- After Columbia shut down its shorts department, the Three Stooges took their act on the road. What they did not know was that they had found a renewed popularity thanks to their old theatrical film shorts being sold to television, exposing them to a whole new (and younger) audience. Larry's sister recalled that when their train pulled into some towns, there were mobs of people waiting. Larry, Moe and Joe DeRita would wonder who the V.I.P. was; they had no idea the crowd of people waiting was for them.
- When Joe DeRita was brought into The Three Stooges (as "Curly Joe"), Moe wanted to make him simply an employee. It was Larry who insisted that he be made a full equal partner. Larry reportedly threatened to quit unless Joe was treated fairly.
- When Larry joined the Three Stooges, Ted Healy offered him a salary of $90 a week and an extra $10 if he threw away the violin.
- His son John died in a car accident on November 17, 1961. He was 24 years old. His daughter Phyllis died of cancer on April 3, 1989. She was 60 years old.
- The same day the Three Stooges left Ted Healy and MGM, Moe Howard signed a contract for them with Columbia Pictures, and Larry, not aware of this, signed a contract for them with Universal Studios. The matter was eventually taken before a judge who determined Moe's contract was valid because it was signed mere hours before Larry's contract. After that, Larry never tried handling the business aspect of their careers again and instead left all that to Moe.
- In his youth, he trained as a boxer and had several bouts as an amateur before his father found out and put a stop to it. However, his boxing training did come in handy for his later career with Ted Healy and then The Three Stooges.
- Larry had calluses on the left side of his chin, which he claimed resulted from years of getting slapped around by Moe in the movies. But Larry was a trained violinist from childhood, and this type of scarring is an occupational hazard among fiddle players.
- On August 30, 1983 Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Curly Howard were awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1560 Vine Street in Hollywood, California where former Stooge Joe Besser and 2 thousands fans showed up for the unveiling.
- Owing to his wife's dislike of housekeeping, the Fines spent years living in hotels until they finally purchased a home in Los Angeles after World War II. One hotel that had been their "home base" for years was the President Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey, which has since been demolished.
- During his 40-year film career, Larry appeared only in one film that did not also feature fellow Stooge Moe Howard. That film is Stage Mother (1933).
- Larry's final concert appearance was at Loara High School in Anaheim, California on March 2, 1974.
- As a child, Larry spilled a bottle of a powerful acid, badly burning his left arm. Doctors recommended that he take violin lessons as therapy to strengthen the damaged muscles. At age ten, he played a solo piece, backed by the Howard Lanin Orchestra. His parents even considered sending him to Europe to study music, but they decided against this when World War I began.
- Offstage, Larry was a social butterfly. He liked a good time and surrounded himself with friends. He and his wife, Mabel Haney, loved to party, and every Christmas served lavish midnight meals. Some of his friends called him a "yes man", since he was so agreeable, no matter what the circumstances.
- His parents, Joseph Feinberg and Fanny Lieberman, owned a watch repair and jewelry shop at South Street in South Philadelphia.
- According to Larry Fine, the Three Stooges were favorites of Harry Cohn, the boss of Columbia Pictures. Larry recalled that in the late 1950s, when other Hollywood studios were phasing out theatrical short-subjects, Cohn reassured them with these words: "You guys are good luck to me. As long as I'm alive you've got a job here". Cohn died in 1958 and Columbia immediately shut down its shorts department, putting the Three Stooges out of work.
- In 1973, Fine appeared in an infomercial promoting a book, "A Stroke of Luck", presented as his memoir. In fact, Fine later disavowed this book; the later authorized biography, "One Fine Stooge" (2006), goes into considerable detail of how the book's author/publisher took advantage of Fine in its preface.
- Renowned for his spending, in an interview with Three Stooges Writer/Director Edward Bernds, he said when Columbia shut down the Shorts Departmenrt, Larry was nearly forced into bankruptcy.
- Has a mural painted of him on a building at 3rd and South Streets in South Philadelphia.
- After his stroke, he never performed again.
- Father-in-law of Don Lamond, who appeared in several Three Stooges full-length features and also hosted the local Three Stooges television show in Los Angeles, California in the late 1950s and early 1960s (which helped give The Three Stooges careers a renaissance).
- When first approached to work for the Three Stooges, he was performing at the Rainbow Gardens nightclub, under contract to Fred Mann. A few nights after being approached, the police closed the Rainbow Gardens for violating the Prohibition laws, and Fred Mann committed suicide. Now free of his contract, Larry joined the Three Stooges.
- Larry originally had a larger role with the Stooges. He was the central character in "Woman Haters", their first starring short, and had most of the lines in the 1934 Columbia feature "The Captain Hates the Sea".
- His wife, Mabel Haney, died of a sudden heart attack on May 30, 1967. Larry was on the road and about to take the stage for a live show when he heard the bad news. He immediately flew home to Woodland Hills, California.
- Billy West based the voice of Stimpy on The Ren & Stimpy Show (1991) on Larry.
- Following his death, he was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California, in the Freedom Mausoleum, Sanctuary of Liberation.
- The Three Stooges' final film "Kook's Tour" has an odd history. Conceived in 1969 as a series of comedy travelogues showing the now retired Stooges hitting the road, finally taking vacation trips they were always too busy for during their careers. The production was halted when Larry Fine had a stroke in January of 1970. The unfinished pilot was padded out to sixty minutes with scenic shots of Yellowstone Park then shelved for nearly 10 years. It was finally released for home use on Super 8 film. Shorter versions, such as one running 15 minutes, in black & white were also released.
- Lived in the hills of Griffith Park.
- With their Columbia contract canceled and Joe DeRita replacing Joe Besser The Three Stooges did a lot of personal appearance tours and in 1959 signed back with Columbia for a series of feature length movies. They also filmed a television pilot entitled "The Three Stooges Scrapbook". This was a combination of live action and animation filmed in color. It eventually played as a featurette in cinemas for a short while then disappeared. Pieces of it were later used in their feature The Three Stooges in Orbit.
- Original member of The Three Stooges.
- Father of actress Phyllis Fine and John Fine.
- Larry was the second member of the Three Stooges act to die of complications from a stroke, the first being Curly Howard, in 1952.
- In the mid-1960s Larry Fine had a pet dog named "Angel Boy".
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