, the duo's
Looney Tunes parody as seen in
A Tale of Two Kitties (1942) Abbott and Costello were frequently parodied in
Looney Tunes &
Merrie Melodies cartoons as
Babbit and Catstello, they appeared in cartoon such as:
A Tale of Two Kitties (1942),
Tale of Two Mice (1945),
Hollywood Canine Canteen and
The Mouse-Merized Cat (both from 1946). They were also directly referenced in
Hollywood Daffy (1946). A catchphrase from Abbott and Costello's radio show, ''"I'm only three and a half years old"'' was often quoted in these cartoons too. Even
Bugs Bunny's famous
catchphrase, ''"Ain't I a stinker?"'' was borrowed from
Lou Costello. Although they are not inductees of the Hall itself, Abbott and Costello are among the few non-baseball personnel to be memorialized in the
Baseball Hall of Fame. A plaque and a gold record of the "Who's on First?" sketch have been on permanent display there since 1956, and the routine runs on an endless video loop in the exhibit area. Their "
Who's on First?" routine has been referred to numerous times. In the 1988 movie
Rain Man,
Dustin Hoffman's
autistic character Raymond Babbitt recites an affectless "Who's on First?" as a
defence mechanism. In 1982,
Tonight Show host
Johnny Carson performed a topical sketch as then-President
Ronald Reagan in which "Who's on First?"-style confusion arose from the names of Interior Secretary
James Watt, Palestinian leader
Yassir Arafat and Chinese leader
Hu Yaobang. The comedy group
The Credibility Gap performed a
rock and roll update of "Who's on First?" using the names of rock groups
The Who,
The Guess Who, and
Yes, recorded and released on their first album,
The Bronze Age of Radio. On the January 13, 2001, episode of
Saturday Night Live host
Charlie Sheen and
SNL cast-member
Rachel Dratch performed a modified version of "Who's on First?" in a sketch. NBC's
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (2006), a drama about life backstage at a television comedy series, used "Who's on First?" as a plot device. A TV movie called
Bud and Lou, based on a book by Hollywood correspondent
Bob Thomas, was broadcast in 1978. Starring
Harvey Korman as Bud Abbott and
Buddy Hackett as Lou Costello, the film told the duo's life story, focusing on Costello and portraying him as volatile and petty. Jerry Seinfeld is an avid Abbott and Costello fan and their influence on him was celebrated in a 1994 NBC special,
Abbott and Costello Meet Jerry Seinfeld. Seinfeld's TV series includes numerous references to the team. George Costanza's middle name is "Louis", after Costello. "
The Old Man" (Season 4, Episode 18, aired February 18, 1993) featured a cantankerous old man named "Sid Fields" (played by veteran actor
Bill Erwin) as a tribute to the landlord on the Abbott and Costello TV show. A friend of Kramer's is named Mickey Abbott. A copywriter for the J. Peterman catalog is named Eddie Sherman, after the team's longtime agent. In Episode 30,
Kramer hears the famous Abbott and Costello line, "His father was a mudder. His mother was a mudder." In 1991, the
US Postal Service featured Abbott and Costello on a first-class stamp, part of a "Comedian Commemorative Issue", illustrated by
Al Hirschfeld. In 2003,
Montclair State University dedicated a student residential complex named The Abbott and Costello Center on Clove Road in the
Little Falls portion of the university's campus. In
Robin Hood: Men in Tights, a 1993 spoof comedy directed by
Mel Brooks,
Dick Van Patten played the part of the Abbot. At one point, a man who looked and sounded like Lou Costello (played by
Chuck McCann) yelled "Hey, Abbott!", in exactly the same way Lou did in the Abbott and Costello movies, repeating a joke from Brooks' Robin Hood sitcom
When Things Were Rotten in which Van Patten shouted the line. Van Patten responds, "I hate that guy!" Abbott and Costello were inducted into the
New Jersey Hall of Fame in 2009. In 2015, a non-profit fan film was produced titled
Abbott & Costello Meet Superman. The film was screened at the Superman Celebration Film Festival in Metropolis Illinois and is currently streaming on YouTube. Abbott and Costello are played by two actors from New York, Aaron M. Lambert and Jake Navatka. In the 2016 sci-fi movie
Arrival, the two Heptapods (
alien beings) are named Abbott and Costello by the scientists, because the one named Abbott is taller and quieter while the one named Costello is shorter and chattier. The names also have
extra-diegetic significance as two of the main themes in the movie are
linguistics and
(mis)communication, which mirrors themes of the "Who's on First?" routine. ==References==