Hong Kong Phooey
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Hong Kong Phooey is a 16-episode (31 shorts) Hanna-Barbera animated series that first aired on ABC Saturday morning from September 7, 1974 to September 4, 1976. The star, Hong Kong Phooey, is the secret alter ego of Penrod Pooch, or Penry, a "mild-mannered" police station janitor.
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[edit] Plot
Hong Kong Phooey, is supposed to be master of kung fu. The stories begin at the police headquarters, where Hong Kong Phooey's alter ego, Penry, works as a mild-mannered janitor. He works with Sargeant Flint (Sarge) and Rosemary, the telephone operator, who has a major crush on Hong Kong Phooey. After Rosemary gets a call and explains the criminals' crime (which is one of the only reasons they call), Penry would run into a filing cabinet to transform himself into Hong Kong Phooey. In each episode, he needs help from his loyal cat and sidekick, Janet, to get him out. Hong Kong never thanks nor even notices his help, but instead is always proud of himself because he thinks he is the one who does everything. He would get into his Phooey mobile and would use the "bong of the gong" to turn it into anything needed to save the day. He would find the thieves committing their crime. Mostly, Janet was the one who found a way to capture the criminals and foil their crime. But since Hong Kong was the reputed superhero, every time Janet would save the day, everyone else (including Hong Kong) credited Hong Kong Phooey with being the hero. Every episode would end with a return to police headquarters, where Penry would usually have some sort of accident that would cause Sarge to yell at him. Still, Penry was never hurt by Sarge's yelling but would find a way to compliment himself on his incognito crime-fighting prowess as Janet sighed. Incidentally, Janet was striped.
[edit] Overview
Sergeant Flint was very similar both in voice and appearance to Botch, assistant zoo-keeper at the Wonderland Zoo on Help! It's The Hair Bear Bunch. Hong Kong Phooey was voiced by Scatman Crothers, who was also the voice of Scat Cat in Disney's The Aristocats. Sergeant Flint was voiced by Joe E. Ross, best known as Officer Gunther Toody in the 50's TV series Car 54, Where Are You?. As Flint, Ross revived Toody's famous "Oooh! Oooh!" exclamation. Like many Hanna-Barbera shows from this era, Hong Kong Phooey was originally broadcast with a laugh track.In the episode "Comedy Cowboys" many different cartoon characters all of them intersting perhaps possible ideas for new cartoons appeared and help clear Hong Kong of a crime he didn't commit. However one of those who did help him did get their own tv series on the C.B. Bears as Posse Impossible minus the short red headed long mustached sheriff who was replaced by a very tall muscluar blond curly headed sheriff.
The opening lines of the theme song were "Hong Kong Phooey! Number one super guy!/Hong Kong Phooey! Quicker than the human eye!/He's got style, a groovy smile, and a bod that just won't stop./When the going gets rough, he's super tough, with a Hong Kong Phooey chop--Hi-ya!" [1]. Ska-punk band Sublime would later cover this song and release it on the DVD of their 2006 boxset "Everything Under The Sun".
Hong Kong Phooey later appeared in Laff-a-Lympics and in an episode of Duck Dodgers. In addition, he appeared in a Flash cartoon with Mortal Kombat-like overtones on the Cartoon Network website. Modeled on Ryu from Street Fighter, he was depicted as a muscular, serious martial artist who battled villains with the kind of violent skill that his previous series could not show.
A limited comic book series highlighting an aged Hong Kong Phooey on a last mission, apparently to clear his name from a crime he didn't commit.[citation needed]
He would soon appear in an upcoming episode of Harvey Birdman.[citation needed]
[edit] Cast
- Scatman Crothers — Hong Kong Phooey/Penrod "Penry" Pooch
- Kathy Gori — Rosemary
- Joe E. Ross — Sergeant Flint
- Don Messick — Spot
[edit] Episodes
Episode Number | Title | Airdate |
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01 | Car Thieves / Zoo Story | September 7, 1974 |
02 | Iron Head, the Robot / Cotton Pickin' Pocket Picker | September 14, 1974 |
03 | Grandma Goody / Candle Power | September 21, 1974 |
04 | The Penthouse Burglaries / Batt Bank Mob | September 28, 1974 |
05 | The Voltage Villain / The Giggler | October 5, 1974 |
06 | The Gumdrop Kid / Professor Presto | October 12, 1974 |
07 | TV or Not TV / Stop Horsing Around | October 19, 1974 |
08 | Mirror, Mirror on the Wall / Great Movie Mystery | October 26, 1974 |
09 | The Claw / Hong Kong Phooey vs. Hong Kong Phooey | November 2, 1974 |
10 | The Abominable Snowman / Professor Crosshatch | November 9, 1974 |
11 | Goldfisher / Green Thumb | November 16, 1974 |
12 | From Bad to Verse / Kong and the Counterfeiters | November 23, 1974 |
13 | The Great Choo Choo Robbery / Patty Cake, Patty Cake, Bakery Man | November 30, 1974 |
14 | Mr. Tornado / The Little Crock Who Wasn't There | December 7, 1974 |
15 | Dr. Disguiso / The Incredible Mr. Shrink | December 14, 1974 |
16 | Comedy Cowboys | December 21, 1974 |
[edit] DVD Release
On August 15, 2006, Warner Home Video released the complete series on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time.
Cover Art | DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date | Additional Information |
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Hong Kong Phooey- The Complete Series | 31 | August 15, 2006 |
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[edit] Hong Kong Phooey in other languages
- German: Hong Kong Pfui
- Japanese: ほえよ! 0011 (Hoeyo! 0011)
- Swedish: Hong Kong Phooey
- French: Hong Kong Foufou
[edit] External links
- Hong Kong Phooey at the Internet Movie Database
- Big Cartoon DataBase: Hong Kong Phooey
- InternationalHero Hong Kong Phooey tribute
- Wingnut Toons episode list
- Interview with Kathy Gori, voice of Rosemary the telephone operator
- Cartoon Network Flash animation (updated version of 70's original)
- Warner Bros. - Hong Kong Phooey on DVD - The Official Site
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Animated television series | Fictional dogs | Hanna-Barbera and Cartoon Network Studios series and characters | 1970s American television series | ABC network shows | Hanna-Barbera and Cartoon Network Studios superheroes | Animal superheroes | Fictional janitors | Anthropomorphic martial artists | Superhero television programs