Although he never appears in the film, a photo of candidate Hammond Egger appears several times in
Three Dark Horses. The photo is actually of supporting actor
Bud Jamison, who died suddenly in 1944. The inclusion of his photo in the film was done as tribute to the actor, whose talents were missed during the post-
Curly Howard era. This is the sixteenth and final Stooge short with the word "three" in the title. Hammond Egger is a pun on "ham and egger", nickname for a supporter of the
Ham and Eggs Movement in
California during the
Great Depression. This was a simplistic share-our-wealth movement inspired by the then recently deceased
Huey Long. The implication is that Hammond Egger supporters will be ordinary people who are not very bright, as well as looking for a handout. It was also a slang term for someone working a menial job, the implication being that ham and eggs (a relatively cheap dish) would be the only substantial thing he could afford to eat. (Before the ham-and-eggs movement, the Stooges used a ham and eggs gag in
A Pain in the Pullman (1936). They called a boarding house owner "Mrs. Hammond Eggerly", implying that the board (food) supplied at her place would be cheap eats for laborers.) The Stooges had also done a "ham and eggs" gag earlier in
You Nazty Spy! (1940), this time with a specific reference to the movement. Hitleresque dictator Moe Hailstone is whipping up a mob with demagogic promises, including "Every Thursday you will receive...ham-burger and eggs!" (A slogan of the ham-and-eggs movement had been "$30 every Thursday".) An extra gag here is that changing "ham and eggs" to "hamburger and eggs" makes the dish kosher, probably not something on Hailstone’s mind at all. A generation later, wrestling announcer
Bobby Heenan would refer to dim fans and untalented wrestlers as "ham-and-eggers".
Three Dark Horses was filmed from 26–28 August 1952. It was released on 16 October 1952, just 19 days before the actual
1952 United States presidential election between
Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower and
Democrat Adlai Stevenson II. ==References==