January 19th, 1940 (FRIDAY)
UNITED KINGDOM:RAF Bomber Command: Reconnaissance of NW Germany for naval targets.
RAF Fighter Command: One enemy aircraft attacked off East Aberdeen, it was driven off damaged, there was no damage caused to British targets.
NORTH SEA: Seven ships of the First Destroyer Flotilla are operating out of Harwich with six other ships of the Flotilla who were returning from an operation off the Dutch coast when in calm weather a mine exploded. G class destroyer HMS Grenville quickly capsizes in the Thames 23 miles east of the Kentish Kcock light vessel at 51 39N, 02 17. The mine had been laid by a destroyer. Grenville's bow was the last part of the ship to disappear. Two ships from the Flotilla disregarded their safety and lowered boats to pluck 118 men from the water. Seventy-seven officers and crew lose their lives. (Alex Gordon and Dave Shirlaw)(108)
FRANCE: Premier Daladier asks General Gamelin and Admiral Darlan to "work out a memorandum on a possible intervention to destroy the Russian oilfields." For a long time the Third Reich has been receiving shipments of raw materials including oil from Russia.
GERMANY: Today is Eva Braun's birthday. As a present Adolf Hitler gives her a book of Bavarian poetry, Josef Filsers Briefwexel by Ludwig Thoma. He inscribes it with the words: "My darling Eva. A gift of love from the heart. Adolf Hitler. Berlin Jan. 19, 1940" (UPI)
VATICAN CITY: Vatican Radio and the Vatican newspaper, "L'Osservtore Romano" revealed to the world "the dreadful cruelties of uncivilized tyranny" the Nazis were inflicting on Jewish and Catholic Poles." (273, pp.74)(Russell Folsom)
FINLAND: The Finnish army stages an unsuccessful attack on Russian positions at Salla.
CANADA:
Flower-class corvettes ordered from Canadian yards - HMS Trillium, HMS Mayflower, HMS Eyebright, HMCS Chambly, HMCS Chicoutimi, HMCS Saskatoon and HMCS Lethbridge.
U.S.A.: Columbia pictures releases its 44th
Three Stooges comedy, You Nazty Spy.
The Three Stooges vs. Hitler Moe Howard was the first American actor to impersonate Hitler, predating
Chaplin’s The Great Dictator by nine months. For that, he got on Hitler’s
death list. by Lynn Rapaport Until the late 1930s the American movie industry was economically
dependent on a world market for the success of its products. In Europe, more
than 35,000 theaters showed American movies regularly. Although Adolf Hitler
loved movies, he resisted seeing himself portrayed on screen. Under Nazi
control, the German film industry forbade characterizations of Hitler as
subject matter for film. Hitler was only to appear in newsreels and
documentaries, and he wanted no artificial Hitlers as rivals. Movies that dealt realistically with Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany were
likely to be banned overseas. Hollywood feared that unless they avoided
social and political issues, and only produced films considered "wholesome"
and "pure entertainment," the federal government would censor the movies or
break up the industry. In 1934, spearheaded by William Harrison Hays, the Motion Picture
Producers and Distributors of America created a production code (PCA) that
imposed sharp restrictions on how movies treated a wide range of subjects.
Article X of the Production Code stated: "The history, institution,
prominent people and citizenry of all nations shall be presented fairly. No
picture shall be produced that tends to incite bigotry or hatred among
peoples of differing races, religions or national origins." This code was
designed to secure the universal appeal of Hollywood movies and their
financial success throughout the world. Many films made in the early 1930s with political messages were removed
from circulation until the 1960s. The United States, in the throes of the Great Depression, followed an
isolationist foreign policy to keep out of the war. Most Americans were
unwilling to be drawn into European power struggles or to take sides between
Hitler and his intended victims. When the Second World War erupted in 1939, a Gallup poll showed that 96
percent of Americans opposed entering the war. Despite the Hays Code,
politicians still suspected ideological aims in Hollywood films. Depending
on the critic’ s political stripes, some saw isolationist propaganda, others saw
interventionist propaganda. Indeed, North Dakota Senator Gerald P. Nye, an isolationist, charged
Hollywood with making feature films that were propaganda vehicles to
mobilize the American public for war. But despite the widespread presence and significant influence of Jews in
the American film industry in the 1930s, Hollywood discreetly avoided making
overtly anti-Nazi films. This attitude remained unchanged until the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. In 1934, The Three Stooges signed with Columbia Studios to make eight
two-reel comedies, or "shorts," annually, for a fee of $60,000 per year,
which was divided evenly among the three performers. Two-reelers were in
great demand by movie theaters across the country. Long before the advent of
"coming attractions," shorts were considered "curtain raisers," to be shown
before the full-length feature movie. Film historians estimate that by the
late 1930s, about 88 million Americans
The Stooges knew that with hard work, luck, and determination they could become household names by being seen by audiences nationwide on a weekly basis.
Between 1934 and 1959, the Three Stooges made 190 short subjects for Columbia Studios. Of these 190 Columbia shorts, eight dealt directly with the Second World War. Five were anti-Nazi: You Nazty Spy! (1940), its sequel, I’ll Never Heil Again (1941), Back From the Front (1943), They Stooge to Conga (1943) and Higher Than a Kite (1943). Two were anti-Japanese: The Yokes On Me (1944) and No Dough Boys (1944) – and the eighth short, Gents Without Cents (1944) dealt with World War II on the home front.
While Charlie Chaplin envisioned the plot for a film about a mustached Jewish barber mistaken for the Führer, the German consulate in Los Angeles complained, and the Hays office told United Artists, the releasing company, that Chaplin "would run into censorship trouble." German sympathizers threatened to vandalize and set off stink bombs in theaters showing the film.
Shorts, however, were not regulated in the same way as feature films. The Three Stooges were unnoticed or ignored by the censors. In mid-1939, Jules White, head of Columbia Pictures Shorts Department and long-time producer and director of the Three Stooges comedies, walked into his brother Sam’s office and said that he was planning a comedy about Hitler. Moe would be Hitler, Curly would be Göring, and Larry would be Goebbels. Sam told his brother that the situation in Europe was grim, and asked if he could make it funny. "I’ll make it funny," Jules replied.
Filming began on December 5, 1939. It was shot quickly, in seven days.
Cutting was finished on December 26, 1939, and on January 19, 1940 Columbia pictures released its 44th Three Stooges comedy, You Nazty Spy. The film cost about $18,500 to make, and preceded the release of Charlie Chaplin’s The Great Dictator by nine months. Moe Howard of the Three Stooges was the first American actor to lampoon Hitler in film. It was also his favorite Three Stooges short.
In You Nazty Spy, three cabinet members, Mr. Ixnay, Mr. Onay and Mr. Amscray (pig-latin for Nix, No and Scram), are discussing solutions to the economic woes of their Kingdom, Moronica. Since the King of Moronica wants peace, which is not economically profitable, the cabinet members plot his overthrow, institute a dictator and start a war. They find Moe Hailstone, who with his cronies, Larry and Curly, is busy wallpapering the dining room.
They offer him the greatest opportunity of his life – to be a dictator.
Pondering it, Moe runs his hand through his hair. Scratching under his nose, he accidentally attaches a piece of dark wallpaper that was stuck to his finger.
The tape mustache makes him look like Hitler. When Moe asks what a dictator does, he’s told, "He makes speeches to the people promising them plenty, gives them nothing and takes everything."
Moronica gets a new flag – snakes entwined into the shape of a swastika, and a slogan, "Moronica for Morons." There is talk of a beer hall putsch, Moe orders a book burning, and sends an innocent man to a "concentrated camp."
Moe plans the conquest of the country Starvania and assembles the famous Peace Conference of Oompola, arguing for a corridor through the country, Double Crossia. In the end, Moe plans to throw his country’s dissidents to the lions.
Instead, the Three Stooges get eaten by the lions, and the film ends with a burping lion wearing the Reichsführer’s hat.
Although the Stooges are killed in You Nazty Spy, they are back running Moronica in the sequel, I’ll Never Heil Again, released in July 1941, five months before Pearl Harbor. Hailstone is bent on world domination, and fights with the Axis powers for control. In both shorts, their confrontations are treated as games--checkers and basketball – and are resolved with the demise of Hitler, the Nazis and the Axis powers.
The Three Stooges were anti-heroes, flaunting their Jewishness at a time when assimilation and ethnic self-denial were integral to the American film industry. Using comedy form the Stooges shatter the image of Hitler and the Nazis. Moe’s lampooning of Hitler is mindful of a Purim masquerade, when we dress up as Haman only so that we can hiss at his name.
All of the Stooges’ families had fled anti-Semitic persecution in Europe in the late 1800s, and in a small way the two-reelers helped bring the Nazi threat to the forefront of moviegoers’ attention. While the Jewish immigrants who founded the motion picture business were reticent to critique Nazi Germany on film, the Stooges wore their Jewishness unselfconsciously, and maligned the man who was exterminating their people back in Europe. So who had the last laugh? Columbia Studios, which made money on the popular shorts.
ATLANTIC OCEAN: SS Telnes sunk by U-55 NW of Orkneys.
At 2109, the unescorted SS Quiberon was hit in the stern by one torpedo from U-59 and sank within four minutes off Great Yarmouth.