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reechie
01-23-2004, 09:33 AM
Good Night, Captain. :cry:
http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/news/wabc_012304_capkangaroo.html

'Captain Kangaroo,' Bob Keeshan, Dies at Age 76

(New York-WABC, January 23, 2004) — Bob Keeshan, the television producer who created and ultimately became beloved children's personality Captain Kangaroo, has died. Keeshan, who was born in Lynbrook, Long Island, was 76.

Keeshan began his career by creating the character of Clarabell the Clown for the 'Howdy Doody Show.' He used that children's show experience to mold Captain Kangaroo, winning over generations of children and their parents through innovative approaches to interesting topics.

As the easy-going Captain with his big pockets and his bushy mustache, Keeshan lured children into close engagement with literature, science and especially music, adopting an approach which mixed pleasure and pedagogy.

Keeshan's approach represented a rejection of pressures towards the increased commercialization of children's programming as well as a toning-down of the high volume, slapstick style associated with earlier kid show hosts.

Keeshan was working as a receptionist at NBC-Radio's Manhattan office when Bob Smith started offering him small acting parts on his NBC-TV show, 'Triple B Ranch,' and then subsequently hired him as a special assistant for 'The Howdy Doody Show.'

Though Keeshan's initial responsibilities involved supervising props and talking to the children who were to be program guests, he was soon pulled on camera, bringing out prizes.

After appearing in clown garb on one episode to immense response, he took on the regular role of Clarabell, the mute clown who communicated by honking a horn.

Leaving the series in 1952, he played a succession of other clown characters, such as Corny, the host of WABC-TV's 'Time For Fun,' a noontime cartoon program, where he exerted pressure to remove from airplay cartoons he felt were too violent or perpetuated racial stereotyping.

While at WABC-TV, he played an Alpine toymaker on 'Tinker's Workshop,' an early morning program which served as the prototype for Captain Kangaroo.

The CBS network was searching for innovative new approaches to children's programming and approved the Kangaroo series submitted by Keeshan and long-time friend Jack Miller.

The series first aired in October 1955 and continued until 1985, making it the longest running children's series in network history. Keeshan not only vividly embodied the Captain, the friendly host of the Treasure House, but also played a central creative role on the daily series, supervising and actively contributing to the scripts and insuring the program's conformity to his conceptions of appropriate children's entertainment.

Mark
01-23-2004, 10:00 AM
Horrible news. At least, he's with Mr. Green Jeans now. Rabbit must be upset.

Dan C
01-23-2004, 10:07 AM
Just heard about this here in the newsroom. Man this is sad. :( I have wonderful memories watching his show at my Grandmother's and with my sister. My mom took us to see Mr. Greenjeans in person, he must have been doing some tour. I couldn't have been older than 5 then.
Sad. :sigh:

I always though it was a sin the way CBS brass treated him in the end. All for a second-rate morning show that still can't get any ratings.

Dan C

poweragemk
01-23-2004, 10:08 AM
I remember when he was on. A sad day for former children everywhere.

guy incognito
01-23-2004, 10:13 AM
I wonder if they'll line his casket with ping-pong balls...

-=Rudy=-
01-23-2004, 10:14 AM
Wow...used to watch the Captain as a little tyke myself. R.I.P.!

Mark
01-23-2004, 10:18 AM
Originally posted by poweragemk
I remember when he was on. A sad day for former children everywhere.

And continuing children like me! LOL

stereoptic
01-23-2004, 10:40 AM
Originally posted by guy incognito
I wonder if they'll line his casket with ping-pong balls...

only if bunny rabbit has something to do with it

mcow1
01-23-2004, 10:47 AM
Very sad.:( And, another part of my childhood gone.

cleandan
01-23-2004, 10:55 AM
Thank you Bob Keeshan, you and Captian Kangaroo will be missed.

teaser5
01-23-2004, 11:01 AM
Damn...
:( Norm

Gardo
01-23-2004, 11:06 AM
My favorite TV show from childhood. The Captain taught me about classical music, storytelling, animation, television, zoology, and many more fascinating things that continue to enrich my life. His sense of humor was extraordinary. For me, no other kid-TV could ever hold a candle to the Captain.

So many memories. "Wake up, Grandfather!" Magic Drawing Board. Tom Terrific and Crabby Appleton. Channel One and Fred. Mr. Green Jeans and his inventions. Mr. Moose, Bunny Rabbit, carrots, ping-pong balls. Dancing Bear.

I can still sing you the theme song.

And now I really do feel like crying.

RIP, Bob Keeshan. Captain Kangaroo's passport to my heart will never expire.

Gardo
01-23-2004, 11:16 AM
There's a nice little classic CK clip over here:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/01/23/entertainment/main595419.shtml

tim_neely
01-23-2004, 12:20 PM
I didn't see this thread originally, so I posted it again in Off Topic (oops)!

I still remember some of the wonderfully goofy songs that aired during Captain Kangaroo. I can't be the only person who learned how to spell "M-A-double-S-A-C-H-U-S-E-double T-S" from his show. Nor can I be the only one who remembers that animated car going up and down an imaginary hill as the song "Abergavenny" played in the background.

I also have his Christmas album that came out on Golden originally, then was reissued on Wonderland, and even came out on CD a couple years ago -- I think the current name is Captain Kangaroo's Merry, Merry, Merry, Merry Christmas.

Like Mister Rogers, Bob Keeshan was another one who thought that television for children didn't have to be mindless, nor did it have to speak down to the audience.

reechie
01-23-2004, 12:22 PM
The folk band I'm in has been doing "When I First Came To This Land" for a few years now. Our main singer picked it up from years of watching Dancing Bear on Captain Kangaroo.

Mark
01-23-2004, 12:27 PM
Originally posted by Gardo
My favorite TV show from childhood. The Captain taught me about classical music, storytelling, animation, television, zoology, and many more fascinating things that continue to enrich my life. His sense of humor was extraordinary. For me, no other kid-TV could ever hold a candle to the Captain.

So many memories. "Wake up, Grandfather!" Magic Drawing Board. Tom Terrific and Crabby Appleton. Channel One and Fred. Mr. Green Jeans and his inventions. Mr. Moose, Bunny Rabbit, carrots, ping-pong balls. Dancing Bear.

I can still sing you the theme song.

And now I really do feel like crying.

RIP, Bob Keeshan. Captain Kangaroo's passport to my heart will never expire.

Gardo: A most perfect eulogy that brought a tear to my eye. Thanks, man.

Joel Cairo
01-23-2004, 12:37 PM
Sad, sad news...

Thanks for **everything**, Captain... you taught me (and a million others, I'm sure) how to tie my shoes, and make sense of the puzzling grown-up world.

We couldn't have asked for a better teacher. :)

-Kevin

stereoptic
01-23-2004, 12:49 PM
Originally posted by Mark


Gardo: A most perfect eulogy that brought a tear to my eye. Thanks, man.

yes, that was perfect!

I've had the theme song running through my head since I read this thread.

reechie
01-23-2004, 12:50 PM
A nice eulogy from Mark Evanier's blog:
http://www.newsfromme.com/archives/2004_01_23.html#003585


Friday, January 23, 2004
The Good Captain**10:34 AM

As sick as I am of writing about the recently-deceased, I have to write about Bob Keeshan, aka Captain Kangaroo. I don't know if the formal obits will make it clear but Mr. Keeshan, with whom so many of us grew up, was an extraordinary individual. He had a capacity to talk to (not "down to") children and to host a very difficult live TV show for a very long time...and this was a man who, when he first got into television, was by his own admission largely devoid of talent. As is probably well-known, his first role was as Clarabelle the Clown on the original Howdy Doody show. Less well-known is that he started there as a kind of go-fer/errand boy for the show's star, "Buffalo" Bob Smith. Among his duties was to herd the kids in and out of the show's Peanut Gallery and to get them to shut the hell up during the live broadcast. In this capacity, he occasionally got on camera and when some NBC exec suggested it looked wrong to have a guy in a sport coat on the show, Keeshan was sent off to work up a clown costume. He started at the public library where he learned what he could about clowns, then he rummaged through the wardrobe and make-up departments and soon, Clarabelle was born.

Clarabelle did not speak, partly because clowns were traditionally mute but mainly because Keeshan couldn't. By his own admission, he was too untrained and untalented to utter an on-camera word. By trial and error though, he managed to develop a pantomimed personality for his clown that the kids loved. It was mean, petulant and often quite nasty but it was Clarabelle. The only one who didn't love him was "Buffalo" Bob, who lived for the musical segments of his show and who was frustrated that the clown couldn't play an instrument. They tried giving Keeshan lessons but he had a tin ear and no sense of rhythm: He couldn't even play a triangle on the beat. At one point, Smith fired Keeshan and put a trained musician in the Clarabelle make-up...but the trained musician failed to capture the popular Clarabelle personality and they had to hire Keeshan back. That happened at least once, maybe twice.

After many years of Smith getting very wealthy off Howdy Doody, several cast members, led by Keeshan, made a stand and demanded better pay. They were fired and it looked like Bob Keeshan's TV career was over. But after failing in some non-television jobs, he made an amazing comeback with two different local shows on which he actually spoke. He had to, since he was the entire cast and mime wouldn't have worked. Eventually, it all led to Captain Kangaroo, which he did on CBS for thirty years. For much of that time, the show was live and it had to be done twice each morning, back to back. Keeshan and his small stock company (often, just Lumpy "Mr. Green Jeans" Brannum plus one puppeteer) would do an entire hour telecast live and then, after he said good-bye, they'd have sixty seconds to reset everything and do the entire show again for a different time zone. Somehow, it worked.

I actually watched the first telecast of Captain Kangaroo in October of '55. I was three and a half years old but I still remember it. A few years back when I worked with Mr. Keeshan, I of course told him this. He was very polite about it but I had the feeling that lots of people around my age told him that and he tended to not believe it.

The project was a show called CBS Storybreak, which we taped over at Television City on Stage 33, the home of The Price is Right. Keeshan had retired Cap'n Kangaroo by then and he hosted our show as Bob Keeshan. The network wanted him because of his enormous credibility in the area of children's programming and the fact that his hosting would help endorse a show they wished to have viewed as enriching. Mr. Keeshan, having learned well from "Buffalo" Bob, charged CBS what they felt was an exorbitant fee...but they paid it. One of the Business Affairs guys grumbled that the last few years Captain Kangaroo was on the network, as they kept cutting back his show and moving it to worse and worse time slots, he held the network up for vast amounts of cash. He kept threatening (they claimed) to go public and tell America that CBS didn't care about programming for children, and they essentially paid him off to let them phase out his show without a huge protest.

I don't know to what extent that's true but if it's completely true, it only adds to my respect for the man. Holding CBS up for money is an admirable skill, and I wish I was as good at it as he apparently was. Beyond that, I found him to be a genuinely kind, soft-spoken man who was everything you'd want Bob "Captain Kangaroo" Keeshan to be. He answered all my silly questions about his various TV endeavors, but he also kept asking everyone on the show about our backgrounds, particularly what kinds of training and education had led us to our present stations in life. He talked at length with the make-up lady about her family problems and joked with her about how, all the years he did Captain Kangaroo, he "grew into" the part and required less and less make-up. Eventually, he said, he reached the stage where they had to try and make him look younger than he really was. "That was a frightening moment," he said.

He said that despite turning into the kindly old man he played, he never got recognized in public by the visual. People, he said, only recognized him from his voice. It was a wonderful voice...warm and instantly friendly, and so much a part of so many lives for so many years. It's amazing to think that for so long, that man couldn't even use that voice in front of a camera. And it's sad to think of all the kids who won't grow up hearing it.

Steve Hoffman
01-23-2004, 01:00 PM
Rich,

A great obit, thanks!

I LOVE THIS PART: "For much of that time, the show was live and it had to be done twice each morning, back to back. Keeshan and his small stock company (often, just Lumpy "Mr. Green Jeans" Brannum plus one puppeteer) would do an entire hour telecast live and then, after he said good-bye, they'd have sixty seconds to reset everything and do the entire show again for a different time zone. Somehow, it worked."


Wow, doing it live twice was really interesting. I remember as a small kid in the 1950's getting up really early on Saturday morning and waiting for the show to come on. First (on CBS, Channel 2) there was "Let Us Pray", then "Farm Report" (if you can believe it) and then, yah, CAPTAIN KANGAROO!

RDK
01-23-2004, 01:10 PM
There sure is no one like Captain Kangaroo on TV now. I grew up watching him and regret that my girls can't. It's too bad there aren't any best-of videos or DVDs available. Sure would like to get some of them...

Steve D.
01-23-2004, 01:55 PM
Thanks Steve for sending me the post on this. That was a great bit of inside information on the Captain. I was a little old for his show, but certainly remember the character. I also remember the local KNXT morning programming. You mentioned "Let us Pray" I recall the slide of the two hands clasped together. Then the farm report and a show called "Panorama Pacific" with host Red Rowe.

Steve Hoffman
01-23-2004, 02:07 PM
Originally posted by Steve D.
Thanks Steve for sending me the post on this. That was a great bit of inside information on the Captain. I was a little old for his show, but certainly remember the character. I also remember the local KNXT morning programming. You mentioned "Let us Pray" I recall the slide of the two hands clasped together. Then the farm report and a show called "Panorama Pacific" with host Red Rowe.

That's right. An innocent time. Imagine a show like Red Rowe's today? No way!

Gardo
01-23-2004, 02:23 PM
Hey, Rich, thanks for that wonderful eulogy from Mark Evanier. I'm always happy to know that the people who touch my heart have a good heart themselves. I'm also glad to know when failure and defeat are merely the prelude to immortality.

I was especially moved by the last paragraph:


He said that despite turning into the kindly old man he played, he never got recognized in public by the visual. People, he said, only recognized him from his voice. It was a wonderful voice...warm and instantly friendly, and so much a part of so many lives for so many years. It's amazing to think that for so long, that man couldn't even use that voice in front of a camera. And it's sad to think of all the kids who won't grow up hearing it.

That's exactly right.

Mike Dow
01-23-2004, 02:35 PM
I am very saddened by the loss of "The Captain". He was a huge part of my childhood. Who could ever forget Captain Kangaroo, Bunny Rabbit, Mr. Moose, Mr. Green Jeans (and his partner, Dennis The Painter) and one of my favorite characters on the show--The Town Clown. Bob Keeshan will always be in my heart.