TCM Announces Month-Long Slapstick Comedy Programming Special; Ouch! A Salute To Slapstick Begins Sep. 6th Hosted by Comedian Greg Proops; Network to Offer Free Online Course on Slapstick Comedy in Partnership with Ball State University and hosted by the Canvas Network

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TCM Announces Month-Long Slapstick Comedy Programming Special

Ouch! A Salute To Slapstick Begins Sep. 6th Hosted by Comedian Greg Proops

 Network to Offer Free Online Course on Slapstick Comedy in Partnership with Ball State University and hosted by the Canvas Network 


OUCHTurner Classic Movies (TCM) will pay tribute to pratfalls and double-takes with Ouch! A Salute To Slapstick, a month-long programming special featuring more than 50 films exploring the history of slapstick. Hosted by acclaimed stand-up comedian Greg Proops, the special will feature programming from silent masters Chaplin, Keaton and Lloyd to modern master Will Ferrell, and will premiere Sep. 6th and air every Tuesday and Wednesday during the month. Additionally, TCM is once again partnering with Ball State University and Canvas Network to offer a free online multimedia course on slapstick comedy. Enrollment begins today and comedy fans can sign up for the course at TCM.com/slapstick.

Ouch! A Salute to Slapstick will explore the various forms slapstick in movie history including:

  • The Silent Era – the rambunctious physical nature of the style proved perfect for the era and programming includes Charlie Chaplin’s first feature, Tillie’s Punctured Romance (1914) and Buster Keaton’s masterpiece Steamboat Bill, Jr. (1928)
  • The 1930s – slapstick took on the classic art form it is today with the rise of the popularity of Laurel and Hardy (Sons of the Dessert [1933]) and the Marx Brothers (A Night at the Opera [1935])
  • The 1940s & 50s – Slapstick remained a popular art form thanks to practitioners W.C. Fields in The Bank Dick (1940) and Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis in Scared Stiff (1953)
  • The 1960s – the style was revived with the all-star It’s Mad Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1963) and two Peter Sellers masterpieces A Shot in the Dark (1964) and The Party (1968)
  • The 1980s and Beyond – the genre and format continued to thrive with Strange Brew (1983) and Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)

The free, six-week online course – Painfully Funny: Exploring Slapstick in the Movies – will bring together movie lovers, comedy fans and online learners to explore the genre and its place in cinematic history. Taught by Richard Edwards, executive director of Ball State’s iLearn Research, the course will feature:

  • Multimedia exploration of how comedy has evolved in popular cinema, beginning with the silent film era and continuing into modern film
  • Access to TCM’s online archives, including movie descriptions, original photos, movie trailers and original essays on slapstick comedies
  • Club Slapstick – fan-related online activities, web-based collaborations and fan panels on slapstick topics using Google Hangouts
  • “Daily Doses of Doozies” – five minute learning modules involving a short video clip of a slapstick gag delivered directly via e-mail Mondays through Thursdays during the length of the course
  • “Breakdown of a Gag” – short course videos featuring Dr. Edwards and NBA TV’s Vince Cellini using a giant telestrator to breakdown the action of famous comedy sequences

In addition to the course, TCM is creating social activations to provide additional engagement opportunities.  Both students and fans will share #SlapstickFall to discuss the genre and films shown in addition to social media contests the network will run throughout the programming event.

“This month-long programming special is going to be a fun and comprehensive opportunity for fans to discover and enjoy this distinctive genre,” said Jennifer Dorian, general manager Turner Classic Movies. “Coming off the successful online course last year with film noir, we’re happy to continue to partner with Ball State and Canvas to once again offer this immersive fan engagement opportunity, which allows us to interact with our passionate film audience in another exciting and new way.”

“This year, Ball State has been particularly excited about the contributions of our students to this project. Working with the Office of Immersive Learning, I was able to teach a course that brought together a team of students to produce social media assets and videos for this initiative. The students worked closely with representatives from both TCM and Instructure’s Canvas Network. The students presented the social media campaign they created for Painfully Funny to TCM executives on a trip we made to their Atlanta offices in June. Their social media campaign was approved and will be used to enhance awareness and engagement about this initiative,” said Richard Edwards, executive director of Ball State’s iLearn Research.

“Canvas has always looked for original ways to deliver learning experiences, and our edutainment MOOCs create opportunities for people to connect and form passionate learning communities,” said Hilary Melander, manager of Canvas Network at Instructure. “This partnership is exciting because it was designed in part by students, taught by a PhD film expert and accessible to anyone with internet access. A version of the course will also be shared to Canvas Commons for other instructors to reuse and revise. Instructure’s dedication to innovation in education and encouragement of educators to think outside the box make ventures like this possible.”

For additional information, please visit TCM.com/slapstick


About Turner Classic Movies (TCM)
Turner Classic Movies (TCM) is a two-time Peabody Award-winning network that presents great films, uncut and commercial-free, from the largest film libraries in the world highlighting the entire spectrum of film history. TCM, which is available in more than 85 million homes, features the insights of hosts Robert Osborne and Ben Mankiewicz, plus interviews with a wide range of special guests and serves as the ultimate movie lover destination. Currently in its 22nd year as a leading authority in classic film, TCM offers critically acclaimed series like The Essentials, along with annual programming events like 31 Days of Oscar® in February and Summer Under the Stars in August. TCM also directly connects with movie fans through events as the annual TCM Classic Film Festival in Hollywood and the TCM Classic Cruise, as well as throu gh the TCM Classic Film Tour in New York City and Los Angeles. In addition, TCM produces a wide range of media about classic film, including books and DVDs, and hosts a wealth of material online at tcm.com and through the Watch TCM mobile app.

TCM is part of Turner, a Time Warner company. Turner creates and programs branded news; entertainment; animation and young adult; and sports media environments on television and other platforms for consumers around the world.


About Ball State University
Ball State University aspires to be the model of the most student-centered and community-engaged of the 21st century public research universities, transforming entrepreneurial learners into impactful leaders— committed to improving the quality of life for all.


About Canvas
Canvas Network offers open, online courses taught by educators everywhere. It provides a place and platform where teachers, students, and institutions worldwide can connect and chart their own course for personal growth, professional development, and academic inquiry. Canvas Network is developed and supported by Instructure, a technology company that makes software that makes people smarter. Learn more at www.Canvas.Net.


Connect with Turner Classic Movies

Website: http://www.tcm.com
Pressroom: pressroom.turner.com/tcm
Facebook: http://facebook.com/tcmtv
Twitter: http://twitter.com/tcm | http://twitter.com/tcmpr
TCM Store: http://shop.tcm.com
Watch TCM app available for iOS and Android Platforms.

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