Photo Doody (Howdy)

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Photo Doody is one of the three original Howdy Doody 1940s marionettes. He is the Howdy figure that was used in Howdy Doody still photo sessions for the Howdy Doody Show and the publicity pictures taken with Buffalo Bob Smith. The near-stringless Howdy marionette was also used in personal appearances and parades. His arm joints and legs were specially built to hold a pose for advertising and marketing photography. He sat easily in Buffalo Bob Smith’s lap.

Photo Doody, made of carved wood, is 30" tall. His face is hand-painted with blue eyes; he has red hair, a gap-tooth grin, pronounced ears and 48 freckles (one for each of the states at the time when the show first went on the air). He wears a western style outfit comprised of blue jeans, a plaid shirt, cowboy boots and a red bandanna.

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[edit] The historic sale

Photo Doody sold at Leland’s auction house in 1997 for $113,432 to a private collector. The legendary Howdy Doody sale made international print and broadcast headline news.

Prior to the sale, Roger Muir, executive producer of The Howdy Doody Show, owned the puppet. In 1963 Photo Doody was mutilated by vandals who broke into the New York NBC office of Muir. Puppeteers successfully repaired the damage but Photo Doody still bears neck "scars" where the vandals pulled his head off.

[edit] After the sale

Following the 1997 auction, Art and Antiques Magazine named Photo Doody one of the world's "Top 100 Treasures" for 1997.

In 1998 the Palm Beach Daily News (The Shiny Sheet), a Palm Beach Post newspaper, identified Palm Beacher TJ Fisher[1] as the Photo Doody high bidder. A “Howdy Doody Comes to Town” front-page feature story profiled Fisher taking Howdy around town in a convertible and dining out with him at local restaurants.

After Buffalo Bob Smith’s death in 1998, the Palm Beach Daily News ran a second exposé quoting Americana and sports memorabilia experts. The article called Photo Doody “priceless” and might “fetch a cool million.” Fisher said he would never sell Howdy.

Photo Doody is the only Howdy Doody marionette to ever be privately owned. The other two original Howdy puppets are museum property — the one used in the show remains on display at the Detroit Institute of Arts; and the other ("Double Doody") is on permanent exhibition at the Smithsonian.

[edit] The show

The idyllic half-hour Howdy Doody Show — legendary as the first children's program to appear on TV and a pioneer in children's programming that set the pattern for many shows — aired for a near-record 2,343 episodes during its 13-year NBC national TV stint from 1947 to 1960. The program’s host, the Buffalo Bob Smith, who created the Howdy character, performed the voice of Howdy. During the show's heyday, Howdy received 1,500 pieces of mail a week.

The network to help promote the sale of color TV sets also used a landmark pioneer in early TV color production, the show. Beginning in 1954, the NBC test pattern featured a picture of Howdy. Photo Doody was the model for the NBC test pattern.

With hundreds of thousands of children in the television viewing audience glued to their TV sets at 5:30 p.m. weekdays, each show opened with Buffalo Bob asking — "Hey, kids, what time is it?" The children in the studio audience "peanut gallery" responded in unison, "It’s Howdy Doody time!"

Buffalo Bob Smith did commercials for Wonder Bread, Campbell Soup, Hostess Twinkies and other sponsors that were new to television; it taught marketers the strength of marketing to children.

[edit] References

  • The Season: The Secret Life of Palm Beach and America’s Richest Society, 2004 [page 31], by Ron Kessler
  • American Puppetry: Collections, History and Performance, 2004 [page 252], by Phyllis T. Dirks
  • Andy Kaufman Revealed, 1999 [pages 81-82], by Bob Zmuda
  • Palm Beach Daily News, 1998 [January and August headline articles], by John Henderson, staff writer [2]
  • Palm Beach Post, 1998 [February], by Thom Smith, columnist [3]
  • Lelands [4]
  • Doodville Trivia [5]
  • ABC News [6]
  • New York Times [7]
  • New York Times [8]
  • New York Times [9]
  • U.S. News & World Report [10]
  • American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors [11]
  • TV Acres [12]
  • Smithsonian Museum of Natural History [13]
  • The Museum of Broadcast History [14]
  • TV Party: All Hail Howdy Doody [15]
  • No Strings Attached (satire), appeared in GQ Magazine, 1999 [16]

[edit] External links