I was born in 63 and had a blast watching saturday morning cartons growing up with the best cartoon ever!I own just about over several 100 dvds with old cartoons rare and popular from 50-70s...catroonaholic!!!Proud!
"Tennesse","Chumley","Baldy" And"Yak"also succeeded in a Christmas cartoon..where they created original and beautiful tree decorations("Mr.Whoopee"gave the boys suggestions)..which pleased zoo director:"Dr.Stanley Livingston","The Mayor Of Megopolis" and his wife and everyone else in the zoo. The title of that film is"The Tree Trimmers"..which sadly is no longer here at"You Tube".
@@kevinbutler1126 In an H. Allen Smith book of stories written by children -- I think the title was _Don't Get Perconel with a Chicken --- _ there was a story in which a kid says to his drunkard grandmother, "If you don't go to the bar more than three times a day I'll eat my hat." The Grandmother says, "You don't have a hat to eat huk."
This is one of a few episodes where Tennessee has his moment of glory. This shows Tennessee can never fail and I just laughed when Stanley humilated himself in front of everyone by eating his hat.
A Billy goat, a Billy goat That's what I could be Because a goat would love the chance To eat my hat for me But it won't taste good to me LOVE that part!
I love how Tennesesee is so multi faceted and can be a plumber, auto mechanic, folk singer or whatever for any money makeing scheme! He is one talented penguin!
Its really too bad kids today do not get to see all these really good cartoons like Tenn Tux. There were so many different cartoon shows back in the mid 1950's through the mid 1960's and each one was well written too. Good old fashioned fun stuff to watch as a kid. One of my favs was Jonny Quest although it was not a "stupid funny" cartoon it was for growing from a kittle kid into the pre-teen and early teen years when I started to watch each Saturday morning and I still watch an episode occasionally, hey....never too old to be a kid again, right? That period of time was a great time to be a kid like no other....and the westerns were wow...terrific too....but thats another topic in itself. Thanks for posting these old cartoons for all of us to go back in time and remember ourselves and that very special era never to come again....and if any of you happen to run into Capt. Kangaroo, please tell him we all miss him, Bunny Rabbitt and Mr. Moose too.
Originally telecast in the fall of 1963 (in two parts), when the folk-singing boom was at its peak. Don Adams, Bradley Bolke, Mort Marshall, Larry Storch and Kenny Delmar provide the voices. The four partners of Total/Leonardo Television- Buck Biggers, Chet Stover, Joe Harris, and Treadwell Covington- were officially credited with composing "Abra Kadabra".
I remember when I was a kid going to PS 132 in Williamsburg Brooklyn and we would be sent home for lunch and I would have lunch over my aunt Anna's house as my mother Rose was working and Anna would make me tv dinners as she couldn't cook! And I would watch Underdog and Tennessee Tuxedo and at some point Paul Winchell and Jerry Mahoney were on and I was watching them and then Tennessee and I had to go back to school and would miss the last cartoon being shown and I'd get upset lol.
I always love to go home from school back in the 1970's to watch it. They sure don't make wonderful and great cartoons like they used to make? RIP Don Adam who was the voice of this 🐧 penguin. 🇺🇸💔😂😆😎✌🆒👍
Wow this is incredible I had no idea that you could look at this kind of thing on the Internet thank you for putting this on this was fun my husband just showed it to me. We were never allowed to watch cartoons growing up so I just got a real education.
I'm not a huge fan of Tennessee Tuxedo or a lot of the Total Television Shows, I might've liked them as a kid, but I don't care about them that much nowadays, but man, I hated Stanley Livingston, he gives people who work at zoos a bad name, and I'm a volunteer at one, and I'm glad this was one of the few times Stanley lost to Tennessee.
😍-😄-😄-- i love/miss So Many Of These Older Cartoon's.💓 I sealize that almost all new/are Learning..one's..great.!!! But...the..60's..were by far the best for me....📺..black/white..💁 Lol...still my choice is/Old One's.
When I tell my child who grew up in the Age of Computers about life before them she can't comprehend it she get that deer in the headlight look, I will have to show her these, and several of the TV shows of the early 80's so she can understand who what when and why I am or do or think the way I do..I think i messed with just about every grammatically mistake let alone how I butchered punctuation lol I have to plan a historic piggy party
Agree with you Jerry. A person who enjoys simplicity, including "primitive" cartoons like this, is not bound to act up upon the smallest setbacks in life.
Phineas J. Whoopie recorded Chumley over Thomas Edison's original phonograph recording of "Mary Had a Little Lamb"??? I don't think that really happened. I'm going to check Snopes.
Production Companies: NBCUniversal Syndication Studios (current owner) Classic Media (current owner) Leonardo Television (Distributor) Total Television (Presentation and production) CBS Originals (copyright holder) Gamma Productions S.A. (animation) Walkman Pictures (animation)
+Stephen Holloway There's been a few, one in my mind is a Christmas episode where he decorated a Christmas tree with DIY ornaments after breaking all the ones they had after being told by Stanley he wasn't supposed to touch anything.
@mage189 i got you beat these shows where on in the sixties on saturday and sunday from 5am to 12 noon . that was the cartoon weekend they was in black and white color came out in the late sixties early seventies
He was already approaching 60 when he started doing inspector gadget. Don Adams was more famous in the 1960's than any other decade he lived in. He was the lead in Get Smart!