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Brown and Carney
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Brown and Carney : ウィキペディア英語版
Brown and Carney
Brown and Carney was a comedy duo consisting of Wally Brown and Alan Carney.
==Notes==
Both actors were under contract with RKO Radio Pictures. The two actors appeared in three films in 1943 when RKO decided to team them together as their answer to Abbott and Costello. Brown and Carney's first film as a team was ''Adventures of a Rookie'', which has some similarities to Abbott and Costello's 1941 film ''Buck Privates''. RKO Pictures sent Brown and Carney on a vaudeville tour together in 1944. Brown's screen character is usually "Jerry Miles" and Carney's is usually "Mike Strager." The only exceptions are ''Seven Days Ashore'', ''Step Lively'', and ''Vacation in Reno''. Actress Anne Jeffreys appeared in four of Brown and Carney's films.
Most of their films had connections to other films. Brown and Carney's third film ''Step Lively'' was based on the same play that inspired the Marx Brothers film ''Room Service''. ''Zombies on Broadway'' is a semi-sequel to the Val Lewton film ''I Walked with a Zombie'', in which Sir Lancelot reprises his role as a singer. Their film ''Radio Stars on Parade'' is notable for having appearances by several popular radio personalities of the time: Don Wilson, Ralph Edwards and Skinnay Ennis.
In 1945, writer Monte Brice went through older RKO scripts to find a new idea for Brown and Carney's next - and last - movie and decided on a remake of Wheeler and Woolsey's 1935 film ''The Nitwits'', which became ''Genius at Work''. ''Genius at Work'' also starred Bela Lugosi, as well as Lionel Atwill in his last film appearance. This film would become Brown and Carney's eighth and final film together as a team as the studio dropped the two comedians' contracts in 1946.
On occasion Brown and Carney appeared in the same film but not together (''Mexican Spitfire's Blessed Event'', ''Vacation in Reno''). For 1961's ''The Absent-Minded Professor'', they were listed in promotional material as "the comedy team of Brown and Carney" as though it was designed as a comeback, but they shared no scenes.
After the team's split, Brown continued working in films and appeared on television shows such as ''I Married Joan'', ''Wagon Train'', and ''My Three Sons'' until his death in 1961. Carney also continued working in films, appearing in Walt Disney films and also had a cameo as a police sergeant in Stanley Kramer's 1964 film It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.〔

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