Video World Online EU


  Najdi video :   

Howdy Doody Christmas (1957) Classic TV Clown and Puppet Show



Zjištuji informace o online videu. Prosím klikněte na tlačítko To se mi líbí

Kategorie: Entertainment, Uploader:xmasflix, Views: 47880, Hodnocení: , Tags: Christmas, Classic, TV, Puppet, Show, santa, claus, children, cartoon, classics, films, songs, Howdy, Doody, Big, Brother, Bob, Smith, pee, wee's, Playhouse, kids, children's, hellboy, merry, xmas, xmasflix, marionettes, Clarabell, Hornblow, xmaslflix, Chief, Thunderthud, Princess, terry, fator, Kukla, Fran, Ollie, carols, gay, Doodyville, cartoons, 1950s, 1957, vintage, punch, and, judy, SHOWS, comedy, holiday, madame, bozo, boys, girls, toy, jeff, dunham, puppets, snow, hand, strings, marionette, clowns,

| Next



Video name: Howdy Doody Christmas (1957) Classic TV Clown and Puppet Show

► http://amzn.to/HowdyDoodyXmas ► http://facebook.com/XmasFLIX

Subscribe for more Christmas films and music! ► http://XmasFLIX.com

Xmas MP3 ► http://XmasTRAX.com ► Podcast ► http://iXmas.mobi

Do you believe in Santa Claus? Click here! ► http://TrustSanta.com

The Howdy Doody Show was one of the first and easily the most popular children's television show in the 1950s and a reflection of the wonder, technical fascination, and business realities associated with early television. While Howdy and his friends entertained American children, they also sold television sets to American parents and demonstrated the potential of the new medium to advertisers.

The idea for Howdy Doody began on the NBC New York radio affiliate WEAF in 1947 with a program called The Triple B Ranch. The three Bs stood for Big Brother Bob Smith, who developed the country bumpkin voice of a ranch hand and greeted the radio audience with, "Oh, ho, ho, howdy doody." Martin Stone, Smith's agent, suggested putting Howdy on television and presented the idea to NBC televi-sion programming head Warren Wade. With Stone and Roger Muir as producers, Smith launched Puppet Playhouse on 17 December 1947. Within a week the name of the program was changed to The Howdy Doody Show.

Children loved the Doodyville inhabitants, because they were a skillfully created, diverse collection of American icons. The original Howdy marionette was designed by Frank Paris and in keeping with Smith's voice was a country bumpkin; however, in a dispute over licensing rights Paris left the show with the puppet. The new Howdy, who premiered in March 1948 was an all-American boy with red hair, forty-eight freckles (one for each state in the Union), and a permanent smile. Howdy's face symbolized the youthful energy of the new medium and appeared on the NBC color test pattern beginning in 1954.

Smith treated the marionettes as if they were real, and as a result, so did the children of America. Among the many unusual marionettes on the show was Phineas T. Bluster, Doodyville's entrepreneurial mayor. Howdy's grumpy nemesis, Bluster had eyebrows that shot straight up when he was surprised. Bluster's naive, high-school-aged accomplice, was Dilly Dally, who wiggled his ears when he was frustrated. Flub-a-dub was a whimsical character who was a combination of eight animals. In Howdy and Me, Smith notes, "Howdy, Mr. Bluster, Dilly, and the Flub-a-Dub gave the impression that they could cut their strings, saunter off the stage, and do as they pleased."

Although the live characters, particularly the native Americans Chief Thunderthud and Princess Summerfall Winterspring, were by modern standards stereotypical and often clownish, each had a rich heritage interwoven into the stories. These were prepared by Eddie Kean, who wrote the scripts and the songs until 1954, and Willie Gilbert and Jack Weinstock, who wrote scripts and song lyrics thereafter. For example, Smith (born in Buffalo, New York) was transformed into Buffalo Bob when he took his place in the story as the great white leader of the Sigafoose tribe. Chief Thunderthud (played by Bill LeCornec) of the mythical Ooragnak tribe ("Kangaroo" spelled backward) introduced the word "Kawabonga," an expression of surprise and frustration, into the English language. One of the few female characters in the cast was the beloved Princess Summerfall Winterspring of the Tinka Tonka tribe, who was first introduced as a puppet, then transformed into a real, live princess, played by Judy Tyler.

The Howdy Doody Show also reflected America's fascination with technology. Part of the fun and fantasy of Doodyville were crazy machines such as the Electromindomizer that read minds and the Honkadoodle that translated Mother Goose's honks into English. Television's technical innovations were also incorporated into the show. On 23 June 1949 split-screen capabilities were used to join Howdy in Chicago with Buffalo Bob in New York, one of the first instances of a cross-country connection. Howdy also ushered in NBC's daily color programming in 1955.

The Howdy Doody Show was immediately successful and was NBC's first daily show to be extended to five days a week. In 1952 NBC launched a network radio program featuring Howdy, and in 1954 Howdy Doody became an international television hit with a Cuban and a Canadian show, using duplicate puppets and local talent, including Robert Goulet as Canadian host, Timber Tom.

Howdy Doody Christmas (1957)

DVD boxed set is cool! ► http://amzn.to/HowdyDoodyShow

Copyright Disclaimer:
Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Komentáře & Download

senorkaboom - 29.4.2012 9:42:05
This little skit just reminded me why l never watched Howdy Doody when l was growing up.

fromthesidelines - 12.3.2012 22:22:19
No, Bob Smith wasn't a "ventriloquist", 'hyspan'...but he PRE-RECORDED Howdy's voice on disc before each day's episode aired...that's how he and Howdy were able to talk to each other while ON camera!

lrd9999 - 3.1.2012 8:17:15
OK, I checked out the wiki pages for Clarabelle the cow and for Clarabelle the clown, but I still don't understand why "he" is called Clarabelle. Can (or could) Clarabelle sometimes be a man's name? Was Clarabelle the clown a part-time transvestite, along the lines of the killer in "Psycho"? Did they ever try to explain this, or was it just another bizarre detail left to the imagination?

Hypsan - 2.1.2012 7:47:34
Short & sweet, silly & snowy, Santa & Sam; raise your hands if you know that Buffalo Bob did the voice of Howdy Doody?? Sure helps explain why they were never on camera at the same time that Howdy was talking. Bob wasn't a ventriloquist. Hope I didn't ruin it for anyone, except for that one sixty year old man in upper state New York. Sorry Maynard! Thanks for your post. However, I think that Buffalo Bob would have sat you right down and explained to you what words we should never use!

Hypsan - 31.12.2011 4:25:01
Thanks for uploading this! Great fun!!

mike54101527 - 29.12.2011 18:39:45
Ron Howard looks like Howdy Doody.

Jocelynne21 - 20.12.2011 9:38:51
This scares me but yet I have to watch it every x mas =[

XmasFLIX - 15.12.2011 19:34:54
kinda explains our parents, huh? :-) Merry Xmas! - XmasFLIX.com

krisruston - 15.12.2011 18:30:08
This video sort of scares the hell out of me.

deliciousdazmo - 4.12.2011 9:13:02
wow puppets are more scary in black and white love this stuff

Johnnyboy792 - 28.11.2011 3:16:56
Excellent Memories !!! Thanks so much for your site !

wa1lmc - 27.11.2011 13:38:03
I was amazed to find our Governor in this (RI) You know, Clarabelle!

blwbl - 26.11.2011 4:19:39
Where's Princess Summerfall Winterspring?!

midmodgal - 23.11.2011 23:46:55
I bought this on a video tape from a dollar store when my son was very young. He was raised with this show every Christmas...It is so.....weird.

PissedOffLion - 22.10.2011 18:50:16
I'VE GOT YOU BANDIT GANG!

OvalGray - 12.9.2011 22:38:19
Does anybody else find it odd that he narrates a show about "last Christmas Eve" instead of the show just being set in the present tense?

atortheinvincible - 11.9.2011 15:18:45
Ugly Sam is the greatest physical comedian ever to have lived!

mxylpx - 29.8.2011 3:51:05
Buffalo Bob always reminded me of a pro wrestler.

Zippy7823 - 12.8.2011 2:53:20
Mr. Phinneas T. Bluster. I also liked Flubbadub! Was he part tortoise part seal?? I also like their GIANT model of a Hostess Cup Cake that opened on a hinge to show the cream filling inside. They did not sucker me into Wonder Bread, however!

Zippy7823 - 12.8.2011 1:49:56
Great post brings back memories for this 1948 boomer. BTW, Phinneas T. Bluster ! And Flubbadub!! What was he anyway? Part turtle, part seal? Kowabunga!

crusher1944 - 29.6.2011 3:10:38
BECAUSE MOST PEOPLE CELEBRATED CHRISMAS I DID AND I'm jewish and we celebrated chanukah also and so did a lot of my jewish friends it was no big deal back then we didn't NEED A COURT ORDER OR GOVERMENT TO APROVE IT.

shubus - 15.4.2011 2:40:44
Anybody remember Princess Summer-Fall-Winter Spring? And then there was Mr. Buster.

Adams42 - 4.4.2011 21:45:00
Exactly. Clarabel scared the be-jezzus out out me when I was little kid. Buffalo Bob was soooo agy but OK and Princess Summer-Fall-Winter-Spring was a hottie.

shump458 - 4.4.2011 0:16:59
Get over it. The show is over and Buffalo Bob is gone now. God rest his soul.

cozener1 - 30.3.2011 20:22:12
That clown is seriously fucking wierd!

TOPlist TOPlist