs', when the Professor arrived
back inside his wrecked home, he was flabbergasted to see the two
workmen there: "What is the meaning of this?...This is my home! What
are you doing here?"; when told the delivery was for a piano, he
became irate: "Piano? Piano? I hate and detest pianos, they are mechanical
blunderbusses! Take it out of here before I commit murder! Take it
out! Take it out! Take it all out!"; as further items were broken
in his home, the Professor threatened them and the piano with
an axe as the piano began to play: "The Star Spangled Banner" (Ollie
and Stan stopped everything and saluted); he chopped the piano into
pieces and shouted out: "I'll kill you! I hate pianos!"
- in the short's conclusion, the Professor's wife (Gladys
Gale) entered and reprimanded her husband for thinking the delivery
(by the two "blundering idiots") was a mistake: "Why, it wasn't a
mistake, darling! I bought the piano to surprise you on your birthday!"
- (in the brief opening scene, the wife was seen purchasing the piano
in a showroom); the Professor changed his tune, telling his wife:
"What, me hate pianos? Why, I'm nuts about them!"; he apologized
to the delivery men, and was about to sign the papers when Stan's
ink pen squirted him in the face - he yelled after them: "Why, you...!
Out of my house! Out of my house!"
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The Arrival of the Professor's Wife
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Signing the Papers
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(l to r): Stan and Ollie
Removal of Crate From Wagon
Up the Narrow, Steep Set of Stairs
The Runaway Crated Piano
Encounter with Nursemaid
The Helpful Postman: "You didn't have to do that"
The Professor After Returning Home: "What is the meaning of this?"
Stan and Ollie During Playing of "The Star Spangled Banner"
The Professor's Destruction of Piano with an Axe
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