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mahatmakanejeeves

(61,606 posts)
Wed Nov 27, 2024, 09:35 AM Nov 27

On this day, November 27, 1917, Buffalo Bob was born.

Fittingly, he was born in Buffalo, New York.

I was in the audience when the last episode was aired. I mean the Televisionland audience, sitting in front of the set at home.

Buffalo Bob Smith


Buffalo Bob Smith and Howdy Doody in 1972

Born: Robert Emil Schmidt; November 27, 1917; Buffalo, New York, U.S.
Died: July 30, 1998 (aged 80); Hendersonville, North Carolina, U.S.

Buffalo Bob Smith (born Robert Emil Schmidt; November 27, 1917 – July 30, 1998) was the host of the children's show Howdy Doody.

{snip}

Biography

Born in Buffalo, New York as Robert Emil Schmidt, he attended Masten Park High School. Schmidt got his start in radio in Buffalo. He started at WGR (AM) but switched from WGR to WBEN's late morning radio slot in 1943, as part of a move which also brought Clint Buehlman's early morning show over from WGR to WBEN at the same time. (The WBEN morning slot had opened when its host, future NBC-TV personality Jack Paar, was drafted into the military.)

WBEN was seeking to break WGR's #1 position in local popularity and shaking the position of network-fed Don McNeil's Breakfast Club's grip on ratings for the 9 am time slot was an important part of the plan. WBEN first brought Clint Buehlman's popular early morning show, which ended at 9am, followed by 15 minutes of local news, over from WGR. Then, Buffalo Bob appeared at 9:15 am. Within a period of time, Smith had won the #1 spot in late mornings for WBEN and McNeil dropped to second in the Buffalo market. Smith's popularity in Buffalo won the attention of NBC, which brought him to New York after the war to host early mornings on flagship station WNBC, a post he held through the early 1950s before concentrating on television. For a time between 1947 and 1953 he appeared mornings on WNBC while hosting and producing the daily Howdy Doody show.

The Howdy Doody show

The puppet Howdy Doody was based on a caricature of Mr. Smith's sister, Esther. She was employed at a department store and Howdy was the spitting image of her. Smith also was known as a singer and musician, appearing on many top shows of the time before and even after becoming nationally known for the Howdy Doody show. At first it aired on Saturdays, then on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and finally, five times a week. In 1954, Smith suffered a heart attack and for a time, he did the show from a studio built in the basement of his home in Mount Vernon, New York. He returned to the NBC studio in 1955. The final NBC Howdy Doody episode aired in 1960. Later, in 1976, Smith reunited with longtime show producer Roger Muir and several of the original cast to produce a new daily syndicated Howdy Doody show.

{snip}

Death and legacy

He made a live infomercial appearance to promote Howdy Doody Entertainment Memorabilia on July 3, 1998, on QVC. That was his last appearance. Smith died of cancer a few weeks later on July 30, 1998, in a hospital in Hendersonville, North Carolina, just three days before puppeteer Shari Lewis, whose show took over the time slot that Howdy Doody had previously occupied.

{snip}


Howdy Doody Show, The (Intro) S1 (1947)
203,871 views • Jun 20, 2013

RetroAlexander
15.4K subscribers


Howdy Doody, September 24, 1960 Full Last Episode
1,546 views • Aug 8, 2018

Vintage Cinema
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Howdy Doody, September 24, 1960 Full Last Episode

Mon Nov 27, 2023: On this day, November 27, 1917, Buffalo Bob was born.

Sun Nov 27, 2022: On this day, November 27, 1917, Buffalo Bob was born.

Fri Nov 27, 2020: On this day, November 27, 1917, Buffalo Bob was born.
5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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On this day, November 27, 1917, Buffalo Bob was born. (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Nov 27 OP
Ha!...My Dad is 5 days older!... MiHale Nov 27 #1
WHich should have cued us in decades ago bucolic_frolic Nov 27 #2
I was in the live audience around 1953 DeeDeeNY Nov 27 #3
I watched the Howdy Doody show in the early 1950's patphil Nov 27 #4
I saw that Clarabelle moment, too. murielm99 Nov 27 #5

bucolic_frolic

(47,572 posts)
2. WHich should have cued us in decades ago
Wed Nov 27, 2024, 09:43 AM
Nov 27

on the unlimited use of deception, mass following and cults, fantasy delusion.

Bill Clinton warned us in 2016. 'Cartoon Hillary' was their tool. We still haven't found a path back to reality.

DeeDeeNY

(3,579 posts)
3. I was in the live audience around 1953
Wed Nov 27, 2024, 09:53 AM
Nov 27

It was me and my older sister. She was 8 and I was 4, and I remember being afraid of Clarabell the Clown.
What a great memory!

patphil

(7,108 posts)
4. I watched the Howdy Doody show in the early 1950's
Wed Nov 27, 2024, 11:38 AM
Nov 27

This show was one of my earliest memories of television; I loved it. I remember Bison Bill took over for Buffalo Bob when he suffered a heart attack. But, Buffalo Bob came back and stayed until the end.
I remember the iconic moment when the last show aired and Clarabell spoke for the first and last time, only to say, "goodbye kids".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howdy_Doody

murielm99

(31,520 posts)
5. I saw that Clarabelle moment, too.
Wed Nov 27, 2024, 11:46 AM
Nov 27

That moment, for me, is the definition of "poignant."

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