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Biography for Lou Costello

Biography
Complete Filmography
with Synopsis
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Entertaining the Troops (1988)
as Himself
The 30-Foot Bride of Candy Rock (1959)
as Artie Pinsetter
Dance with Me, Henry (1956)
as Lou Henry
Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955)
as Freddie Franklin [Lou Costello]
Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops (1955)
as Willie Piper
Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1953)
as Tubby
Abbott and Costello Go to Mars (1953)
as Orville
Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd (1952)
as Oliver "Puddin' Head" Johnson (credited as [Lou] Costello)
Lost in Alaska (1952)
as George Bell
Jack and the Beanstalk (1952)
as Jack (credited as [Lou] Costello)
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 LOU COSTELLO
AKA: Lou Cristillo;
Sebastian Cristillo;
Louis Francis Cristillo;
Costello;
[Lou] Costello;
Born: 1906-03-06
Birth place: Paterson, New Jersey, USA
Death: 1959-03-03
Death cause: heart attack
Profession: vaudevillian, actor, newsboy, prizefighter, soda fountain clerk, stuntman, producer, laborer, salesman
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Biography

The explosive fireplug half of the enormously popular, lowbrow comedy team of Abbott and Costello (he played the good-natured fall-guy with a plaintive voice and aggressive manner, while Abbott was the fast-talking wiseguy). After some years as a prizefighter and stuntman, Costello entered vaudeville, where he teamed up with Abbott in 1930. They played burlesque with their fast-moving, somewhat "blue" act, till a cleaned-up version landed them a regular spot on Kate Smith's radio show and a Broadway revue, "Streets of Paris" (1939).

Universal Pictures came calling, seeing in the team a modern Laurel and Hardy (though their appeal was more akin to Wheeler and Woolsey or Clark and McCullough). The team made more than a dozen films during the WWII years, mostly for Universal (and some on loan-out to MGM). They were light as air, mindless entertainment for wartime, and though critics lambasted them, the public flocked to see films like "One Night in the Tropics" (their first, 1940), "Buck Privates" and "Hold That Ghost" (both 1941), "Pardon My Sarong" (1942), "It Ain't Hay" (1943), and "Lost in a Harem" (1944). The team's classic "Who's on First?" routine was featured in the film "The Naughty Nineties" (1945). In the best of these films, the boys played good-natured bumbling schemers and con men, caught up in circumstances beyond their meager control. Good leads and supporting casts (e.g., The Andrews Sisters, Martha Raye, Joan Davis) helped, too.

With the end of WWII, the team's popularity slipped. This was not helped by the fact that they were put into increasingly juvenile, low-budget films for both Universal and on loan-out (twenty films from 1946 to the end of their career). In their better vehicles, the pair cavorted and double-talked through "Buck Privates Come Home" (1947) and Mexican Hayride" (1948). But mostly, the titles told it all: "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein" (1948), "Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd" (1952), "Abbott and Costello Go to Mars" (1953), and so on.

By the time of their last, "Dance with Me, Henry" (1956), Abbott and Costello were as tired of each other as their audiences were of them. They split acrimoniously in 1957, and Costello made one solo film, the fantasy "The Thirty-Foot Bride of Candy Rock" (1959). After one of his children drowned, Costello devoted much time to charity work in his native New Jersey and lost some interest in his career.

Abbott and Costello found a renewed audience on TV; not only were their films popular in reruns, but they briefly had their own "Abbott and Costello Show" (syndicated, 1952-1953). This show itself went into endless reruns, and was even turned into an animated series in 1966. Abbott and Costello also appeared on "The Colgate Comedy Hour" (NBC, 1951-1954). The two were tearfully reunited in a segment of "This Is Your Life" shortly before Costello's death.



Family

BROTHER: Pat Costello. Producer.

DAUGHTER: Patricia Anne Costello. Author. Wrote biography of father.

DAUGHTER: Carole Lou Costello. Died in 1987.

DAUGHTER: Christine Costello. Author. Wrote memoir.



Companion

WIFE: Ann Costello. Survived him.



Milestone

Worked in a haberdashery, a slaughterhouse and the prize ring before he met William 'Bud' Abbott while working as a $40-a-week comic in burlesque; Abbott a last-second substitute one night for Costello's indisposed straight man

1931: Joined with Bud Abbott in Brooklyn

1938: First radio performance (as Abbott and Costello) on the Kate Smith program

1939: Broadway acting debut in revue, "Streets of Paris", alonside Carmen Miranda

1940: Film debut with Abbott in comic supporting roles, "One Night in the Tropics"

1940: First starring roles for the duo, "Buck Privates", for Universal Studios

1941 - 1944: Abbott and Costello consistently voted among the top ten box office stars by motion picture exhibitors

1946: Unsuccessfully attempted to work separately within the same film, "The Little Giant"

1948: Flagging popularity revived with "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein"; film initiated a series of onscreen encounters with other monsters

Team appeared in 52 episodes of half-hour TV series, "The Abbott and Costello Show", reprising most of their comic routines

1955: Ended association with Universal after "Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy"

1956: Their most famous comic routine, "Who's on First?", placed on permanent display at the National Baseball Fall of Fame Museum in Cooperstown, NY, in the form of a gold record and a framed copy of the text

1956: Last film with Abbott, "Dance with Me, Henry"

1957: Ended partnership with Bud Abbott

1959: Made one solo film appearance (also his last), "The Thirty Foot Bride of Candy Rock"



Education

P S 15 - Paterson, New Jersey


Bibliography

"The Abbott and Costello Book" Jim Mulholland 1975

"Lou's on First" Chris Costello with Raymond Strait 1981

"The Horror Spoofs of Abbott and Costello: A Critical Assessment of the Comedy Team's Monster Films" Jeffrey S. Miller 2000



Citizenship

United States


Notes

"The great success of Abbott and Costello was attributed by the critics to their old-fashioned knock-about style, combined with a modern toughness of talk. Abbott was the lean and hawk-eyed wise guy, the sharp-shooter who always got the last word; Costello the good-natured dimwit who always got it in the neck--except when the worm occasionally turned. The average viewer never analyzed them--he just laughed." --From his March 4, 1959 The New York Times obituary.

A gold record of Abbott and Costello's "Who's On First?" routine is displayed at The Baseball Hall of Fame.


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