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Mulligan and Garrity (The Gorilla)

Created by Ralph Spence
(1890-1940)

“Out go the lights—on go the thrills!
Shrieks! Yells! Roars! Screams! More Shrieks!
MULLIGAN, MULLIGAN,
WHERE THE HELL IS MULLIGAN?”
— lyrics from the musical

Ralph Spence’s 1925 play The Gorilla: A Musical Comedy, was a slight piece of silliness that intentionally lampooned the whole haunted house genre, so popular at the time. A killer known only as “The Gorilla” (Strangler of men—kidnapper of women!) is the prime suspect in the murder of a wealthy businessman whose daughter hires private detectives MULLIGAN and GARRITY, worrying that her boyfriend may be suspected of the crime.

The bumbling detectives investigate, and eventually most of the suspects end up chasing each other around a creepy old mansion full of trap doors, secret passages and the like until the murderer — a man in a gorilla suit — is apprehended.

Any doubts that this was anything but a parody are easily dispelled by the pay’s tagline “Out-bats ‘The Bat’! Out-cats ‘The Cat and the Canary’! Out-warns ‘The Last Warning’.”

Parody or not, the play lasted only fifteen performances on Broadway. But it fared considerably better in its subsequent run in Chicago, and went on to inspire several films.

The first version was silent and appeared only a few years after the curtains went down on Broadway. Mulligan was played by Fred Kelsey and Garrity by Keystone Cops vet Charles Murray, while the young suitor, Stevens,  was played by a very young Walter Pidgeon.

It’s all played out as scenery-chewing slapstick, making Spence’s already ridiculous play even more ridiculous, but audiences must have liked it, because it wouldn’t be the last adaptation. It was filmed again in 1930 and in 1939 (with the singin’ dancin’ comedy trio The Ritz Brothers).

But you couldn’t kill this thing with a stick. Parts of it were even regurgitated for a 1937 Warner Bros. flick called Sh! The Octopus, with the gorilla converted to an octopus.

Of course. Throw in some Scooby Snacks and it would be a perfect Scooby Doo episode.

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Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith, with a wave of the tentacles to Tim Beer.

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