Was this REALLY 60 years ago???
I was 11 at the time....Damn! I'm OLD!!!
Kukla, Fran and Ollie is an early American television show using puppets. It was created for children, but soon watched by more adults than children. It did not have a script and was entirely ad-libbed. It was broadcast from 1947 to 1957.
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Original series
Burr Tillstrom was the creator and only puppeteer on the show, which premiered as the hour-long Junior Jamboree locally on WBKB in Chicago, Illinois, on October 13, 1947. The program was renamed Kukla, Fran and Ollie (KFO) and transferred to WNBQ (the predecessor of Chicago's WMAQ-TV) on November 29, 1948. The first NBC network broadcast of the show took place on January 12, 1949. It aired from 6–6:30 p.m. Central Time, Monday through Friday from Chicago.Like Jack Benny's radio program, KFO's humor relied on building a relationship between its characters and the audience over time. The humor was quite tame by the standards of later comedy. There were few laugh-out-loud jokes per show—KFO relied on the humor of familiarity, much like The Honeymooners.
KFO evoked not only loyalty but also a deep belief in its characters from regular viewers. Fans became so attached to the show that when it was cut back to 15 minutes in November 1951, letters of outrage poured into NBC and The New York Times. The Bob & Ray Show was the replacement 15-minute program and had considerable vitriol heaped on it by angry KFO viewers. From August 1952 to June 1954, KFO ran as a weekly program on Sundays from 3–3:30 p.m. CT. They also began a weekday radio show in October of that year. It was then picked up by the ABC network and returned to the 15-minute daily format [7-7:15 p.m. ET] until the last regular program aired on August 30, 1957, a continuous run of nearly ten years.
During that time, KFO was a hugely successful show that counted Orson Welles, John Steinbeck, Tallulah Bankhead, Ben Grauer, Milton Caniff, and Adlai Stevenson among its many adult fans. The show had sponsors like Life magazine, RCA, Nabisco and Ford Motor Co., who surely weren't trying to reach children. James Thurber once wrote that Tillstrom was "helping to save the sanity of the nation and to improve, if not even to invent, the quality of television."
:o)
I'm right there with ya. Remembering Kukla, Fran and Ollie, Howdy Doody and Captain Kangaroo. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteRemember 'Winky Dink? Ha! :o)
DeleteNope. I missed out on Winky Dink. We had Axel in His Treehouse, though. Local show. Axel was rarely sober. Most of his jokes, delivered in a Norwegian accent, could be taken one way by kids and another way by adults. Dad loved the show. Mother...not so much!
DeleteAnd I also remember
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYZazW9Ja1k
"Plunk your magic twanger Froggy!"
LOL! It sure didn't take mush to entertain us, did it? :o)
DeleteS/B much-not mush.... dang broken keyboard........
Deletethanks for the memories!
ReplyDeleteYou Tube has a whole bunch of those old TV shows, Deborah! The quality isn't very good, but they sure are fun to watch again! :o)
Delete