In 1977, ABC executive Fred Silverman felt that Hanna-Barbera Productions’ quality was starting to slip due to their overextending
themselves on a multitude of projects. Feeling they needed a little competition
to not only lighten the load but keep their quality high, Silverman set up
former Hanna-Barbera employees Joe Ruby and Ken Spears with their own studio: Ruby-Spears Productions. Silverman had recruited Ruby and Spears to oversee the
development of Saturday mornings over at CBS, and then took them with him to ABC to continue that
job.
For their very first production, they revisited the formula for their greatest creation, Scooby-Doo, with a dash of inspiration from I Was a Teenage Werewolf, and created Fangface. The series focused on a group of teenagers who, traveling around in a dune buggy dubbed “The Wolf-Buggy”, solved mysteries and foiled crimes perpetrated by monsters and evil masterminds. Comprising this group was the handsome Biff (Jerry Dexter); his smart girlfriend, Kim (Susan Blu); the stocky Puggsy (Bart Braverman), who tended to make up words constantly; and tall, lanky simpleton Sherman “Fangs” Fangsworth (Frank Welker, patterned after Joe E. Ross). Puggsy and Sherman were heavily based on Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall from The Bowery Boys series.
This group had a bit of a twist: one of them
was a werewolf. Indeed, the Fangsworth family had a curse placed upon it where
once every 400 years a member of that family would be born a werewolf; as
explained in the opening narration by John Stephenson. Whenever Sherman was
exposed to the full moon—be it real or merely an image when the kids needed to
call upon their “secret weapon”—he transformed into Fangface: a furry werewolf
with a single giant fang. Conversely, whenever Fangface saw the sun or its
image, he’d revert back (usually at the most inopportune times).
Upon transformation, Fangface would always
ingest Puggsy whole, holding him in his mouth until Biff or Kim rubbed his foot
to calm him down (this also happened whenever Fangface saw or heard anything
remotely related to food). This was a subconscious reaction to Puggsy’s
constant taunting and teasing of Sherman’s cowardice while in his human form.
You see, they were essentially two separate people with contrasting
personalities as Fangface was much braver than Sherman and neither knew of the
other’s existence. Despite always being almost eaten, Puggsy was constantly
teamed up with Fangface whenever the kids would split up. Fangface also somehow
retained his trademarked baseball cap despite losing the rest of his clothing
(which reappeared whenever he changed back to human form--hey, this IS a kid’s
show!) from which he could pull a variety of items out of in various
situations.
Sherman’s sole role was comic relief, but
whenever he became supremely scared, he came up with a brilliant idea to save
himself. Fangface didn’t take away from that role. He had the propensity to
howl whenever he saw his own reflection and enter into a feral state whereby he
ran only on instinct, often leading him to attack Puggsy. The kids did manage
to turn this state to their advantage in a case most of the time by letting him
loose on the bad guys. Despite being a werewolf, the public at large didn’t
seem to acknowledge that fact, treating meeting Fangface as an everyday normal
occurrence.
Sherman, Baby Fangs, and their alter-egos. |
Fangface ran on ABC beginning on
September 9, 1978. The series was written by Mark Jones, Elana Lesser, Norman Maurer and Cliff Ruby, with music composed by Dean Elliott. The show failed to gain the ratings or notability of the Scooby franchise and was cancelled after
a single season. For the following season, Ruby-Spears tried to give their
creation a second life by including Fangface as a segment
of The
Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show. Stories
were shortened to 11 minutes and it was renamed Fangface and
Fangpuss to include the new character Baby Fangs (also Welker);
Sherman’s infant cousin who, despite the contradiction of the original opening
narration, also inherited the ability to transform into a werewolf. Sherman was
unaware that Baby Fangs was Fangpuss, becoming scared whenever encountering him
in wolf form. However, unlike Sherman, Baby Fangs remembered his time as a
wolf. Fangpuss also seemed to share his cousin’s affinity for inflicting pain
on Puggsy. Unlike the previous season, the werewolves’ sun weakness was never
exploited.
In 1981, Fangface and Fangpuss was
broken off into its own series of reruns that lasted only a single season like
its parent program. Despite the short run of the overall show, it did spawn the
typical gamut of tie-in merchandise including a board game from Parker Brothers; jigsaw puzzles; books published by Ace Books; a vinyl
album from Peter Pan Records; and
even a Viewfinder
set. The entire series has yet to see a physical home
media release, but Worldvision
Enterprises released three
episodes on VHS in 1983, with two
more episodes following in 1986. It became
available to purchase for streaming on Prime
Video, Vudu, and iTunes.
Originally posted in 2014. Updated in 2023.
1 comment:
Loved this cartoon as a child!!
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