Slippery Silks was filmed from June 10 to June 15, 1936. The film represents the Stooges' iirst genuine pie and pastry altercation. Although it involves predominantly
cream puffs, a pie becomes inadvertently launched amidst the chaos when Curly obstructs Moe's trajectory while attempting to retrieve a "lucky penny", resulting in him being struck in the face with a pie. It is noteworthy that the earliest prefiguration of a pie fight in a Stooges short occurred in
Pop Goes the Easel (1935), wherein sculptor's clay is employed as a substitute projectile hurled at unsuspecting individuals. Moe Howard stated in his autobiography that over 150 pies were thrown. In Moe's June 8, 1973, appearance on
The Mike Douglas Show, he revealed to Douglas that, in making the Stooge pie-fight scenes, he was responsible for most of the pie-throwing, remarking: "the studio auditors claimed I had saved them tens of thousands of dollars with my accuracy in the pie throw." The pie fight scenes were used in the
Muppet Babies episode, "Good, Clean, Fun". "Preston Black" was a pseudonym used for a time by Jack White (brother of producer
Jules White), who had been in a nasty divorce and was trying to shield income from his ex-wife. The ending theme of "Listen to the Mockingbird" features different instrumentation. ==References==