THE
LITTLE RASCALS
(ABC, September 25, 1982-December 2, 1983)
Hanna-Barbera Productions, King World Productions
MAIN CAST:
While
working on a film in 1921, comedy producer Hal Roach found himself watching
an argument by some kids in the lot across the street over some sticks they
wanted to play with. After realizing just how long he had been watching them,
he figured that a series of theatrical shorts about kids just being themselves
could be a success.
The original Our Gang cast. |
Our
Gang, initially known as Our Gang
Comedies: Hal Roach Presents His Rascals In…, focused on a group of young
kids just being kids. The original cast of Rascals were children recommended to
Roach by his studio employees, with the exception of Ernie Morrison
who was already under contract with Roach. Morrison had been the star of
Roach’s previous shorts series as “Sunshine Sammy” until theater owners became
wary of running shorts based entirely around a Black boy. The Our Gang shorts were originally helmed
by director Robert
F. McGowan who worked around his stars’ inabilities to read by
describing situations for them from the scripts and letting them improvise.
Roach previewed the first short in several theaters around Hollywood and the
audience clamored for more. The self-titled debut short
was released on November 5, 1922.
Title card featuring the MGM logo. |
Our
Gang became a staple in theaters, traversing the changing landscape of
cinema from silent pictures to sound. The Rascals line-up continually shifted
as the actors began to grow too old for their roles or left, but one notable
thing about those line-ups were the fact that white and non-white characters
were interacting with each other as equals; something virtually unheard of at
the time. There were also some transitions behind the scenes, as McGowan had
grown increasingly stressed out having to work with children and left the
series. One of his first replacements was his nephew, Robert A. McGowan
(credited as Anthony Mack). Roach also ceased distributing through the Pathe company and went
with the newly-formed Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
in order to have the shorts shown with MGM’s features in the Loew’s
Theatres chain.
Alfalfa, Darla, Porky, Buckwheat and Spanky. |
1936 introduced the most well-known
line-up of Rascals: George
“Spanky” McFarland, the breakout star of the series who
became the central lead; Carl
“Alfalfa” Switzer, who was most identifiable by his
perpetual cowlick and bad singing; Billie “Buckwheat” Thomas,
one of the younger members of the group who often performed errands for the
older kids; Darla
Hood,
a gifted singer with a crush on Alfalfa; Eugene “Porky” Lee,
Spanky’s little brother and Buckwheat’s best friend who tagged along as the
older kids’ sidekick; Darwood
“Waldo” Kaye, the Anti-Rascal who was studious,
well-behaved, and came from a privileged background; Gary “Junior” Jasgur,
Darla’s little brother; Henry
“Spike” Lee, the sergeant-of-arms of their He-Man
Woman-Hater’s Club; Leonard Landy,
Junior’s red-headed friend who always wore a farmer’s hat and overalls; Shirley “Muggsy” Coates,
Darla’s close friend and primary competition for Alfalfa’s affections; Patsy May,
Spanky and Porky’s baby sister; Harold Switzer,
Carl’s older brother who was a background player in all of his appearances; and
Peter the Pup, the gang’s pet dog. Tommy Bond,
who had been one of the Rascals from 1931-33 before leaving to return to public
school, rejoined the cast as neighborhood bully “Butch.” Sidney Kibrick,
brother of Leonard
Kibrick who had become a rascal in 1935, joined the group in
late 1935 but was renamed “The Woim”, Butch’s sidekick. Butch and Waldo would
eventually become rivals with Alfalfa for the affections of Darla.
General Spanky poster. |
While Our
Gang was popular during the 1920s and 30s, many theaters began dropping
20-minute comedy shorts in favor of running double feature programs. Roach had
considered ending the series in 1936, but MGM head Louis B. Mayer
convinced him to continue it. Roach shortened the Our Gang shorts to 10 minutes and produced a feature film, General
Spanky,
in
an effort to have the series transition to that format. However, the film
focused more on the adult characters than the actual Rascals and became a box
office disappointment. Roach would continue the series until 1938 when the
continuing decline of theatrical shorts increasingly diminished the profit Our Gang was generating, meaning Roach
could no longer afford to keep producing them. MGM wanted the series to
continue and offered to take over production. Roach sold the rights to Our Gang, the entire production crew,
and the actors’ contracts to MGM for
$25,000 (roughly more than $430 million today) and joined United Artists.
Hide and Shriek marked the final
Roach-produced Our Gang short, and
his final short in general.
Title card to the first entry in the MGM-era. |
MGM’s series debuted on August 6,
1938 with The Little Ranger, directed by Hal
Roach Studios’ Gordon Douglas.
George Sidney
became MGM’s permanent director for the series for the remainder of MGM’s 52
entries. The MGM era was largely considered inferior to the Roach era by fans,
critics and cast members alike. MGM couldn’t grasp the brand of slapstick
comedy the series had become famous for, the cast’s performance was criticized
as being stilted and stiff, the mayhem caused by the kids was significantly
toned down, adult situations became the driving force behind most of the
action, and MGM insisted on keeping on Alfalfa, Spanky and Buckwheat well into
their teen years. After suffering losses on six of the shorts, MGM finally
ended Our Gang with Dancing
Romeo on
April 29, 1944.
The new name for Our Gang. |
A term of Roach’s sale to MGM gave
him the option to buy the rights to the Our
Gang trademark provided he didn’t create any children’s comedies. Roach
forfeited those rights when he produced the films Curley in 1947 and Who
Killed Doc Robbin in
1948. Both films performed poorly, and Roach turned his studio away from
feature productions to focus solely on the budding medium known as television.
In 1949, MGM sold Roach back the rights to the Our Gang shorts from 1927-38 with the stipulation that all
references to the title, MGM and Loew’s be removed from the reissued film
prints. Roach used a modified version of the series’ original name and
rechristened it The Little Rascals. Monogram Pictures
and Allied
Artists reissued the shorts to theaters in 1951 and to
television syndication in 1955.
The Rascals in Claymation. |
The
Little Rascals enjoyed a renewed popularity, spawning a new wave of
merchandising. MGM was inspired to release the shorts they retained to
television as well, having the Rascals and
Our Gang competing against each other
for decades to come. Some stations bought both packages and ran them together with
Rascals serving as the blanket title. The silent films were sold to
various distributors and they began airing on television under titles such as The Mischief Makers and Those Lovable Scallawags with Their Gangs. When
Hal Roach Studios filed for bankruptcy in 1963, struggling syndication agent
Charles King purchased the rights to The
Little Rascals and their success led to his company, King
World Productions, being able to grow into one of the
largest television syndicators in the world. British studio Bura
& Hardwick also recreated several of the shorts in
Claymation form.
Stymie, Porky, Spanky, Darla and Alfalfa in the Christmas Special. |
Over the years, many people tried to
bring The Little Rascals back into
production; former Rascal Jackie
Cooper even produced a pilot himself. The most successful
attempt came in 1979 when Murakami-Wolf-Swenson
produced the animated The
Little Rascals Christmas Special.
The
special featured the voice work of Hood (who died before it aired) and Matthew “Stymie” Beard,
who was a Rascal from 1930-35. This version of Rascals would be used for a series of 156 Public Service
Announcements.
Alfalfa, Spanky, Darla, Porky, Buckwheat and Pete. |
Three years later, Hanna-Barbera Productions
would acquire the rights to produce a new animated series based on The Little Rascals. The series largely
drew inspiration from the 1936 incarnation of the Our Gang series, with the characters of Alfalfa, Porky (both Julie
McWhirter), Darla (Patty Maloney), Spanky (Scott Menville), Buckwheat (Shavar
Ross), Waldo, Butch (both B.J. Ward), The Woim (also McWhirter) and Pete the
Pup (Peter Cullen). Iwao
Takamoto and Bob Singer
designed the characters by tracing over photographs of the original characters
and then simplified their appearances for animation.
Character model sheet featuring the kids' swim wear. |
While the series would continue to focus
on the antics of the kids, it took some liberties with the source material.
Unlike the Christmas Special that was
set during Depression-era
America, Hanna-Barbera’s series updated the setting to contemporary times and
included things like computers and televisions. Buckwheat became an inventor
and created a variety of devices for the gang. Darla’s underwear-revealing
miniskirts were replaced by a knee-length dress and was given a modern
hairstyle (her hair was also a lighter brown and her eyes blue instead of
hazel, but as the shorts were in black and white those changes wouldn’t be
known by casual audiences). Porky was given an obsession with food and a speech
impediment that often resulted in his statements needing translation by
Buckwheat. Though he didn’t talk, Pete was given human-like mannerisms and
often attempted feats that resulted in slapstick disaster. Waldo’s family was
heavily implied to be wealthy; a fact that was carried over to future Rascals productions. Their primary
hangout became a treehouse, and they got around town on a cobbled-together cart
that resembled a 1920’s car pulled by Pete. The show also used an entirely new
theme composed by Hoyt
Curtin.
Pencil drawing of their "car". |
The
Little Rascals began airing on ABC
on September 25, 1982 after its premier was delayed by two weeks due to an animator’s
strike. However, the first episode actually aired was the
segment “Beauty Queen for a Day” as part of The
Pac Preview Party special
hosted by Dick
Clark on September 19th. The show was broadcast as
part of The Pac-Man/Little Rascals/Richie
Rich Show 90-minute
programming block. The Rascals episodes
were broken up into two 11-minute segments aired at the start and the middle of
the block, with a 30-second vignette immediately following the second segment. Although
largely original stories, episodes would feature callbacks to the various shorts
and even the feature film through actions and wardrobe choices. The series was
written by Tedd
Anasti, Douglas
Booth, Patsy
Cameron, Rowby Goren
and Earl
Kress.
Meeting in the tree house. |
When Pac-Man was moved to his
own half-hour, he was replaced in the block by The Monchhichis resulting in its being renamed The
Monchhichis/Little Rascals/Richie Rich Show.
A
second season of The Little Rascals was
ordered, but only nine 11-minute segments were produced with four from the
previous season being used to round out the broadcast package. Without Pac-Man,
the block suffered low ratings. The
Monchhichis was split off to its own half-hour with the other two remaining
paired up as The Little Rascals/Richie
Rich Show. Although each respective show would cease production by the end
of 1983, they continued airing in reruns through 1984.
Darla checking to see the result of the lawsuit, no doubt. |
In March of 1984, Eugene Lee filed
a lawsuit against Hanna-Barbera over the use of his likeness
for Porky. Lee’s lawyers, Mike
Burg
and Scott
Eldredge, wrangled up the remaining surviving Rascals and
proceeded to pursue action that would net them adequate compensation from the
cartoon. Ultimately a discrepancy was discovered in the contracts that didn’t
allow Hanna-Barbera to use the likenesses of the actors, and King World had to
pay out all of the profits (which weren’t vast due to the show’s poor
performance in ratings) to the actors in a settlement. Burg documented the
particulars of the case in his 2016 book Trial by Fire: One Man’s Battle to
End Corporate Greed and Save Lives.
Before
that point, none of the actors had received any kind of compensation for their
work in the series outside of their original salaries.
It's hard to find the Rascals on TV. |
King World repackaged the series
into 17 episodes; each containing two 11-minute segments and one of the
vignettes. “The Zero Hour” was omitted from this package. The series was
rebroadcast across Europe as late as 2014. The French version even received its
own theme song. In North America, however, after its initial airing reruns of
the show were never seen, nor have there been any home video releases likely as
a result of the fallout from the lawsuit. While the various shorts continued to
be shown sporadically on retro stations, the Rascals franchise continued on in two films by Universal Pictures:
the 1994 theatrical feature The
Little Rascals,
which
was a moderate success, and the 2014 direct-to-video feature The
Little Rascals Save the Day.
EPISODE GUIDE:
Season 1:
“Rascal’s
Revenge / Yachtsa Luck / Fish Fright” (9/25/82) – Butch and Woim lure the
Rascals to a haunted house. / The Rascals try to retrieve Waldo’s treasure from
crooks. / Spanky and Alfalfa go fishing.
“Grin
and Bear It / Beauty Queen for a Day / The Serenade” (10/2/82) – While camping,
Porky is abducted by the Phantom Lumberjack. / Darla enters a beauty pageant
after the boys fall for a new girl in town. / Alfalfa serenades Darla and his
singing scares Pete away.
“Big
City Rascals / Alfalfakazam! / Scoop Dupes*” (10/9/82) – The Rascals visit
Darla’s uncle’s farm. / Alfalfa appears to be turned into a rabbit during a
magic show. / Porky’s ice cream cone ends up larger than the others’.
*This segment was delayed and aired during the reruns of
this episode. “Sea Song” aired originally in its place.
“Showdown
at the Rascal Corral / Poached Pooch / Ice Escapades” (10/16/82) – While
playing cowboy, Alfalfa is arrested for singing in a no-singing zone. / Butch
and Woim steal Pete’s license. / The Rascals figure out a creative way to go
ice skating during a heat wave.
“Porky-O
and Julie-Et / Just Deserts / No Hit Wit” (10/23/82) – Porky falls for the
daughter of a man involved in ice cream. / The boys attempt to make Darla’s
entry for a baking contest when she gets ill, but they can’t read her recipe
card. / NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“Alfalfa
for President / Rock and Roll Rascals / A Swimming We Will Go” (10/30/82) –
Alfalfa and Waldo run for class president. / Darla wants to get an autograph
from a famous musician. / Officer Ed finds the boy swimming in a prohibited
pond.
“The
Irate Pirates / All the Loot That’s Fit to Print / The Spare” (11/6/82) – The
Rascals deal with two bullies playing pirate. / The Rascals start their own
newspaper and Alfalfa unknowingly spends some phony money. / NO SYNOPSIS
AVAILABLE.
“Alfalfa’s
Athlete Feat / Darla’s Dream Dance / Fiscal Fitness” (11/13/82) – Butch
challenges Alfalfa to a pentathlon. / Darla organizes the school dance. / NO
SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“Cap’n
Spanky’s Showboat / Case of the Puzzled Pals / Go Cart Go” (11/20/82) – The
Rascals clean up an old steamboat. / Alfalfa sets out to find Darla’s doll. /
Butch rides Buckwheat’s go cart.
“Falling
Heir / Flim Flam Film Fans / Do or Diet” (11/27/82) – Spanky inherits a haunted
castle. / When a director comes to town, Darla ends up tied to a railroad gate.
/ Darla wants to know how many meals Porky eats a day.
“Trash
Can Treasures / King of the Hobos / Out on a Limb” (12/4/82) – Darla adopts a
horse while the Rascals find a lamp. / After eating all their food, Porky runs
away and befriends a hobo. / Alfalfa gets distracted by Darla while pushing
Spanky in a swing.
“Tiny
Terror / Science Fair and Foul / Sea Song*” (12/11/82) – Butch has the Rascals
babysit his brother. / Buckwheat builds a robot. / Alfalfa decides to serenade
his friends as they swim.
*Originally aired on
October 9th in place of “Scoop Dupes”.
“Big
Top Rascals / Class Act / He Who Runs Away” (12/18/82) – Unable to attend a
real one, the Rascals start their own circus. / The Rascals enter Pete into a
dog show and he ends up kidnapped. / NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
Season 2:
“Wash
and Werewolf” (9/10/83) – After seeing a horror movie, Alfalfa believes he’s a
werewolf.
“Save
Our Treehouse!” (9/17/83) – A used car dealer has his sights set on the
Rascal’s treehouse.
“Horse
Sense” (9/24/83) – Waldo challenges Alfalfa to a horse race for Darla, but
Alfalfa doesn’t know how to ride.
“After
Hours” (10/1/83) – The Rascals get a job in a warehouse.
“Not
so Buenos Dias” (10/15/83) – Alfalfa doesn’t trust Darla’s friend Maria.
“Fright
Night” (10/29/83) – The Rascals go trick-or-treating.
“The
Big Sneeze” (11/12/83) – Alfalfa is allergic to the goat the Rascals meet.
“Pete’s
Big Break” (11/19/83) – Pete saves a dog from drowning and ends up in a dog
food commercial because of it.
“The
Zero Hero” (12/2/83) – After Darla wins a date with a TV superhero, Alfalfa
attempts to impress her by becoming one himself.
Originally posted in 2017. Updated in 2020.
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