Very classic bozo and cookie appreciate your style way to go appreciate you thanks for the memories RIP you will be missed appreciate you take care . Joe
This show is holy grail to me. Every day at 4.00pm after Hobo Kelly on KCOP CHANNEL 13 a Christ Craft station in the late 1960's, Bozo came on before Reruns of Batman and at 6:30, Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea. And than at 7:30pm its the family hour among the three major networks.
Harmon was born in Toledo, Ohio and raised in Cleveland. During World War II, he served as a private in the Army. On returning, he wanted to become a doctor, until he met entertainer Al Jolson. According to Harmon's autobiography, The Man Behind the Nose, Jolson told him, "Being a doctor of medicine is honorable, but you'll touch so many more lives as a doctor of laughter!"[2] Harmon instead attended the University of Southern California, where he majored in theater and performed in the Spirit of Troy marching band.[1] In 1957, Harmon purchased the licensing rights to the Bozo character from Capitol Records and marketed the property aggressively. By the late 1960s, Harmon had licensed local Bozo TV shows in nearly every major U.S. market, as well as in other countries.[3] He also produced a series of Bozo animated cartoons intended to be shown with the live-action show, performing Bozo's voice himself. Harmon's animation studio also produced eighteen Popeye The Sailor cartoons in 1960 as part of a larger TV syndication package. In 1961, Harmon bought the merchandising rights to the likenesses of Laurel and Hardy.[4] Five years later, he promoted a Laurel and Hardy TV cartoon short series called A Laurel and Hardy Cartoon, animated by Hanna-Barbera Productions. Harmon performed Stan Laurel’s voice in that series along with Jim MacGeorge as Hardy. In 1999, Harmon coproduced and codirected a live-action feature, The All New Adventures of Laurel & Hardy in For Love or Mummy, starring Bronson Pinchot as Laurel and Gailard Sartain as Hardy. Intended as the first of a series, it was released direct-to-video and no sequels were made. In 1984 Harmon stood as a write-in candidate in the presidential election with the aim of encouraging people to vote.[5][6] Only Arizona reported the number of votes he received, 21.[7] The total number of U.S. write-in votes was 19,315 or 0.02 percent of the vote. On New Year's Day 1996, Harmon dressed as Bozo for the first time in 10 years, appearing in the Rose Parade in Pasadena, California.[8] He wrote an autobiography titled The Man Behind the Nose: Assassins, Astronauts, Cannibals, and Other Stupendous Tales, published in 2010 by Igniter Books. One of Harmon's alleged ex-wives disputed the memoir's veracity.[9] Harmon died of congestive heart failure in his home in Los Angeles, California, on July 3, 2008.[10] He is buried in Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles. He was married four times, and had four children: filmmaker Jeff Harmon, and three daughters.
I was wondering if this was Frank Avruch. The way he picked out his "Butchy Boy for the Day" is the way I saw Avruch do it on a DVD I had of the show from the early 2000s. I wonder if any of the other Bozo shows had a kid be Butch for the day. Yes, I know Chicago didn't because they didn't even use the characters from the cartoons but instead came up with their own characters.
I was a participant on this show on my 6'th 🙋♂️🎩birthday..July 1969 in Windsor ,Ontario Canada. I played a game bouncing ping pong🏓 balls into a box. I won a giant Tootsie roll🍭🍬🍫🍊 & a six pack of Orange Crush ! Ahhhh !.. those were the days ! Lol🤡🎈🤭
1963 June 1st until August 15th. Gomorrah the first One jumbo space, a cabin of a guest, missing until 50 minutes and the last 3, a gift for each of us from Florida and Mississippi.