The Keystone Kops were a series of silent film comedies about an incompetent group of policemen that were produced by Mack Sennett. Their first film debuted in 1912, but after a few years Sennett shifted them to supporting characters for the silent film comedies of Charlie Chaplin, Fatty Arbuckle, and Mabel Normand. They continued to appear after their heyday in such films as 1955's Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops and inspired many homages including Mel Brooks' Silent Movie and the 1980 Broadway production (and its 1983 film adapation) of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance.
References[]
- Footage of the Keystone Kops appears during the song "Hey a Movie!" in the 1981 special The Muppets Go to the Movies.
- The New York City Department of Missing Birds, a group of incompetent constables in the first Sesame Street Live stage show A Sesame Street Mystery: The Case of the Missing Rara Avis, is a nod to Sennett's police force.
- Newsreel footage of the Sennett studios are shown in the Muppet Babies episode "This Little Piggy Went to Hollywood."
- Sesame Street scripts occasionally call for "Keystone Cops-Style Music" during fast-paced scenes, such as for Episode 4104 and the special The Cookie Thief.