Hollywood writer Kenneth Anger thinks Bruckman was one of the most important figures in the history of American screen comedy.[3]
Early life
Clyde Adolf Bruckman was born on June 30, 1894, in San Bernardino, California.[1][2]: 131 In 1911, Bruckman's father Rudolph was in a car accident that left him with headaches and brain damage. Rudolph killed himself in 1912.[1]
Bruckman was the director for four Laurel and Hardy comedies in the early stages of their work together at the Hal Roach Studios in 1927–1928. The most popular one was The Battle of the Century with its custard pie fight. During this period he also wrote for Harold Lloyd and Monty Banks.
Bruckman kept directing comedies during the sound era, his most famous comedy being The Fatal Glass of Beer, W. C. Fields' satire of Yukonmelodramas. He was addicted to alcohol, which was a problem for directing his movies. After 1934, Bruckman would be only allowed to write scripts.[5]
Recycling gags
Bruckman's experience of silent-comedy got him hired at Columbia Pictures' short-subject workforce (Bruckman was very important Columbia hiring Keaton). Bruckman continued to write new jokes for The Three Stooges and other comics. After some time, he re-used gags from Keaton and other creators. After he had taken some gags, Lloyd sued Columbia and won. "Never mind that Bruckman had co-written and co-directed Movie Crazy, giving him a good claim to his work, or that Bruckman and Lloyd may have got their ideas from a vaudeville act in the first place", wrote Ethan Gates in The New Republic, reviewing Matthew Dessem's 2015 biography of Bruckman, The Gag Man.[6]
Bruckman was hired by Universal Pictures to write comedy scenes for the studio's "B" musical shows. This was a big job that paid better than short works. He continued re-using gags but on a larger scale. He inserted the tuxedo routine into Universal's "B" musical-comedy feature Her Lucky Night. Bruckman adapted material from Lloyd's Welcome Danger into Universal's Joan Davis–Leon Errol comedy She Gets Her Man, and again took jokes Movie Crazy for Universal's "B" comedy So's Your Uncle. Lloyd was very angry by several things being taken from his movies, and sued for US$1,700,000;[7] the court ruled for Lloyd but granted damages of $40,000. After this Bruckman was fired and never made a film again.