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For Laurel and Hardy Fans, a Club With Plenty of Guffaws

John Giriat, 65, setting up a projector at the Players Club in Manhattan during a meeting of a Laurel and Hardy fan club.Anthony Lanzilote for The New York Times John Giriat, 65, setting up a projector at the Players Club in Manhattan during a meeting of a Laurel and Hardy fan club.
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.Associated Press Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.

The cookies were laid out on paper plates, a 70-year-old print of “The Chimp” was threaded into the aging film projector, and the Sons of the Desert were filing into the Players Club on Gramercy Park South on a recent weeknight.

“We’re running three of the boys’ funniest films tonight,” Jack Roth, 60, told the Sons of the Desert, the name of a Laurel and Hardy fan club that has been around for nearly half a century. Mr. Roth holds the group’s top title of grand sheik.

The lights dimmed and the old movie flickered to life, animating life into “the boys,” a pair of men wearing derbies and struggling to load a cannon as part of their circus act.

The boys â€" the legendary Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy â€" engaged in their typical high jinks, and the chuckles of fan club members turned to cackles and then guffaws as they finally managed to bring down the big top, eliciting screeches and applause from an audience in a communal state of celluloid-induced bliss.

Hardy died in 1957 and Laurel eight years later, but their memory endures in the hearts of this fan club that was formed in 1965, and is named after a 1933 Laurel and Hardy film, “Sons of the Desert.” There are now 300 chapters of the Sons of Desert club around the world, Mr. Roth said.

“People can watch these movies at home now, but it’s not the same thing,” said Mr. Roth, who said that club membership had declined over the years. But, still, a core group of fans keeps paying dues and showing up at the Players Club, where the club holds its monthly meetings. And without fail, at every meeting the members say a toast and raise a glass to “the boys.’’

One member, Brian Gari, said, “There’s something about seeing the boys on real film in the dark with a group of fans â€" it’s like being back in the 1930s again in an old movie house, a bit like a time warp.”

“It’s the camaraderie and appreciation for the humor,” added Mr. Gari, whose maternal grandfather was the singer and comedian Eddie Cantor. “Even though we’ve seen these films a million times, it’s always like seeing them for the first time. You never stop noticing new things.”

Mr. Roth said he was 5 when he saw his first Laurel and Hardy film, “The Devil’s Brother,” in which the men are cast as Stanlio and Ollio in a spoof of an Italian operetta.

“I literally wet my pants, it was so funny,” he recalled, as the group mingled before the films were screened at the Players Club. “Now I own the film.”

In fact, Mr. Roth is the chapter’s Keeper of the Celluloid - that’s an official title - because he owns about 2,500 reels of old film, including nearly the entirety of Laurel and Hardy’s work, which includes over 100 films. He provides many of the films for the meetings, but “The Chimp” was provided by John Giriat, a 35-year member from City Island in the Bronx, who owns about 1,000 reels of film.

Mr. Roth, of Yonkers, a sales manager at a camera store, joined the chapter 42 years ago, making him longest-standing of the roughly 100 members, almost all of whom are men. Most members are over 50, and perhaps the youngest member at the meeting was Raymond Valinoti, 43, who wrote a book about Laurel and Hardy called “Another Nice Mess: The Laurel & Hardy Story.”

Another member, Jim Burke, is a deli manager in Freehold, N.J., whose role at the meetings is to take the floor and deliver what he calls “Believe It or Don’t,” a listing of trivia items related to early film and television.

“We come here because we have a shared childhood experience growing up with these films,” he said. “It’s a shared nostalgia.”

Speaking of nostalgia, Mr. Roth asked members to keep an eye out for reissues of some short films featuring the actor Fatty Arbuckle and discussed a new book about Charley Chase, another comedic actor.

When one member asked him about his summer, Mr. Roth said he had been on vacation for a week, but it was so hot that he wound up staying home and watching Laurel and Hardy movies.

“I could think of worse things,” the member replied.



A Cater-Waiter to the Elite

Dear Diary:

Once there was an intrepid young man who, freshly draped with the lush greenery of an Ivy League degree, saw the world at his feet. Those feet soon became calloused and blistered, however, by the demands of an interminable sentence of hard cater-waiting (just punishment for his majoring in English).

This most-likely-to-succeed, ever-aging dreamer fell in line with a stream of anonymous drones dressed in slop-stained polyester tuxedos, ladling out untouchably rich food French-service-style to the very brand of socialite from whose loins he had himself sprung as a wide-eyed child of privilege a distant generation before.

Having nearly lost sight of himself and his dreams alike, he at first couldn’t even hear the balding blueblood at the Metropolitan Opera’s gala opening banquet, who, as the dessert plate went down (from the left, of course; a floating island, what else?), said: “You’re much too clever-looking to be in this line of work. What do you really do?”

Startled beyond recognition, our protagonist could only sputter, “No guest has ever asked me anything about myself before.” (“Guest” is catering verbiage for “them.”)

The generous titan awaited an answer.

“I’m a writer.”

As the kind old chap opened his mouth to give what promised to be a fully soul-restoring appraisal of the scribe’s still-untapped promise, he was cut off by his adjacent wife, who didn’t trouble herself with looking up as she snapped:

“I want more coffee.”

And with that, the young fellow returned to form and went to do her bidding.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via e-mail diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: A Day at the Races

Letitia James, center, celebrated her victory in the runoff for public advocate with John C. Liu, the city comptroller.Bryan Thomas for The New York Times Letitia James, center, celebrated her victory in the runoff for public advocate with John C. Liu, the city comptroller.

With the Democratic runoff on Tuesday, New York City woke today to a presumed new public advocate, Letitia James.

Does that end all the drama this election season?

After all, Bill de Blasio is a heavy favorite for mayor, polls show, and Scott M. Stringer has little competition for the comptroller’s job.

Still, some tension remains for November â€" in a handful of City Council races.

On the Upper East Side, the Democrat, Ben Kallos, who upset Assemblyman Micah Kellner in the Democratic primary after Mr. Kellner faced harassment accusations, faces a Republican, David Garland, a management consultant.

In Bayside, Queens, Paul Vallone - the son of a former Council speaker, and the brother of a  councilman â€" seeks to further spice up the political gossip around the Vallone family table.

His Republican rival is Dennis Saffran, a prosecutor.

And in a traditional swing district in central Queens, the incumbent Democrat, Liz Crowley, is going up against Craig Caruana, a former researcher for Fox News.

Here’s what else you need to know for Wednesday.

WEATHER

It’s crazily sunny, with a high of 85, so feel free to pretend you live in perpetual summer.

COMMUTE

Subways: Click for latest status.

Rails: Limited service continues on Metro-North’s New Haven line. See advisory, schedule and map of temporary park-and-ride lots at other stations.

Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect all week.

COMING UP TODAY

- Joseph J. Lhota takes part in a forum sponsored by the Brooklyn Real Estate Board. Mr. de Blasio visits after-school programs in Red Hook, Brooklyn.

- Tomorrow is the last day to register for the Sept. 11 Victim Compensation Fund.

- Mayor Bloomberg cuts the ribbon on a new performing arts space in Brooklyn.

- The New Yorker critic Adam Gopnik hosts the first of a series of conversations on the modernist art movement prior to World War I. [$30, 6 p.m.]

- The Birth of Hip Hop Festival kicks off at 6 p.m. with events at venues across the South Bronx. [Free]

- We reconciled Einstein’s theories with quantum physics in a recent lunch hour. But if you want to try your hand, Brian Greene, a Columbia professor, is discussing “String Theory and the Mathematics of Hyperspace” at the Museum of Math at 6:30 p.m. [Free, registration required]

- Back on earth, the Bronx County Historical Society hosts a lecture at 6:30 p.m. on the history of the Bronx Latino community. [Free]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- The first day of New York’s new health insurance exchange was marked by delays because too many people tried to access its Web site. [The New York Times]

- Here’s a guide to help New Yorkers navigate the Affordable Care Act. [New York Magazine]

- Two-thirds of New Yorkers say they want better bike and pedestrian infrastructure. [Atlantic Cities]

- A “large, lean dark grey cat” is bullying other cats, and humans, in Brooklyn. [South Slope News]

- It costs almost $170,000 per year to house each of New York City’s inmates. [The Associated Press]

- The New York City Opera officially announced that it will close. [The New York Times]

- Up in the Bronx, the Yankees reportedly will offer manager Joe Girardi a new contract on Wednesday. [ESPN New York]

- The Meatpacking District staple Pastis plans to close, leaving Sex and the City tours down one stop. [Crain's New York]

AND FINALLY…

This week in 1893, the right to a speedy trial was brought to an unusual extreme in Brooklyn.

There, a Justice Walsh disposed of 116 public-drunkenness cases in two minutes, The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported.

“Ask the prisoners if there are any who plead not guilty to the charge of intoxication,” the judge instructed a court officer.

The court officer bellowed the question into the holding cell.

No reply came.

“They all plead guilty,” the officer said.

All 116 men were fined a dollar.

Joseph Burgess and David W. Chen contributed reporting.

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