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A good guess, but not the right guess. At the time, the Superman movies were still going, so nothing connected to those were shown on this TV special, just like there wasn't an appearance by Wonder Woman.
That awesome purveyor of puzzles, none other than the Riddler!
Yes. The Riddler it was indeed.
And thusly, with the question answered most correctly by thee, CuCr, this thread now passes on to thine own use of formidable questioning.
I would love to have seen all four "real" stooges in one short, though.
Hold That Lion, 1947.
Shemp's shorts were perhaps a bit more sophisticated than Curly's, but that's as much a reflection of the times as of the Stooges. Curly was a Stooge during the Great Depression and World War Two; Shemp during the boom time of the late 40s and early 50s.
Here's a related trivia question: What actor who would later become known for portraying a DC Comics character co-starred with the Three Stooges in their last feature film?
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
Yeah, but none of the full length flicks starred (the real) Curly or Shemp.
True, true. And most of the best gags from those later feature films had previously been done before with Curly and/or Shemp (such as the "Ain't that quaint/Isn't that quisn't" bit from Have Rocket Will Travel).
They did actually make a couple of feature films with Curly and Shemp, though. Swing Parade of 1946 isn't half bad, nor is Rockin' in the Rockies; though I can't say much for Gold Raiders.