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Paul McCullough : ウィキペディア英語版 | Paul McCullough
Paul Johnston McCullough (March 27, 1883 – March 25, 1936) was an American actor and comedian who was one half of the comedy duo Clark and McCullough, along with fellow comedian Bobby Clark. ==Early life and career== Born in Springfield, Ohio, McCullough met his future partner Bobby Clark in elementary school. The two became friends and attended tumbling classes at a local YMCA together. Their childhood friendship grew into an adult partnership when they decided to pursue a career as a comedic duo. Billing themselves as "Clark and McCullough", they began their career performing in minstrel shows in the early 1900s. From 1906 to 1912, the pair performed in circuses before entering vaudeville in 1912. Due to the White Rats strike of 1916, Clark and McCullough were forced to enter into the burlesque circuit to continue working. During their time in burlesque, the duo would create some of their most well known sketches. In their act, Clark was the dominant, motor-mouthed comedian and McCullough was the quieter straight man. In 1922, the team achieved mainstream stardom in Irving Berlin Broadway show ''Music Box Revue''. They went on to appear in the Broadway hit ''The Ramblers'', which was filmed as the 1930 musical comedy ''The Cuckoos'', a vehicle for Wheeler & Woolsey. In mid-1928, Clark and McCullough went to Hollywood where they signed with Fox Films Corporation for a reported $8,000 a week. The studio hoped the duo's stage popularity would transition to films and set about casting them in a series of two-reel comedies known as ''The Clark & McCullough Comedies''. According to the July 1931 issue of ''Picture Play'' magazine, the films were poorly received by critics and audiences alike. Around the Fox studio lot, the duo's film series were mockingly referred to as ''The Clark and McCullough Tragedies''. After filming fourteen shorts, Fox dropped Clark and McCullough in early 1929.〔 In 1930, the duo signed with RKO Radio Pictures. They would go on to make twenty-two comedy shorts for RKO over the next five years. In many of their films, McCullough’s input was severely limited to a supporting role as Clark generated the bulk of the humor. Their occupations in the films usually dictated what Clark's character name was: when photographers, such as in ''Alibi Bye Bye'', Clark was named "Flash"; when chefs, Clark was "Cook"; when lawyers, Clark was "Blackstone", etc. In the team's films with RKO, Paul McCullough was nearly always named "Blodgett," regardless of the role. As with their Fox films, the duo's comedy did not transition well into the medium of film and were poorly received.〔 RKO attempted to remedy this by hiring big name directors and granting bigger budgets, but the shorts continued to be panned by critics. Director Sam White, who directed three of Clark and McCullough's RKO shorts, later said that the duo's film career stalled because, on film, "...Bobby came across as annoying. Clark was one of those comedians who had to be seen live. In pictures, he was flat." Clark and McCullough's final film for RKO was 1935's ''Alibi Bye Bye''.
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