By 1925, and after a full career on Broadway, he and brothers
Al and Jimmy decided to team up and form a song/dance-and-comedy act called the
Ritz Brothers. Al chose the name "Ritz" after seeing it on the side of a laundry truck. The brothers would have Harry standing in the middle singing "The Man in the Middle Is the Funny One", a song written for them. The other two brothers would then take to berating Harry for occupying that favored spot and, as they screamed their displeasure, Harry would wander about bellowing "Don't holler--please don't holler." Their comedy style was a tandem song and dance, as if they were one. By 1930 they were playing the Palace where the headliner was
Frank Fay with his bride,
Barbara Stanwyck. By 1934, they had done their first film together as a team,
Hotel Anchovy, all of 18 minutes long. They worked in Shubert shows for a time and in 1932 caught the attention of
Earl Carroll who featured them in his
Vanities that year. They were appearing at the old Clover Club on
Hollywood's
Sunset Strip when
Darryl F. Zanuck reportedly caught the act and signed them to a contract. (Al had appeared earlier in a silent film,
The Avenging Trail in 1918.) The Ritz Brothers started their Hollywood film career with
20th Century Fox in 1936, starring with
Alice Faye in
Sing, Baby, Sing. Later they were in
One in a Million with
Sonja Henie,
The Three Musketeers with
Don Ameche,
Kentucky Moonshine and
The Goldwyn Follies. The brothers left
Fox in 1940 and went with rival studio
Universal. The brothers quit after filming the movie "Never a Dull Moment" in 1943 to concentrate on club dates. The Ritzes, among the first of the big-money acts in
Las Vegas, made a few television specials in the early 1950s. They carried their zaniness on the road until 1965 when Al died in
New Orleans where they were performing. Harry and Jimmy stayed together and by 1966 opened the new Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. They continued to perform, just the two of them, in Florida and upstate New York theaters, cruise ships, as well as some guest appearances on the Dick Cavett Show, Merv Griffin, etc. By the 1970s and 1980s, they had small roles in films such as
Blazing Stewardesses (1975) and
Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood (1976). Harry also appeared in a cameo in the 1976
Mel Brooks film
Silent Movie. ==Personal life==