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- Joined: Wed Dec 19, 2007 1:20 am
Throughout the early years of Howdy Doody, silent comedies were a very regular part of the daily telecast. I'd like to say they were presented with loving care, but the opposite is true. The prints were in average condition, stock music was used (when there was music at all, which was seldom), every intertitle was edited out, and the films were invariably narrated, usually by Buffalo Bob Smith.
I'd also like to say that the comedies were greeted with uproarious shouts of juvenile laughter, but again the opposite is true. During the live telecast, I believe the shorts were shown on one monitor, somewhere on stage, and it had to be 20 or 30 feet away from the kids in the Peanut Gallery. They probably couldn't even see what was going on; very, very little laughter can be heard from them.
Watching some of these episodes today, you can tell that Smith has previewed the films before the telecast. Occasionally, he informs the kids in the Peanut Gallery that they're seeing Mickey McGuire or Eddie Lyons. Far more often, though, he simply makes up a name on the spot, and then asks the kids if they remember the comedian:
"And here's George Smiddlyfoozis with a bouquet of flowers! You remember him, right, kids?"
"Yeahhh!!!" (The inevitable response when the Peanut Gallery is asked anything)
I have 42 episodes from the show's heyday (1947-1955), and all but five or six of them include a silent comedy. I have no idea where the prints came from (an archive? a private collector?), but they all seem to have been public-domain films, and I guess that's no accident. There are no films with Chaplin, Keaton or Lloyd, possibly out of fear that they were still copyrighted.
I zipped through my episodes, just to see which comedians were represented. I'm ashamed to admit that I couldn't identify very many of the films, and in several cases I couldn't even identify the comedian. Here's what they were showing on Howdy Doody:
Harry Langdon's Shanghaied Lovers and All Night Long
Carole Lombard's Run, Girl Run
Charley Chase's All Wet and another of his Jimmie Jump shorts
The Smith Family's Smith's Restaurant, Smith's Army Life, Smith's Pets and 1 more short
Martha Sleeper's Sure, Mike!
Snub Pollard's Days of Old
7 Mickey McGuire shorts
4 Ton of Fun shorts
2 Billy West shorts (both from his early 1920s period)
2 Bobby Ray shorts, one of which features Oliver Hardy
1 Eddie Lyons short
1 Bobby Dunn short
1 Paul Parrott short
I'd also like to say that the comedies were greeted with uproarious shouts of juvenile laughter, but again the opposite is true. During the live telecast, I believe the shorts were shown on one monitor, somewhere on stage, and it had to be 20 or 30 feet away from the kids in the Peanut Gallery. They probably couldn't even see what was going on; very, very little laughter can be heard from them.
Watching some of these episodes today, you can tell that Smith has previewed the films before the telecast. Occasionally, he informs the kids in the Peanut Gallery that they're seeing Mickey McGuire or Eddie Lyons. Far more often, though, he simply makes up a name on the spot, and then asks the kids if they remember the comedian:
"And here's George Smiddlyfoozis with a bouquet of flowers! You remember him, right, kids?"
"Yeahhh!!!" (The inevitable response when the Peanut Gallery is asked anything)
I have 42 episodes from the show's heyday (1947-1955), and all but five or six of them include a silent comedy. I have no idea where the prints came from (an archive? a private collector?), but they all seem to have been public-domain films, and I guess that's no accident. There are no films with Chaplin, Keaton or Lloyd, possibly out of fear that they were still copyrighted.
I zipped through my episodes, just to see which comedians were represented. I'm ashamed to admit that I couldn't identify very many of the films, and in several cases I couldn't even identify the comedian. Here's what they were showing on Howdy Doody:
Harry Langdon's Shanghaied Lovers and All Night Long
Carole Lombard's Run, Girl Run
Charley Chase's All Wet and another of his Jimmie Jump shorts
The Smith Family's Smith's Restaurant, Smith's Army Life, Smith's Pets and 1 more short
Martha Sleeper's Sure, Mike!
Snub Pollard's Days of Old
7 Mickey McGuire shorts
4 Ton of Fun shorts
2 Billy West shorts (both from his early 1920s period)
2 Bobby Ray shorts, one of which features Oliver Hardy
1 Eddie Lyons short
1 Bobby Dunn short
1 Paul Parrott short
