ONE was thin, one was fat, one was British and one American, but when it came to love, Laurel and Hardy were identical – they were both complete disasters.
The film comedy legends, who found fame with joyously daft slapstick in the 1920s, had seven wives between then.
Then there were the long-term girlfriends and affairs, plus an extraordinary trail of broken hearts and broken bank balances.
It would surely have left Stan Laurel scratching his head in bafflement and Oliver Hardy denouncing the tangles, as the title of their film “another fine mess”.
A new film starring Steve Coogan as Stan and John C Reilly as his rotund sidekick will tell the story of the pair in their later years, battered by their exhausting private lives.
Due out next year, Stan And Ollie will follow the bowler-hatted duo on their swansong UK tour in 1953, when they were trying to boost their flagging careers and finances.
By then Stan was on his fourth wife and fifth marriage — he wed one woman twice — and Ollie, called “Babe” by friends, on his third.
After both men had died, their lawyer Ben Shipman said: “Such sweet men. But oh, the problems they could get into!
Particularly Stan but Babe too. And most of it was women trouble.”
Stan’s first love, Aussie actress Mae Dahlberg, was definitely trouble.
The pair met around 1921, 11 years after the Lake District-born Stan had joined a touring comic troupe where he understudied another young comedian called Charlie Chaplin.
When the group toured the US, the youngster, then Stan Jefferson, decided to stay to try to make it in the new silent movie industry.
He and Mae began living together after meeting on a set and it was Mae who suggested he change his surname to Laurel.
His old moniker, she felt, was bad luck because it had 13 letters in it.
She then adopted the surname herself even though the couple never married — probably because, despite claiming she was a widow, Mae had a husband back in Melbourne.
The actress also had a reputation for being “temperamental and abrasive”. Producers were so wary of her that when they offered Stan a contract for 12 comedy films, it was on the condition Mae did not appear.
By 1925, when Mae was thought to be hindering his inevitable rise to fame, film producer Joe Rock offered her a cash settlement and a one-way ticket Down Under. She accepted.
A year later Stan married a Californian actress, Lois Nielson. In that same year his career really took off, after he appeared in a movie with Ollie under producer Hal Roach.
Called 45 Minutes From Hollywood, it was comedy gold.
In 1927 they were put together for their first “official” film as a duo, Putting Pants On Philip.
It was the beginning of the greatest double act the entertainment world had ever seen, and one which only got better when talkies began.
Steve Coogan calls them geniuses and their jokes still make us laugh (Ollie: “Call me a cab.” Stan: “You’re a cab.”).
They went on to make dozens of movies and to make millions of fans laugh.
Stan’s home life, meanwhile, was only causing tears.
Author John Connolly, whose novel He, based on Stan Laurel’s life, is published by Hodder & Stoughton this month, said: “Even as he and Lois were expecting their first child together, Laurel had already begun an affair with French actress Alyce Ardell.” That child was a girl, also called Lois, who died only last month aged 89. The pair also had a son, named Stanley, who died at just nine days old.
Stan and Lois divorced in 1933 and Lois sued him for the modern equivalent of nearly £15,000 a month, for the lavish upkeep of their daughter. The bills included money for a chauffeur, governess and cook, and trips to the beauty salon.
According to Connolly, Stan always regretted divorcing Lois, and even tried to win her back while married to wife number two and four, Virginia Ruth Rogers, known as Ruth.
These two ill-fated unions with Ruth, from 1935 to 1937 and then 1941 to 1946, book-ended an even more catastrophic third match with singer Vera Ivanova Shuvalova.
He had met the fiery Russian just five weeks before they wed, when the ink was barely dry on his divorce from Ruth.
They eloped to marry in Yuma, Arizona, pursued by Ruth — who arrived the day of the ceremony demanding the authorities stop the wedding because she was the real Mrs Laurel.
The ceremony went ahead after Stan showed officials his divorce papers, and just to be sure, Vera insisted they had a second wedding a month later.
Their tempestuous union lasted little over a year and was filled with drunken fights as well as arrests for her driving without a licence and him for drink driving.