The Little Clowns of Happytown
The Little Clowns of Happytown | |
---|---|
Genre | Children |
Based on | A concept by Anthony Paul Productions |
Developed by | Chuck Lorre |
Written by | Bruce Faulk Cliff Roberts |
Directed by |
|
Voices of | Sue Blu Charlie Adler Danny Cooksey Frank Welker Ron Palillo Pat Fraley Josh Rodine Ellen Gerstell Howard Morris |
Theme music composer | D.C. Brown Chuck Lorre Anthony Paul Productions |
Composer | Robert J. Walsh |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 18 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Fred Wolf[1] |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies | Murakami Wolf Swenson ABC Entertainment Marvel Productions |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | September 12, 1987 July 16, 1988 | –
The Little Clowns of Happytown is an American animated television series that aired as part of ABC's Saturday morning lineup from September 12, 1987 to July 16, 1988.[2][3]
Plot
The series is set around young clowns from Happytown, whose goal is to spread happiness and imbue positive mental attitudes to the city next door.[4] The young clowns are Big Top (the leader), Badum-Bump (Big Top's little brother), Hiccup (Big Top's helper), Tickles (Hiccup's best friend), Pranky (Big Top's best friend), and Blooper (Hiccup's big brother), along with their pet elephant, Rover, and their mentor, Mr. Pickleherring. They are also accompanied by the clownimals, clown-like animals that only Badum-Bump can understand. The only thing that stands in their way is Awful B. Bad and his minions, Geek and Whiner.[4]
Characters
Big Top - The main protagonist and leader of the Little Clowns. He loves to tell jokes. He wears a top hat in the style of a Ringmaster.
Blooper - He's a clumsy clown that does physical comedy. He is also involved in many acts by accident.
Hiccup - She is Blooper's younger sister. She loves to sing songs but often hiccups when she talks.
Tickles - She loves to giggle and can fix anything.
Pranky - He loves to prank people by throwing custard pies at them only sometimes he gets them in his face by accident.
Badum-Bump - Big Top's younger brother and he only speaks by making sounds.
Rover - Badum-Bump's pet elephant and partner.
Clownimals - The colorful clown-like animals that accompanies the little clowns. Badum-Bump is the only one who understands them. There are 9 of them: Lion, Tiger, Bear, Seal, Penguin, Giraffe, Rhino, Zebra and a Kangaroo.
Mr. Pickleherring - The kids' enthusiastic teacher often teaches them how to be funny and helps with their morals.
Awful B. Bad - He's the main antagonist. He is also a man who wants the world to be gloomy just like him.
Geek - Bebad's redheaded assistant.
Whiner - Bebad's other assistant. A teenager who whines and often informs Bebad on what's going on.
Cast
- Sue Blu as Hiccup
- Charlie Adler as Pranky and Awful B. Bad (in some episodes)
- Danny Cooksey as Big Top
- Frank Welker as Badum-Bump, Rover the Elephant, Clownimals
- Ron Palillo as Whiner
- Pat Fraley as Awful B. Bad, Geek
- Josh Rodine as Blooper
- Ellen Gerstell as Tickles
- Howard Morris as Mr. Pickleherring
Production
Marvel Productions[3] and ABC had brought in consulting company Q5 Corporation to help develop the show along with other series for the 1987–1988 season. Q5's consultants consist of psychology PhDs and advertising, marketing and research professionals. Marvel had already used Q5 to develop their Defenders of the Earth series, so ABC brought them in for the 1987–88 season to improve its kid appeal on its Saturday morning offerings to get out of third place in the ratings.[5]
A Little Clowns former story editor indicated in September 1987 to the Los Angeles Times regarding Q5 consulting on the series:[5]
They aren't merely researching trends; they're trying to engage in social engineering. There's absolutely no passion with these people. There is no sense of honor, of anger, of deep emotion, of love. They're bland-izers; they try to hammer out all of the high and low points of being a human being. I can see we're not doing Dostoevsky on Saturday morning, but there has to be some leeway to create characters who are free to express themselves.
Fred Wolf and his Murakami Wolf Swenson were also brought in to produce the series.[1]
The show was promoted as a part of the third annual ABC Family Fun Fair, which brought the voice talent of the characters to perform highlights of their show. The show stopped in Oklahoma City from Friday August 28 through Sunday August 30, 1987.[6]
Little Clowns was unsuccessful in boosting ABC's ratings. ABC children's programming vice president Squire Rushnell blamed the recently introduced people meter for the show's failure, noting that young children had neither the dexterity nor the interest to operate the device, and thus any program aimed at young children as Little Clowns was would be doomed to ratings failure.[7]
Episodes
This section needs a plot summary. (May 2022) |
No. | Title | Original air date |
---|---|---|
1 | "Baby Blues" | September 12, 1987 |
2 | "Big heart, Sweet heart" | September 19, 1987 |
3 | "Carnival Crashers" | September 26, 1987 |
4 | "Clowny Exchange" | October 3, 1987 |
5 | "Won't You Please Come Home Blooper Geek?" | October 10, 1987 |
6 | "BeBad's Pet Peeve" | October 17, 1987 |
7 | "City Clowns, Country Clowns" | October 24, 1987 |
8 | "I love mom" | October 31, 1987 |
9 | "Don't be angry" | May 7, 1988 |
10 | "I can do it" | May 14, 1988 |
11 | "Lost and Not Found" | May 21, 1988 |
12 | "New Dad, No Dad" | May 28, 1988 |
13 | "Nobody's Useless" | June 4, 1988 |
14 | "When you lost, S.T.O.P" | June 11, 1988 |
15 | "The Chosen Clown" | June 18, 1988 |
16 | "Everyone has a talent" | July 2, 1988 |
17 | "To Mr. Pickleherring with Love" | July 9, 1988 |
18 | "Too scared too laugh" | July 16, 1988 |
Reception
The Los Angeles Times was critical of the show, with writer Charles Solomon saying that younger kids should skip it by staying in bed. They also claimed that the show was predictable and copied the Smurfs heavily, including using "clown" as a general word substitute.[3]
Joking Around with the Little Clowns
During the show's run, ABC aired a series of short segments called Joking Around with the Little Clowns, which ran during the commercial breaks of their other Saturday morning programming and featured one of the clowns telling another a joke. Although Little Clowns of Happytown was cancelled after a single season, the Joking Around with the Little Clowns segments continued to run on ABC for another two years.
Home releases
In the United Kingdom, several volumes of Little Clowns of Happytown were released on VHS by Tempo Video in 1988, each containing three episodes. A compilation video of the Joking Around With the Little Clowns segments was later released in the United States by Strand-VCI Entertainment in 1991.
Years later, in 2014, several episodes of the series were released on DVD in Region 1 as part of the Mill Creek Entertainment compilation TV Guide Spotlight: Totally '80s Toons which also includes Heathcliff, The Littles, Dennis the Menace, The Get Along Gang, Care Bears and Nellie the Elephant.
References
- ^ a b Lenburg, Jeff (2006). Who's who in Animated Cartoons: An International Guide to Film & Television's Award-winning and Legendary Animators. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 359. ISBN 9781557836717. Retrieved February 15, 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ TV Guide Guide to TV. Barnes & Noble. 2004. p. 371. ISBN 0-7607-5634-1.
- ^ a b c Solomon, Charles (1987-10-09). "Kidvid Reviews : Cartoon Debuts Are All Drawn Out". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-10-15.
- ^ a b Yoshihara, Nancy (November 2, 1987). "'Little Clowns' Find Happytown Outside Japan: Korea, Brazil Among Countries Drawing Animation Work as Yen Grows Stronger". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
- ^ a b Haithman, Diane (September 3, 1987). "How Image Makers Shape Kids' TV: Q5 Firm Advises ABC on the Look and Style of Cartoon Shows; Some Writers Call It Intrusion". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
- ^ "ABC Family Fun Fair planned at city mall". The Oklahoman. August 23, 1987. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
- ^ Harmetz, Aljean (June 7, 1988). "Kids Like Tube, But Tune Out Networks". Chicago Tribune. New York Times News Service.
Do you think I'll keep putting those programs on the air? Little Clowns of Happytown, which is specifically for children under 6, has been canceled because it can't generate the people-meter numbers.
External links
- The Little Clowns of Happytown at IMDb
- Little Clowns of Happytown at TVBuzer.com
- 1980s American animated television series
- 1987 American television series debuts
- 1988 American television series endings
- American children's animated adventure television series
- American children's animated comedy television series
- American Broadcasting Company original programming
- Animated television series about children
- Fictional clowns
- Television series by Marvel Productions
- Television shows about clowns
- American Broadcasting Company animated television series