I wasn't kissing her, I was whispering in her mouth.
Mustard's no good without roast beef.
The only time he made a pass at me, I upended a jug of water over him and walked out.
The only reason the Marx Brothers made their last two films as a team, A Night in Casablanca and Love Happy, was because Chico needed the money.
The brothers' mother, Minnie, was the group's original manager but when she passed away, Chico took over the job.
Chico met his first wife, Betty, when he was playing in a vaudeville house in Pittsburgh. She was only 15 at the time.
Rocker Jerry Lee Lewis once said that Chico was one of his piano playing idols.
Chico starred in a short-lived TV series for NBC entitled The College Bowl which aired in 1950-51.
Chico's daughter, Maxine, wrote a book about his life entitled Growing Up with Chico.
As one of the Marx Brothers, Chico was voted 62nd Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly magazine.
Chico's son-in-law, Shamus Culhane, was an illustrator for Disney.
Chico was the nephew of famed vaudevillean Al Shean.
Chico was 5 feet, 6 inches tall.
Singer Mel Torme got his show biz start singing with Chico's band.
Chico's father, Sam, was a tailor whose nickname was Frenchie.
Chico once had an orchestra entitled Chico Marx and his Ravellis. Ravellis was taken from a character in one of his movies.
Chico's daughter and only child, Maxine, was a radio actress who later became a casting director.
Besides his Italian accent, Chico could also do other dialects such as Irish, French, and German.