Rick Mitz, author of The Great TV Sitcom Book, once joked that Amos ‘n’ Andy constituted the “two dirty words” of American broadcasting (and he even thought the “’n’” suspect). I myself refer to the program as “the third rail” of old-time radio, insomuch as the medium’s first true phenomenon has been clouded with controversy ever since its premiere over Chicago’s WMAQ on March 19, 1928 (the show went national over NBC’s Red network in August of 1929) and stayed with the show long after it left the airwaves on November 25, 1960. Created by Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, two vaudeville performers who had a talent for black dialect, the long-running serial/sitcom began as Sam ‘n’ Henry over rival Windy City station WGN in 1926; the two men left the following year after a dispute with the station…and since they were unable to use the “Sam ‘n’ Henry” name (it was still owned by WGN) they changed the name of the characters to their better known alliterative association.
Freeman Gosden & Charles Correll |
With the cancellation of The Amos ‘n’ Andy Music Hall,
Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll weren’t quite ready to abandon the
characters that made them famous…and with the prompting of ABC, anxious to
duplicate the success of their hit animated series The Flintstones, they
came up with an idea that would allow them to continue the show in cartoon
form. It was not a new idea; a cartoon
version of Amos ‘n’ Andy had actually been attempted as far back as 1934
at the Van Beuren Studios but after two entries (The Rasslin’ Match and The
Lion Tamer) the series was abandoned.
This time around, Freeman and Charlie would lend their characterizations
to a pair of anthropomorphic animals…and Calvin and the Colonel was born.
Charlie & Gos with their cartoon counterparts |
The Colonel had a Sapphire-like spouse in Maggie Belle
(voiced by Virginia Gregg)—although her name is spelled “Maggi Belle” in the
show’s closing credits, I’m going to go with “Maggie.” Instead of having to put up with a mother-in-law
like the Kingfish, Colonel Klaxon suffered under the domineering thumb of Susan
Culpepper (Beatrice Kay)—Maggie Belle’s sister, affectionately known as “Sister
Sue.” The character of Maggie Belle is
not one of Ginny’s finest thespic hours, mostly because of the severe
limitations of the role (she’s there to be a constant scold to the Colonel and
little else) …but Kay doesn’t come off that much better (though I do giggle
when she calls The Colonel an “old foof”).
I believe this can be explained by the fact that the radio counterparts
of Sapphire and “Mama” were also rather thinly written…yet I wish they had
considered letting Ernestine Wade and/or Amanda Randolph perform the Maggie
Belle/Sister Sue roles to give their cartoon counterparts a little more oomph. (I can certainly understand the reluctance to
do this, though.) The remaining
character on Calvin and the Colonel was “Judge” Oliver Wendell Clutch (Paul
Frees)—a shady lawyer (appropriately portrayed in weasel form) who the
Colonel was always asking for advice (Clutch was the show’s Stonewall/Algonquin
J. Calhoun counterpart).
Bob Mosher & Joe Connelly |
My interest in Calvin and the Colonel was stoked by
the recent Oldies.com purchase of three volumes of the show released by Alpha
Video. I’d previously watched an episode
or two at YouTube, but the more episodes I tuck under my belt the more I enjoy
this pleasurable little series. I’ll
state right off the bat that this is due in large part to my familiarity with
the source material, but as someone who loves old-time radio I think
like-minded folks will follow my lead. It’s
quite hooty hearing the voices of Kingfish and Andy emanate from a fox and a
bear, and in addition to the regular cast you’ll hear OTR/character favorites
(in various episodes) like Joe Flynn, Jesse White, Frank Nelson, Barney Phillips,
Will Wright, June Foray, Howard McNear, Hans Conried, Charlie Cantor, Frank
Gerstle, Marvin Miller, Elvia Allman, Forrest Lewis, Olan Soule, and Peter
Leeds. (“It’s too piercing, man…too piercing.”)
It’s television animation, of course, but despite the
limited budget the style of Calvin and the Colonel is
reminiscent of that in the creations of Jay Ward (Rocky and His Friends) or
Total Television (King Leonardo, Underdog). A 2006 post at Michael
Sporn Animation notes that the company who produced Calvin was TV
Cartoons/Creston Studios (who also did the non-Jay Ward version of Crusader
Rabbit), and the roster of talent that cranked out the installments
included Chuck McKimson, Norm Gottfredson, Lee Mishkin, Phil Roman, John
Sparey, Ben Washam, Tom McDonald, Volus Jones, Dave Weidman, Jim Davis, and Bob
Bemiller—“They were more WB & Disney people unlike the Hanna Barbera shows
which initially seemed to use more of their MGM cohorts.”
That post also observes that Calvin and the Colonel
was the “second prime time show to premiere” after The Flintstones—which I
don’t think is entirely accurate if The Bugs Bunny Show is worked into
the equation (you can argue that the animation on Bugs had already appeared
in motion picture theatres…but the segments that introduced the cartoons had
not). (Television Obscurities notes that CBS Cartoon
Theater even predated The Flintstones by four years—though
like Bugs,
the show featured shorts previously unspooled in theatres.) It is accurate
to say that the success of that “modern Stone Age family” ushered in a slew of
prime-time cartoon efforts in the 1961-62 season, with Calvin joined by the
premiers of The Bullwinkle Show (okay, technically a continuation of Rocky
and His Friends), The Alvin Show, and Top
Cat. Calvin only lasted two
months in its 8:30pm Tuesday slot (stiff competition from Alfred Hitchcock
Presents and The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis)
before it returned in January of the following year to a Saturday time slot
(7:30pm) to fulfill its obligation to sponsor Lever Brothers. It then made Saturday a permanent
home—mornings, that is—for another year before fading from the small screen
landscape.
Calvin and The Colonel working for the sponsor. |
…which I will graciously share here with you until some
hoser pulls the YouTube plug. “Job” (the
black-and-white version), “The Polka Dot Bandit,” “Thanksgiving Dinner,” and
“The Costume Ball” are featured on Alpha’s first volume of
the series, while Volume
2 includes “Sycamore Lodge,” “Wheeling and Dealing,” “Sister Sue’s
Sweetheart,” and “Nephew Newton’s Fortune.”
(“Wheeling” is one of my favorite Calvin outings—The Colonel is under
orders from the women in his life to ship Nephew Newton’s car to him out on the
West Coast…but he and Calvin have a mishap that results in Newton's ride being
filled with cement. It’s an unusual
episode in that The Colonel emerges victorious in this one—at the end of the
show, he breaks the fourth wall as he enjoys breakfast in bed: “I know I didn’t
earn all this love and affection,
but…I’m a married man, so I’m gonna take what little I can get.”)
But if you’re like me and there’s often too much month at
the end of the money, Volume
3 is the Alpha Calvin and the Colonel collection is the
one you should get—it features four color episodes in “The Colonel’s Old
Flame,” “Sister Sue and the Police Captain” (this one was an episode I watched
on YouTube—in color!—but it has
apparently been yanked), “Calvin’s Glamour Girl,” and “Colonel Out-Foxes
Himself.” This last one is very funny
(it’s the one on which I heard Conried and Cantor), as The Colonel attempts
“The Pocketbook Swindle” after it’s been pulled on him…with unsuccessful
results. Animation history king Jerry
Beck calls the show “illustrated
radio” …which is certainly fair, though I’ve heard the same term applied to
much of the Hanna-Barbera product as well, and Calvin and the Colonel
can certainly hold its own with Huck, Yogi, and the rest of my childhood
heroes.
I told Grover I'd only buy these dolls if one of them said "Holy mackerel, Calvin!" |
Dell Comics published two Calvin and the Colonel comic books in 1962 (one of which was in their “Four Color” series, which is why the second issue was labeled “#2”) and Milton Bradley released a board game to capitalize on the (non)popularity of the program (Leal also notes that there were “Calvin” and “The Colonel” dolls available for purchase—they talk, too!—and Beck has published this image of a C&C coloring book)—you can find the board game/comic books on eBay, if you’re curious. I’d settle for a DVD release of the complete series only because I believe it’s much better than its reputation and it doesn’t deserve its current obscurity.
Noticing that you didn't mention what was (my opinion at least) the most memorable part of Calvin and the Colonel - the theme music.
ReplyDeleteGeorge Bruns was a Hollywood musical stand-by for many years, mainly at Disney.
My favorite credit of his - one that the C&C theme brought sharply to mind - was as the relief man of The Firehouse 5 + 2, the Disney animators who moonlighted as a Dixieland band for many years (and many good-selling LPs from Good Time Jazz). Many of the FH5+2 had regular work schedules that got in the way of band bookings; when one or another couldn't get away, George Bruns would step in on piano, tuba, or whatever else came to hand.
The Calvin theme, with a slightly more varied chart, caught my pre-adolescent fancy, which made ABC's early bailout hurt just a bit.
Anyway, I just thought I'd mention it ...
You left out the cringe-worthy Check and Double Check (1930), with Gosden and Correll in blackface.
ReplyDeleteWhenever I see Elizabeth McLeod on shows such as "History Detectives," she's always dressed in 1940s clothing. Is this an eccentricity, or can she not afford newer clothes?
ReplyDeleteTrue, when A&A went to its sitcom format, it could have been called "Kingfish & Andy." The only time Amos had any prominence by then was on the Christmas show, when Amos interpreted the Lord's Prayer for his daughter (also done on the TV version).
rnigma did some channel surfing:
ReplyDeleteWhenever I see Elizabeth McLeod on shows such as "History Detectives," she's always dressed in 1940s clothing. Is this an eccentricity, or can she not afford newer clothes?
I'm tempted to make a joke about how both of us work for Radio Spirits...but I want to continue working for Radio Spirits.