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・ Hugh Hay
・ Hugh Hayes
・ Hugh Haynie
・ Hugh Heclo
・ Hugh Hedley Scurfield
・ Hugh Hefner
・ Hugh Heinrick
・ Hugh Henderson
・ Hugh Hendry
・ Hugh Henry
・ Hugh Henry Brackenridge
・ Hugh Henry Gough
・ Hugh Henry John Seymour
・ Hugh Henry Mitchell
・ Hugh Henshall
Hugh Herbert
・ Hugh Herdon
・ Hugh Herland
・ Hugh Heron
・ Hugh Herr
・ Hugh Hesketh Hughes
・ Hugh Hewitt
・ Hugh Heywood
・ Hugh Hibbert
・ Hugh Hickling
・ Hugh Higgins of Tyrawley
・ Hugh High
・ Hugh Hill
・ Hugh Hill (baseball)
・ Hugh Hind


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Hugh Herbert : ウィキペディア英語版
Hugh Herbert

Hugh Herbert (August 10, 1884 – March 12, 1952) was a motion picture comedian. He began his career in vaudeville, and wrote more than 150 plays and sketches.
==Career==
Born in New York City, Herbert "had many serious roles, and for years was seen on major vaudeville circuits as a pathetic old Hebrew."〔
The advent of talking pictures brought stage-trained actors to Hollywood, and Hugh Herbert soon became a popular movie comedian. His screen character was usually absent-minded and flustered. He would flutter his fingers together and talk to himself, repeating the same phrases: "hoo-hoo-hoo, wonderful, wonderful, hoo hoo hoo!" So many imitators (including Curly Howard of The Three Stooges and Etta Candy in the Wonder Woman comic book series) copied the catchphrase as "woo woo" that Herbert himself began to use "woo woo" rather than "hoo hoo" in the 1940s.〔
Herbert's earliest movies, like Wheeler & Woolsey's 1930 feature ''Hook, Line and Sinker'', cast him in generic comedy roles that could have been taken by any comedian. He developed his own unique screen personality, complete with a silly giggle, and this new character caught on quickly. He was frequently featured in Warner Brothers films of the 1930s, including ''Footlight Parade'', ''Bureau of Missing Persons'', ''Fog Over Frisco'', ''Fashions of 1934'', and ''Gold Diggers of 1935'', as well as the 1935 film adaptation of Shakespeare's ''A Midsummer Night's Dream''. He played leads in "B comedies", notably ''Sh! The Octopus'', a 1937 comedy-mystery featuring an exceptional unmasking of the culprit.〔
He was often caricatured in Warners' Looney Tunes shorts of the 1930s/40s, such as ''The Hardship of Miles Standish'' and ''Speaking of the Weather''. One of the minor characters in the Terrytoons short ''The Talking Magpies'' (1946) is also a recognizably Hugh Herbertesque bird. In 1939 Herbert signed with Universal Pictures, where, as at Warners, he played supporting roles in major films, and leading roles in minor ones. One of his best-received performances from this period is in the Olsen and Johnson comedy ''Hellzapoppin''', in which he plays a nutty detective.
Herbert joined Columbia Pictures in 1943 and became a familiar face in short subjects, with the same actors and directors who made the Stooges shorts. He continued to star in these comedies for the remainder of his life. Shortly before his death from a heart attack in 1952, aged 67, he appeared on television, making a surprise appearance (in drag) on a live Spike Jones show.〔
Herbert wrote six screenplays, co-writing the screenplays for the films ''Lights of New York'' (1928) and ''Second Wife'' (1930) and contributing to ''The Great Gabbo'' (1929), among others. He acted in a few films co-written by the much more prolific (but unrelated) screenwriter F. Hugh Herbert: ''Fashions of 1934'' (1934), ''We're in the Money'' (1935) and ''Colleen'' (1936). He also directed one film, ''He Knew Women'' (1930).〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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