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Captain Kangaroo



First Aired in 1955

Captain Kangaroo was a children's program which aired weekday mornings on the United States television network CBS from 1955 until 1984, then moved to the American Program Service (now American Public Television, Boston) to air syndicated reruns of past episodes in 1992. The show was produced and the title character played by the late Bob Keeshan, who based the show on "the warm relationship between grandparents and children."

It had a very loose structure, built around life in the "Treasure House" where the Captain (whose name came from the big pockets in his coat) would tell stories, meet guests and indulge in silly stunts with regular characters, both humans and puppets. The show was live for its first four years, and was in black-and-white until 1966. In 1981, CBS shortened the hour-long show to a half-hour.

In the TV season of 1997-98, an All New Captain Kangaroo was attempted, starring John McDonough. Keeshan was invited to appear as "The Admiral", but after seeing sample episodes declined to appear or have any association with it.

Other actors in the show included:

Hugh 'Lumpy' Brannum
Hugh Brannum played the Captain's main sidekick Mr. Green Jeans and other, less-frequently seen characters, such as the New Old Folk Singer, who played a double bass (or "bass fiddle") as if it were a guitar, and Mr. Bainter, the Painter.

Cosmo 'Gus' Allegretti
Cosmo Allegretti created and performed several of the show's best-known puppet characters, including Bunny Rabbit, who always tricked the Captain into giving him carrots, and Mr. Moose, whose riddles and knock-knock jokes invariably ended with hundreds of ping-pong balls cascading from above and hitting the Captain in the head. Allegretti was also the actor portraying the Dennis the Apprentice, Miss Frog, Mr. Whispers, Dancing Bear and Grandfather Clock characters.

Sam Levine
Levine played an unusual, mute character known as The Banana Man, which produced huge bunches of bananas from within his coat.

John Burstein
John Burstein joined the show in 1980 as Slim Goodbody, a man wearing a bodystocking which showed the internal organs of the human body painted on it in their appropriate locations.

Bill Cosby
Bill Cosby was a regular on the show in the 1980s; he did a "Picture Pages" segment.

Debbie Weems
From 1973 until 1977 Debbie Weems was a regular on Captain Kangaroo. She played many roles. She was Debbie the newspaper reporter. She played Pheobe Beebee. Debbie also played many parts on the various skits for the show. She also was an active puppeteer and did the voice for Baby Duck. Debbie also sang on many episodes and had a very nice voice.

Theme Song

The original theme song to Captain Kangaroo (titled Puffin' Billy) was used from 1955–1974. It was an instrumental, written by Edward G. White. The track was from a British stock music production library known as the Chappell Recorded Music Library which was sold through a New York agency called Emil Ascher. The tune's original title referred to a British steam locomotive. In 1957, lyricist Mary Rogers penned lyrics to the tune, creating a newly titled Captain Kangaroo song.

In 1974, a new theme song was composed for Captain Kangaroo, written by composer Robert L. Brush. As the new theme used similar melodic elements from the original theme, Edward G. White's name was added to the song credits.

The lyrics to the second Captain Kangaroo theme song were simple, consisting of two sets of rhymed couplets:

Good morning, Captain, let's come on out and play!
Good morning, Captain, it's going to be a perfect day!
Get your crayons and your paper and your pencil, too
And come on out and play with Captain Kangaroo!


Schedule history

For the first three months, "Captain Kangaroo" was seen every weekday morning. Thereafter, the successful Captain was also seen on Saturday mornings. Except for pre-emptions for news coverage, notably the three-day continuous coverage of the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963, and a few shows that were 45 minutes, the show aired a full 60 minutes on weekday mornings and Saturday until 1981. One exception was the 1964 to 1965 season, which saw the broadcast replaced on Saturdays by a Keeshan vehicle called "Mr. Mayor."

In the fall season of 1981, to make room for "CBS Morning News", the show was moved to an early time slot and cut to 30 minutes sporting a new title "Wake Up with the Captain." A few months later, the successful "CBS Morning News" was made a two hour show and "Wake Up with the Captain" was moved to a very early time slot where ratings were hard to find. Finally, in the fall of 1982, the show lost its weekday presence and was shown on the weekends in a one hour version. New episodes were shown on Saturdays and a rerun aired on Sundays. In the fall of 1984, it was trimmed again to 30 minutes. By the end of the year, it was cancelled.

The show had a 29-year run, making it one of the longest running network children's program series. By contrast, Sesame Street, insulated from the Nielsen Ratings wars on commercial network television, has had a run of 36 years, as of 2006.
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Episodes:


Season 1:
1. First Episode
2. First Saterday Episode

Season 2:
1. The Philharmonic House Cleaning and Wrecking Company

Season 3:
2. Should The Captain Have A New Uniform?

Season 4:
1. Captain Kangaroo at Carnegie Hall

Season 5:
1. The Tale of The Tootle Bird

Season 6:
1. Mr Rogers Visits

Season 7:
1. The Amusement Park

Season 8:
2. Phil Donahue Show

Season 9:
3. Dolly Parton visits

Season 10:
1. Good Evening, Captain



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