NBC Children's Theatre (partially found anthology TV series; 1963-1973): Difference between revisions

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{{Template:InfoboxLost
{{InfoboxLost
|title = <center>NBC Children's Theatre</center>
|title=<center>NBC Children's Theatre</center>
|image =NCT The Reluctant Dragon.jpg
|image=NCT The Reluctant Dragon.jpg
|imagecaption =Puppet characters from the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".
|imagecaption=Puppet characters from the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".
|status = <span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>
}}
}}
'''''NBC Children's Theatre''''' was an American television anthology series that aired from 1963 to 1973. Many of the stories were derived from classic and contemporary children's literature. Bill Cosby, Johnny Carson, Hugh Downs, and Burl Ives were the narrators. Actors and actresses included Fran Allison, Geraldine Page, James Earl Jones, Tony Dow, Judy Carne, Tim Matheson, and Sterling Holloway. The show was nominated for four prime-time Emmys and won two Peabody Awards.
'''''NBC Children's Theatre''''' was an American television anthology series that aired from 1963 to 1973. Many of the stories were derived from classic and contemporary children's literature. Bill Cosby, Johnny Carson, Hugh Downs, and Burl Ives were the narrators. Actors and actresses included Fran Allison, Geraldine Page, James Earl Jones, Tony Dow, Judy Carne, Tim Matheson, and Sterling Holloway. The show was nominated for four prime-time Emmys and won two Peabody Awards.


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There are also episodes at certain libraries.<ref>[http://www.worldcat.org/title/nbc-childrens-theatre-1971-03-27-a-day-with-bill-cosby/oclc/40198123/ Library listing for episode of show] Last retrieved 03 July 2016.</ref>
There are also episodes at certain libraries.<ref>[http://www.worldcat.org/title/nbc-childrens-theatre-1971-03-27-a-day-with-bill-cosby/oclc/40198123/ Library listing for episode of show] Last retrieved 03 July 2016.</ref>
A website called Skary Guy Video apparently sells an episode of it on a compilation DVD of "creepy" puppet shows.<ref>[http://www.skaryguyvideo.com/puppets.htm The "creepy" puppet shows listing on SkaryGuyVideo.com.] Retrieved 21 Nov '20</ref>


Interestingly, an editorial search on Getty Images will bring up quite a few photos taken during the filming of several episodes. These show various cast members and parts of the sets.
Interestingly, an editorial search on Getty Images will bring up quite a few photos taken during the filming of several episodes. These show various cast members and parts of the sets.


Here is a list of known episodes of NBC's Children's Theatre:
Here is a list of known episodes of NBC's Children's Theatre that are known to exist in collections or in libraries:


<ul>
<ul>
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<li>Rabbit Hill - "A story which tells how the small animals who live on Rabbit Hill are affected by the new owners who move into the big house and plant a garden."</li>
<li>Rabbit Hill - "A story which tells how the small animals who live on Rabbit Hill are affected by the new owners who move into the big house and plant a garden."</li>
<li>For the Love of Fred - "A puppet film in which a caterpillar's friends try to help him become a butterfly. For elementary grades."</li>
<li>For the Love of Fred - "A puppet film in which a caterpillar's friends try to help him become a butterfly. For elementary grades."</li>
<li>Super plastic elastic goggles - "Humorously explains the various aspects of color in a child's world. Includes appearances by Judy Carne, James Earl Jones, Tom Poston, James Coco, Tammy Grimes, and the Goggles Quartet"</li>
<li>Super Plastic Elastic Goggles - "Humorously explains the various aspects of color in a child's world. Includes appearances by Judy Carne, James Earl Jones, Tom Poston, James Coco, Tammy Grimes, and the Goggles Quartet"</li>
<li>A Day with Bill Cosby - "Comedian Bill Cosby and drug experts Father Egan, John Stuart Marr, and Ulysses Williams explain the dangers of drug abuse to children. For elementary grades."</li>
<li>A Day with Bill Cosby - "Comedian Bill Cosby and drug experts Father Egan, John Stuart Marr, and Ulysses Williams explain the dangers of drug abuse to children. For elementary grades."</li>
<li>Stuart Little</li>
<li>Hansel and Gretel</li>
<li>The Enormous Egg</li>
<li>All About Me</li>
<li>The Street of Flower Boxes</li>
<li>No Pets Allowed</li>
<li>Quillow and the Giant</li>
</ul>
</ul>


A songbook<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/Goggles-Songbook-Television-Special-Plastic/dp/B003QHJ7YY/ Amazon listing for Super Plastic Elastic Goggles songbook] Last retrieved 05 June 2016.</ref> and a vinyl soundtrack<ref>[https://www.discogs.com/Goggles-The-Goggles/release/6546898 Super Plastic Elastic Goggles soundtrack at Discogs] Last retrieved 05 June 2016.</ref> for "Super Plastic Elastic Goggles" were released around the time that episode originally aired in 1971. The soundtrack's songs were by The Goggles, a band featured in the TV special. Its members were Jessica Harper, Rod McBrien, David Spinoza, and Mark Lockhart. This soundtrack was re-released on CD in Korea by Big Pink Music in 2010.<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/Music-From-Soundtrack-Miniature-Korea/dp/B0039M5SOY Amazon listing for CD release of Super Plastic Elastic Goggles soundtrack] Last retrieved 05 June 2016.</ref>
On May 6th, 2021, Lost Media Wiki user SAKURARadiochan found a MEGA link to the episode "A Day With Bill Cosby".  This wasn't noticed until July 24th, 2021, when Lost Media Wiki user [[User:BrayBrayLMW|BrayBray]] uploaded the full episode onto Archive.org, making it the first piece of footage found from the series in almost 50 years.


A songbook<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/Goggles-Songbook-Television-Special-Plastic/dp/B003QHJ7YY/ Amazon listing for Super Plastic Elastic Goggles songbook] Last retrieved 05 June 2016.</ref> and a vinyl soundtrack<ref>[https://www.discogs.com/Goggles-The-Goggles/release/6546898 Super Plastic Elastic Goggles soundtrack at Discogs] Last retrieved 05 June 2016.</ref> for "Super Plastic Elastic Goggles" were released around the time that episode originally aired in 1971. The soundtrack's songs were by The Goggles, a band featured in the TV special. Its members were Jessica Harper, Rod McBrien, David Spinoza, and Mark Lockhart. This soundtrack was re-released on CD in Korea by Big Pink Music in 2010.<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/Music-From-Soundtrack-Miniature-Korea/dp/B0039M5SOY Amazon listing for CD release of Super Plastic Elastic Goggles soundtrack] Last retrieved 05 June 2016.</ref>
Ever since the 1960's, the giant Triceratops statue that was used to represent Uncle Beazley in the show's 1968 adaptation of ''The Enormous Egg'' has been part of the Smithsonian's collection as it was taken on set to the National Zoological Park and National Museum of Natural History where parts of the serial were filmed. The statue was first unveiled at the Anacostia Community Museum for its public opening on September 15, 1967; months before the NBC production would air the next year. Afterwards, Uncle Beazley was placed on the north side of National Mall, adjacent to NMNH where it became a playground for children who would climb on top of and play "King of the Hill" as vintage newspaper articles state; mulch and wood were scattered around the model to safe-proof it in 1981. Since 1994, Beazley has been reinstated into the Zoological Park; fenced off on a patch of land near Lemur Island. <ref>[https://siarchives.si.edu/blog/dino-detours-uncle-beazley The Dino Detours of Uncle Beazley] Last retrieved 13 May 2022</ref> Sculpted by Hungarian-born artist and taxidermist Louis Paul Jonas, Uncle Beazley is actually one of two life-size fiberglass Triceratops statues that he first made for the Sinclair Oil Company exhibit during the 1964 New York World's Fair; <ref>[https://johannaleech.com/2013/06/07/sinclair-dinoland-images-and-video-from-19645/#jp-carousel-735 Sinclair Dinoland images and video from 1964/5] Last retrieved 13 May 2022</ref> the other one wound up in Louisville, Missouri and was displayed outside the Museum of Science & Industry before it wound up abandoned in an outdoor storage area. <ref>[https://brokensidewalk.com/2012/dino-update-louisvilles-triceratops-a-traveling-celebrity/ Dino Update: Louisville's Triceratops Once a Travelling Celebrity] Last retrieved 13 May 2022</ref> Along with loaning the World's Fair dinosaur to NBC, Jonas was commissioned to make five smaller models that represent Beazley's growth progression and the four of them were donated to Pittsfield's Berkshire Museum, a Smithsonian Affiliate organization in Massachusetts, by ''NBC Children's Theatre'' producer George Heinemann in 1979; they would later be moved to the Berkshire Athenaeum in October 2014 after the Spark!Lab play space was installed in their original spot. <ref>[https://berkshiremuseum.org/uncategorized/uncle-beazleys-new-home/ Uncle Beazley's New Home] Last retrieved 13 May 2022</ref> Uncle Beazley used to be brown in both the film and when it was on display in Smithsonian properties, though in February 2011, he became noticeably worse for wear as he was taken to the Smithsonian's Office of Exhibits Central where he received structural repairs and a makeover. When he returned in mid-March, Beazley sported a brand new forest green color scheme. <ref>[https://www.npr.org/sections/pictureshow/2011/02/16/133806945/uncle-beazley-is-on-the-move Uncle Beazley Is On The Move] Last retrieved 13 May 2022</ref>


==Images==
==Gallery==
<gallery mode=packed heights=150px>
<gallery mode=packed heights=150px>
File:The_Goggles_Soundtrack_1.jpg|The cover of the "Super Plastic Elastic Goggles" soundtrack record.
File:The_Goggles_Soundtrack_1.jpg|The cover of the "Super Plastic Elastic Goggles" soundtrack record.
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File:NCT_The_Reluctant_Dragon_2.jpg|Fran Allison with puppets Kukla and Ollie on the set of the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".
File:NCT_The_Reluctant_Dragon_2.jpg|Fran Allison with puppets Kukla and Ollie on the set of the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".
File:NCT Fran Allison.jpg|Fran Allison with puppet characters on the set of the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".
File:NCT Fran Allison.jpg|Fran Allison with puppet characters on the set of the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".
File:Louis Paul Jonas with Beazley prop 1.jpg|Jonas at the National Zoo with the "Enormous Egg" that was made for the adapted production of the titular children's book.
File:Louis Paul Jonas with Beazley prop 2.jpg|Jonas at the National Zoo with one of the Baby Beazley props made for "The Enormous Egg".
File: Uncle Beazley at the National Zoo.jpg|The life-size "Uncle Beazley" model from both the 1964 World's Fair and "Enormous Egg" production as currently displayed in the National Zoological Park.
File: Berkshire_Uncle_Beazley.jpg|The smaller Uncle Beazley statues that Louis Paul Jonas made for production on "The Enormous Egg" when they were displayed at the Berkshire Museum.
</gallery>
</gallery>
==Video==
{{Video|perrow  =1
  |service1    =archiveorg
  |id1          =1971-03-27-nbc.-childrens.-theater-a.-day.-with.-bill.-cosby-woc
  |description1 =The March 27th, 1971 episode of ''NBC Children's Theatre'', "A Day With Bill Cosby".
}}
==External Links==
*[https://archive.org/details/1971-03-27-nbc.-childrens.-theater-a.-day.-with.-bill.-cosby-woc Archive.org mirror of "A Day With Bill Cosby".]
*[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1289479/ IMDb page.]


== References ==
==References==
<references />
<references/>
 
== External links ==
*[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1289479/ IMDb page]


[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Lost puppet shows]]
[[Category:Lost puppetry]]
[[Category:Partially found media]]

Latest revision as of 19:29, 13 May 2022

NCT The Reluctant Dragon.jpg

Puppet characters from the episode "The Reluctant Dragon".

Status: Partially Found

NBC Children's Theatre was an American television anthology series that aired from 1963 to 1973. Many of the stories were derived from classic and contemporary children's literature. Bill Cosby, Johnny Carson, Hugh Downs, and Burl Ives were the narrators. Actors and actresses included Fran Allison, Geraldine Page, James Earl Jones, Tony Dow, Judy Carne, Tim Matheson, and Sterling Holloway. The show was nominated for four prime-time Emmys and won two Peabody Awards.

It would seem that all episodes are currently lost in that they are unavailable for public viewing for the most part. None of them have ever been released on home video, and no parts of the show can be found online.

Several of the episodes, however, are in the collection of The Paley Center for Media; "Stuart Little", "Hansel and Gretel", "The Enormous Egg", "Circus Town", "All About Me", "The Street of Flower Boxes", "No Pets Allowed", "Quillow and the Giant", and "Super Plastic Elastic Goggles". These can be viewed by the public, but only at The Paley Center's locations in New York and Los Angeles.

There are also episodes at certain libraries.[1]

A website called Skary Guy Video apparently sells an episode of it on a compilation DVD of "creepy" puppet shows.[2]

Interestingly, an editorial search on Getty Images will bring up quite a few photos taken during the filming of several episodes. These show various cast members and parts of the sets.

Here is a list of known episodes of NBC's Children's Theatre that are known to exist in collections or in libraries:

  • Circus Town - "Shows how the residents of Peru, Indiana, join together to present a full-length circus every summer. Includes scenes of auditions, training, rehearsals, and the actual performances."
  • Rabbit Hill - "A story which tells how the small animals who live on Rabbit Hill are affected by the new owners who move into the big house and plant a garden."
  • For the Love of Fred - "A puppet film in which a caterpillar's friends try to help him become a butterfly. For elementary grades."
  • Super Plastic Elastic Goggles - "Humorously explains the various aspects of color in a child's world. Includes appearances by Judy Carne, James Earl Jones, Tom Poston, James Coco, Tammy Grimes, and the Goggles Quartet"
  • A Day with Bill Cosby - "Comedian Bill Cosby and drug experts Father Egan, John Stuart Marr, and Ulysses Williams explain the dangers of drug abuse to children. For elementary grades."
  • Stuart Little
  • Hansel and Gretel
  • The Enormous Egg
  • All About Me
  • The Street of Flower Boxes
  • No Pets Allowed
  • Quillow and the Giant

A songbook[3] and a vinyl soundtrack[4] for "Super Plastic Elastic Goggles" were released around the time that episode originally aired in 1971. The soundtrack's songs were by The Goggles, a band featured in the TV special. Its members were Jessica Harper, Rod McBrien, David Spinoza, and Mark Lockhart. This soundtrack was re-released on CD in Korea by Big Pink Music in 2010.[5]

On May 6th, 2021, Lost Media Wiki user SAKURARadiochan found a MEGA link to the episode "A Day With Bill Cosby". This wasn't noticed until July 24th, 2021, when Lost Media Wiki user BrayBray uploaded the full episode onto Archive.org, making it the first piece of footage found from the series in almost 50 years.

Ever since the 1960's, the giant Triceratops statue that was used to represent Uncle Beazley in the show's 1968 adaptation of The Enormous Egg has been part of the Smithsonian's collection as it was taken on set to the National Zoological Park and National Museum of Natural History where parts of the serial were filmed. The statue was first unveiled at the Anacostia Community Museum for its public opening on September 15, 1967; months before the NBC production would air the next year. Afterwards, Uncle Beazley was placed on the north side of National Mall, adjacent to NMNH where it became a playground for children who would climb on top of and play "King of the Hill" as vintage newspaper articles state; mulch and wood were scattered around the model to safe-proof it in 1981. Since 1994, Beazley has been reinstated into the Zoological Park; fenced off on a patch of land near Lemur Island. [6] Sculpted by Hungarian-born artist and taxidermist Louis Paul Jonas, Uncle Beazley is actually one of two life-size fiberglass Triceratops statues that he first made for the Sinclair Oil Company exhibit during the 1964 New York World's Fair; [7] the other one wound up in Louisville, Missouri and was displayed outside the Museum of Science & Industry before it wound up abandoned in an outdoor storage area. [8] Along with loaning the World's Fair dinosaur to NBC, Jonas was commissioned to make five smaller models that represent Beazley's growth progression and the four of them were donated to Pittsfield's Berkshire Museum, a Smithsonian Affiliate organization in Massachusetts, by NBC Children's Theatre producer George Heinemann in 1979; they would later be moved to the Berkshire Athenaeum in October 2014 after the Spark!Lab play space was installed in their original spot. [9] Uncle Beazley used to be brown in both the film and when it was on display in Smithsonian properties, though in February 2011, he became noticeably worse for wear as he was taken to the Smithsonian's Office of Exhibits Central where he received structural repairs and a makeover. When he returned in mid-March, Beazley sported a brand new forest green color scheme. [10]

Gallery

Video

The March 27th, 1971 episode of NBC Children's Theatre, "A Day With Bill Cosby".

External Links

References