Tom Hatten
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Tom Hatten (born November 14, 1927 in Jamestown, North Dakota) is a veteran radio, film and television personality best known as the long-time host of The Popeye Show (originally "The Pier 5 Club") and Family Film Festival on KTLA Channel 5 in Los Angeles in the 1960's, 70's and 80's. He has also appeared in dozens of musicals, movies and television shows, often portraying characters in the military.
He is left-handed.
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[edit] Life
Hatten served in the Navy during World War II and later used his GI Bill scholarship to study acting at the Pasadena School of Theater, where he graduated magna cum laude in 1950.
[edit] The Popeye Show
In 1952, he started working at the KTLA studios in Hollywood, filling a number of odd broadcasting jobs before landing the part of the good-natured Sailor in the station's nautically-themed afternoon children's program, the "The Pier 5 Club". This was in direct Contrast to "Skipper Frank" Herman who appeared in the earlier afternoon with KTLA's "Cartoon Carousel".
Clad in Navy whites, Hatten was chosen to present a sizeable library of the animated works of Max and Dave Fleischer (which, of course was relatively easy to attain at a Paramount affiliate) starring the spinach eating salt of Elzie Segar's "Thimble Theater"; Popeye. A highly skilled artist and cartoonist, his show is often remembered for the how to segements which would tech the viewer how to draw the various characters seen in the cartoons. He also had two guests on each program. Another oft-remembered sequence in the show involved his guests in a unique competition. Each guest was given a large upright easel and sketch-pad as well as a series of chalks and pencils. Carefully placed at the center of each pad, Tom would draw an abstract shape which he called a "Squiggle". The object of the competition was to create a full drawing incorporating the squiggle into anything recognizable without crossing any of the squiggle's initial lines. Tom would go on to host two incarnations of the Popeye show and always had something to tell about the colorful history of the Fleischer's, the cartoons or the business in general.
"The Pier 5 Club" was finally given a more elaborate studio set ultimately being re-christened "The Popeye Show". This time, Tom was more formally costumed as a Harbor Master and placed in a nautical structure resembling the marina headquarters of a sporting regatta. Tom still had his two guests and the popular squiggle contest and was also expanded to a full hour, but the audience could now join the club complete with pin and certificate for those who wrote in. While Tom had his show, King Features was inspired to create a whole new series of Popeye cartoons to go with it. These cartoons were stiffly animated and strayed very far from Segar's original vision. Even so, Jack Mercer who had originally replaced William Costello (aka "Red Pepper" Sam) as the voice of the 'squinky-eyed' sailor for Fleischer paid Tom a visit in recognition of his being the single largest showcase on the West Coast of the Max and Dave Fleischer studio.
As late as 1985 Tom's show was again aired on Saturday and Sunday. The guests and games were gone but still featured Tom's knowledge in cartooning and the industry. Tom eventually went on to host KTLA's "Family Film Festival" where more of his cinema expertise was put to use.
[edit] Family Film Festival
The "Family Film Festival" was a weekend afternoon feature on KTLA 5 between 1978 and 1988, with Hatten screening a classic movie, often from the 40's or 50's. During breaks in the show, he would offer anecdotes about the film's history or its actors, or even conduct brief interviews with a cast or crew member (a practice that originally predated the cable networks American Movie Classics and Turner Classic Movies; see those articles for details). Many "Gen X"-aged men and women, born throughout the 1970's and raised in Los Angeles, were introduced to the films of Jerry Lewis, as well as such animated films as "The Aristocats", through Hatten's Family Film Festival.
[edit] Career
Hatten's acting credits on stage include Annie (as President Franklin Delano Roosevelt). He also portrayed a corrupt military officer in the movie Spies Like Us, with Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase. He appeared as Captain Murdock in several episodes of the television show Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., and had a minor role as an officer in three episodes of Hogan's Heroes. Hatten provided the voice of the character Farmer Fitzgibbons in the animated movie The Secret of NIMH.
For nearly twenty years, Hatten also worked as an award-winning entertainment reporter for KNX 1070 Newsradio in Los Angeles, filing regular reports on the movie industry, new films, and celebrity news [1]. He left the station in 2007.
[edit] External links
- L.A. Local TV Legends - Tom Hatten
- Tom Hatten Interview (Part I) on Marty's Corner, 2004
- Tom Hatten Interview (Part II) on Marty's Corner, 2004