Nash made his first foray into show business in 1912 at the age of 15 when he and childhood friend
Moe Howard joined the
Annette Kellerman Diving Girls, a
vaudeville act that included four boys. The act ended quickly after an accident on stage, and Nash and Howard went their separate ways. Nash then developed a vaudeville act and adopted the stage name Ted Healy. Healy's act was a hit, and he soon expanded his role as a comedian and
master of ceremonies. In the 1920s, he was the highest-paid performer in vaudeville, making $9,000 a week (equivalent to about $166,000 in 2024). He added performers to his stage show, including his new wife, Betty Brown (Betty Braun), and his
German shepherd dog. The Healys' revue toured, listed on the marquee as
Syncopated Toes, and when some of his acrobats quit in late 1923, Moe Howard answered the advertisement for replacements. Since Howard was not an acrobat, Healy cast his old friend as a
stooge (a purported member of the audience who is picked, ostensibly at random, to come onstage). In the routine, Howard's appearance would end with Healy losing his trousers.
Ted Healy and his Southern Gentlemen Howard's brother
Shemp joined the act as a heckler in early 1924; however, both Howards temporarily left show business in mid-1925. Ted and Betty were hired in June 1925 to star in the Broadway revue
Earl Carroll Vanities of 1925. Ted brought some of the routines he developed with the Howard brothers, using three comics under contract to Carroll, (Dave Chasen, Kenneth Lackey, and Lou Warren). After a contract dispute whereby it was determined that Carroll was in the wrong, Ted and Betty left "Vanities" in October 1925 with Lou Warren and relaunched their
Syncopated Toes revue, now retitled
Fun in the Healy Manner. By January 1926 Shemp Howard had returned, and they successfully toured the country through the summer of 1926. Ted and Betty received another Broadway opportunity, this time from the Shubert Brothers, who hired them for
The Passing Show of 1926, with Ted bringing Shemp and Lou along.
Passing only enjoyed a preview tour and did not open on Broadway, but the Shuberts and Healy retooled the show into the successful
A Night in Spain, with Phil Baker joining the Healys as its stars. For
Spain, Ted utilized four stooges in some scenes: Shemp, Lou Warren, brother-in-law Sam "Moody" Braun, and Dick Hakins. Arriving on Broadway in May 1927 after four months of successful previews, Hakins fell ill and was replaced by comedy/specialty dancer Bobby Pinkus. In November 1927,
Spain began a national tour with four months at Chicago's
Four Cohans Theatre.
Larry Fine, who had been working as the lead performer and house
MC at Chicago's
Rainbo Gardens nightclub and restaurant, was added to Healy's group of comics in late March 1928. '' (1935) The Shuberts hired Ted to star in their new show
A Night in Venice. Moe Howard returned to show business and joining Ted at his home in Connecticut to develop some comedy bits for the revue, which began rehearsals in January 1929. Shemp Howard also returned, but Larry Fine was in Atlantic City with his wife, waiting for the birth of his daughter. Healy hired comedy xylophonist
Fred Sanborn in Fine's place. Circa mid February, Fine joined the
Venice cast. During the run of
A Night in Spain, Ted and Betty performed a song-and-dance stage act in nightclubs and other theaters after the evening show; but the Healys split in 1928. Ted came up with the idea to spotlight his stooges in a new act, with the emphasis on comedy and slapstick humor. Concurrent with their performances in
Venice, Healy booked his troupe in additional shows as '"Ted Healy & His Southern Gentlemen" and later as "Ted Healy & His Racketeers".
A Night in Venice had a brief road tour after Broadway and closed in March 1930. Fox Films hired Healy to costar in the film
Soup to Nuts (filmed in July 1930), and Ted brought Moe, Shemp, Larry, and Fred Sanborn with him. In late August 1930, the Stooges and Healy parted ways after a dispute over a movie contract. Sanborn began a solo career, and the remaining trio began performing on their own, using such monikers as "The Three Lost Soles" and "Howard, Fine, and Howard," and often incorporated material from previous Healy shows. Healy attempted to sue the Stooges for using his material, but the copyright was held by the
Shubert Theatre Corporation, for which the routines had been produced, and the Stooges had the Shuberts' permission to use it. Healy hired replacement stooges—Eddie Moran (soon replaced by Richard "Dick" Hakins), Jack Wolf (father of sportscaster
Warner Wolf), and
Paul "Mousie" Garner—in early 1931. This group appeared with Healy in two Broadway plays, ''The Gang's All Here
and Billy Rose's Crazy Quilt''. Moe, Larry, and Shemp rejoined Healy's act in late July 1932, but Shemp left on August 19 to pursue a solo career and was replaced by his younger brother,
Curly Howard. The switch from Shemp to Curly happened very quickly, and on August 27, 1932, only eight days after Shemp departed, "Ted Healy with Howard, Fine & Howard" premiered Curly at the RKO Palace in Cleveland, Ohio. The new lineup's personal appearances headlined many of the prime nightclubs and movie palaces nationally for the next several months. In late spring 1933, Ted was contracted by MGM, and the act once more headed to Hollywood, this time to stay. Over the next year, Ted's comedy team appeared in several MGM shorts and even supported stars like Clark Gable and Joan Crawford in theatrical films like
Dancing Lady, a blockbuster which featured Healy in an important supporting role as well as
Fred Astaire. On his own, Healy was given major roles in MGM features such as
Bombshell with Jean Harlow and
Operator 13 with Marion Davies and Gary Cooper. In March 1934, Fine and the Howards permanently and more or less amicably parted professional ways with Ted Healy and began working at Columbia Studios as "
The Three Stooges."
After the Stooges Healy appeared in a succession of films for
MGM from 1934 to 1937 and was also loaned to
20th Century-Fox and
Warner Bros. for films by those companies, playing both dramatic and comedic roles. One of his films,
Mad Holiday (1936), featured stooge Dick Hakins as his sidekick. In
San Francisco (1936), a new lineup of "stooges" consisting of Jimmy Brewster, Red Pearson, and Sammy Glasser (Sammy Wolfe) filmed a scene with Healy, but it was omitted from the final release; a few production stills of them survive. Also, in the Technicolor short subject
La Fiesta de Santa Barbara (1935), Jimmy Brewster briefly appears to 'stooge' with Healy. During this period, Healy took to wearing a
toupée in public. His last film,
Hollywood Hotel (1937), was released a few days after he died. ==Personal life==