Sid Fields Movies

Bald-headed, nervous, blustery, overbearing character actor/comedian Sidney Fields is best remembered today as the resident foil for Abbott & Costello on their television program The Abbott & Costello Show. Those two seasons, however, were but a tiny portion of a 64-year career in show business that took Fields from tent shows and carnivals as a teenager, through burlesque and vaudeville, and into movies and television, where he worked alongside the likes of Frank Sinatra and Jackie Gleason. Sidney Fields (who was sometimes credited as Sid Fields) was born in Milwaukee, WI, in 1898, and started doing comedy in local theaters as a boy. By his teens, he was working carnivals and tent shows in the Midwest, and he later became partner in a comedy team with Jack Greenman. The burlesque and vaudeville duo eventually made it to New York City and was cast by Harold Minsky in his follies, but the team was split up when Fields headed for Hollywood to work on a feature film. He was kept busy on stage, radio, and occasionally in movies for the next 30 years, working with Eddie Cantor as a writer and actor, and then with Ben Blue, and with Rudy Vallee on the radio, and later with Fred Allen and Milton Berle. In movies during the 1930s, Fields appeared in small roles in a pair of comedies, Strike Me Pink and Love Is News, and served as the assistant director on one of Cantor's funniest (yet least known) films, Ali Baba Goes to Town. He was mostly busy in radio and on stage during the late '30s and early '40s, often playing a character referred to as "Guffy" in his appearances with Cantor. Starting in 1945, however, Fields began an eight-year association with Abbott & Costello, initially in a small role in The Naughty Nineties. He was almost lost in that somewhat overloaded and frantic costume musical-comedy, but in Little Giant, Fields' performance was one of the funniest parts of a decidedly unfunny movie, portraying a bad-tempered customer at Lou Costello's roadside filling station, in a scene in which every word that Costello says, no matter how innocuous of conciliatory, provokes an argument from Fields. And in Mexican Hayride, Fields' scene as an overly talkative reporter interviewing the hapless Costello was a highlight of the movie. During the early '50s, Fields showed up on the Colgate Comedy Hour (usually with Cantor) and The Frank Sinatra Show (often with his partner Ben Blue), but it was his two seasons on The Abbott & Costello Show, playing the duo's short-tempered, tight-fisted landlord (named "Sidney Fields") that he achieved immortality. With his bald-headed physiognomy and beady, rolling eyes, coupled with a deep, blustery, expressive voice, Fields was the perfect nemesis for the baby-faced Lou Costello, tormenting him as the greedy, put-upon landlord, but also just as likely to get a pie (or an entire cake, or even half-a-watermelon) in the face. Whether he was doing a slow burn, or seething in anger over some mishap caused by Costello, Fields was often the funniest thing on the show, and his scenes were guaranteed to elicit hysterical laughter. Equally funny were his appearances in other roles on the show, often wearing a toupee or other make-up variation -- usually he played one of Mr. Fields' cousins or brothers (Friendly Fields the used car dealer, Sporty Fields the sporting goods store owner, Melonhead Fields the attorney), but occasionally did classic burlesque shtick with Costello, most notably a brilliantly timed version of "Slowly I Turned..." in which, for the punch line, Fields ended up playing two roles on screen, doubled in one of them. Those filmed shows became his legacy, though Fields continued to work on network television for another dozen years, including regular appearances on top-rated programs like The Jackie Gleason Show, where he often did sketches with Gleason that were essentially the same bits he'd done with Costello. He also worked with Red Buttons and appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show. Fields moved to Las Vegas in the 1960s, initially to work as part of Pat Moreno's Artists & Models revue, and he retired to the city in his sixties. He died of lung cancer in 1975 at the age of 77, but his work lived on after him in the hearts and minds of comedians and their audiences everywhere -- in 1994, Fields' work was singled out for praise by Jerry Seinfeld in his television special Abbott & Costello Meet Jerry Seinfeld, who went out of his way to cite Sidney Fields as a well-spring of beautifully timed comedy. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1995  
 
This video is part of a series that showcases some of the high points in the early history of American television. This volume contains two episodes featuring the beloved American clowns Bud Abbot and Lou Costello. Appearing on The Abbot and Costello Show, they perform in "The Drug Store" and "Peace and Quiet." ~ Rose of Sharon Winter, All Movie Guide

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1950  
 
When the continual bickering of a married couple threatens to tear them apart, an angel is sent to help them get back together and start making babies in this fantasy. The husband is a busy producer for theatrical shows so the angel disguises himself as a wealthy Westerner looking to invest in a show. He meets the couple at a casino where the angel discovers a special gift for gambling. He is so good that the IRS threatens to intervene and he must be rescued by another angel. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Clifton WebbJoan Bennett, (more)
1948  
 
Cole Porter's Broadway musical Mexican Hayride was optioned by Universal in the mid-1940s, then remained in "development hell" until 1948. By the time the property made it to the screen, the entire Porter score had been removed, and the play's original star Bobby Clark was replaced by Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The story takes place South of the Border, where American fugitive from justice Joe Bascom (Costello) searches for con man Harry Lambert (Abbott), for whom Bascom had been a fall guy. Also in Mexico is Joe's hometown-sweetheart Mary (Virginia Grey), now known as Montana, the country's foremost female bullfighter. Joe catches up with Harry at the bull arena, where Montana is about to choose the "Amigo Americano" in a publicity scheme cooked up by Harry. When she spots Joe in the crowd, Montana (angry at our tubby hero for bilking her out of her life savings -- it was actually Harry's doing), furiously throws her hat at him. When Joe catches the hat, he's elected Amigo Americano and extended every hospitality that Mexico can afford. Sensing yet another opportunity to make a dishonest dollar, Harry exploits Joe's newfound celebrity to promote a phony gold-mining scheme. The gorgeous Dagmar (Luba Malina), Harry's partner in crime, romances Joe to secure his cooperation. Somehow all of this ends up back in the bull ring, with poor Joe facing a very belligerent "el toro." A bit too plot-heavy for Abbott & Costello, Mexican Hayride still has several choice moments, including a priceless verbal exchange involving gold ore ("gold or what?") and a "Mother Lode." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bud AbbottLou Costello, (more)
1945  
 
Abbott and Costello's The Naughty Nineties offers a million laughs and a nickel's worth of plot. Most of the film takes place aboard a 19th century showboat, owned by kindly Captain Sam (Henry Travers). Bud Abbott plays the showboat's leading man Dexter Broadhurst, while Lou Costello is handyman Sebastian Dinwiddie. A group of slick gamblers (Alan Curtis, Rita Johnson and Joe Sawyer) cheat Captain Sam out of his boat, turning the place into a floating gambling palace, but Dexter and Sebastian foil the villains and save the day. The film is a virtual encyclopedia of wheezy but still hilarious comedy routines, many of them devised by veteran Laurel & Hardy and Three Stooges gagman Felix Adler. The film's highlight is a full-length performance of Abbott and Costello's verbal classic "Who's on First?"-and if one listens very closely, one can hear the cameramen and crew members laughing! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bud AbbottLou Costello, (more)
1944  
 
For their first film in a year, Bud Abbott and Lou Costello played it safe with a medley of old burlesque routines and slapstick setpieces -- and never mind a coherent plot. The boys play Eddie and Albert, a pair of plumbers hired to fix the pipes of a fancy society mansion. While a masquerade party takes place on the first floor, our heroes wreak havoc in the bathroom on the second floor. The angry owners (Thurston Hall, Netta Packer) shoot off a letter of complaint to the plumbers which gets mixed up with an invitation for a fancy weekend party. Thus it is that Eddie and Albert, accompanied by their female cab-driving pal Elsie (Marion Hutton), show up dressed to the nines at a posh country estate. While the boys get mixed up in further comic complications, Elsie carries on a romance with wealthy and handsome Peter (Kirby Grant). Things come to a head when a valuable painting is stolen, prompting Eddie and Albert to chase after the thieves by commandeering a fire engine! Released in most areas simply as In Society, this slapped-together comedy proved beyond all doubt that Abbott and Costello's appeal had not slipped during their screen absence. Highlights include a variation on the burlesque chestnut "Floogel Street" (here renamed "The Susquehanna Hat Company"), a wild and crazy fox hunt, and the climactic fire-engine pursuit, which was lifted virtually in toto from W.C. Fields' Never Give a Sucker an Even Break (1941). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bud AbbottLou Costello, (more)
1937  
 
Autograph hound Al Babson (Eddie Cantor) accidentally disrupts the filming of a movie about Ali Baba, and is injured in the process. The filmmakers try to buy him off, but nurse Dinah (Virginia Field) suggests he be hired as an extra. He takes an overdose of painkillers, and his Arabian Nights dreams combine with the plot of the movie. His name leads the populace to think he's the son of Ali Baba, and he's taken to the palace of Sultan Abdullah (Roland Young), who's so impressed by Al that he makes him prime minister. Princess Miriam (June Lang) is in love with Yusuf (Tony Martin), the leader of the peasants, while Al has fallen for Deenah (also Virginia Field), whose father Omar (Maurice Cass) is trying to make a carpet fly. Meanwhile, the evil Prince Musah (Douglas Dumbrille) is conspiring with Sultana (Louise Hovick), one of Abdullah's many wives, to capture the princess, take over Bagdad, and kill Abdullah and Al as well. Miriam and Yusuf are unhappy because royalty and commoners cannot marry, so Al comes up with a plan to help his friends, but the plan spectacularly backfires, and Abdullah orders him to be boiled in oil. ~ Bill Warren, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Eddie CantorTony Martin, (more)
1937  
 
Slightly reminiscent of Frank Capra's Platinum Blonde (31), this screwball comedy features those two stalwarts of 1930s comedies: The brash reporter and the giddy heiress. Tyrone Power is the reporter, who makes his living writing about the foibles of the idle rich. His special target is heiress Loretta Young, the daughter of an influential financier (Dudley Digges). Young gets even by announcing her engagement to Power; now it's his turn to have his every movement scrutinized by the Public. Both reporter and heiress connive to embarrass one another, but (as expected) they're headed for the altar at fadeout time. Love is News was remade in 1949 as That Wonderful Urge, with Tyrone Power reprising his role and Gene Tierney in the Loretta Young part. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tyrone PowerLoretta Young, (more)
1936  
 
Musical comedy star Eddie Cantor stars in this story, well suited to his talents, as Eddie Pink, a meek gentleman who works as a tailor and has a terrible crush on Joyce (Ethel Merman), a nightclub singer. Eddie buys a book (through the mail, of course) called Man or Mouse: What Are You?. Taking its advice, he tries to become more confident and assertive, and his new, outgoing personality helps him get a job running an amusement park called Dreamland. But when racketeers move in for a piece of the action on the park's slot machines, he wonders if he's gotten himself in deeper waters than he can safely navigate. Cantor sings four songs in Strike Me Pink, three of them with co-star Merman. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Eddie CantorEthel Merman, (more)

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