Hey, Hey, Hey, It's Fat Albert (found primetime NBC animated special; 1969): Difference between revisions
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|imagecaption=A newspaper ad, showing The Cosby Kids in their original designs. | |imagecaption=A newspaper ad, showing The Cosby Kids in their original designs. | ||
|status=<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span> | |status=<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span> | ||
|datefound=<br>20 Feb 2024 (audio) | |datefound=<br>20 Feb 2024 (audio) / | ||
<br>28 Jul 2024 (footage) | <br>28 Jul 2024 (footage) | ||
|foundby=<br>[https://youtube.com/channel/UCrz3Y_seEYDXsHc0XzwaXCQ M. acrylic] (audio) | |foundby=<br>[https://youtube.com/channel/UCrz3Y_seEYDXsHc0XzwaXCQ M. acrylic] (audio) / | ||
<br>Unknown Tracks (footage) | <br>Unknown Tracks (footage) | ||
}} | }} | ||
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Mundie and a team of animators worked 18-hour days for six months to meet NBC's deadline. The animators drew directly onto cels with grease pencils, coloring each cel themselves. The cels were then photographed. | Mundie and a team of animators worked 18-hour days for six months to meet NBC's deadline. The animators drew directly onto cels with grease pencils, coloring each cel themselves. The cels were then photographed. | ||
Live footage from Philadelphia was inserted as background. Said Filmation's Lou Scheimer: | Live footage from Philadelphia was inserted as the background. Said Filmation's Lou Scheimer: | ||
<blockquote>It did not work. It was a strange-looking thing. And it did not have any of the values that we wanted to do ultimately in the show.</blockquote> | |||
While the series became popular, the special has not been released since. | |||
==Crew== | ==Crew== | ||
Line 38: | Line 40: | ||
==Availability== | ==Availability== | ||
The Paley Center for Media holds a copy of the special in their collection, and it is available for viewing at their | The Paley Center for Media holds a copy of the special in their collection, and it is available for viewing at their location in New York.<ref>[https://paleycenter.org/collection/item/?q=fat%20+albert&f=all&c=all&advanced=1&p=1&item=T77:0398 Listing for the special on The Paley Center for Media website.] Retrieved 11 Feb '24 </ref> | ||
At first, the only footage of the special that has publicly resurfaced was a blurry red-tinted clip from animator Leo Sullivan's collection. It seems it comes from near the end of the special, where Fat Albert arrives at a football game where his friends are playing against rivals, and so he is using his huge weight to dogpile the opponents. | At first, the only footage of the special that has publicly resurfaced was a blurry red-tinted clip from animator Leo Sullivan's collection. It seems it comes from near the end of the special, where Fat Albert arrives at a football game where his friends are playing against rivals, and so he is using his huge weight to dogpile the opponents. |
Latest revision as of 00:47, 3 August 2024
A newspaper ad, showing The Cosby Kids in their original designs.
Status: Found
Date found:
20 Feb 2024 (audio) /
28 Jul 2024 (footage)
Found by:
M. acrylic (audio) /
Unknown Tracks (footage)
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids is an animated TV series which aired from September 9th, 1972, to August 10th, 1985. It has 114 episodes counting specials.
Before the series premiered, there was a primetime special called Hey, Hey, Hey, It's Fat Albert, which was shown on November 12th, 1969, and aired on NBC. It was rebroadcasted twice but never saw a home release.
Plot
It follows The Cosby Kids performing stand-up sketches from Bill Cosby's routines, much like in the actual show.
The plot would have centred on Fat Albert being made fun of by his friends because of his weight, and so he distances himself from them. The other kids would then dispute an (American) football game against rivals, and Fat Albert would then arrive, using his weight to help his friends to win the game.
Production
Mundie and a team of animators worked 18-hour days for six months to meet NBC's deadline. The animators drew directly onto cels with grease pencils, coloring each cel themselves. The cels were then photographed.
Live footage from Philadelphia was inserted as the background. Said Filmation's Lou Scheimer:
It did not work. It was a strange-looking thing. And it did not have any of the values that we wanted to do ultimately in the show.
While the series became popular, the special has not been released since.
Crew
Produced by: Harry J. Gittes.
Executive Producers: Roy Silver, Bruce Campbell.
Directed by: Ken Mundie
Animators: Bob Bachman, Dick Drew, Lillian Evans, Bill Hajee, Amby Paliwoda, Len Rogers, Leo D Sullivan, Stan Green, Floyd Norman.
Writers: Ed. Wienberger, Jack Mendelson, Bill Cosby.
Composed by: Herbie Hancock.
Availability
The Paley Center for Media holds a copy of the special in their collection, and it is available for viewing at their location in New York.[1]
At first, the only footage of the special that has publicly resurfaced was a blurry red-tinted clip from animator Leo Sullivan's collection. It seems it comes from near the end of the special, where Fat Albert arrives at a football game where his friends are playing against rivals, and so he is using his huge weight to dogpile the opponents.
Clearer footage resurfaced, depicting the visuals in neater quality. Fat Albert is notably depicted as seemingly being able to expand his body at will.
On February 20th, 2024, LMW user M. acrylic uploaded the full audio from the special, obtained from a reel-to-reel recording. Later, on July 28th, 2024, YouTuber Unknown Tracks uploaded a low-quality camera recording of the special taken at The Paley Center for Media. However, it should be noted that The Paley Center normally doesn't allow recordings of the media viewable on-site.
Gallery
Footage
Audio
Images
External Links
- Soundtrack album for the special produced by Herbie Hancock.
- https://willfinn.blogspot.kr/2012/03/hey-hey-hey.html
- https://jimhillmedia.com/columnists1/b/floyd_norman/archive/2004/12/12/the-real-fat-albert.aspx
References
- ↑ Listing for the special on The Paley Center for Media website. Retrieved 11 Feb '24