Top Cat was one of the
prime-time sitcoms developed by Hanna-Barbera Productions
in their early years. It was partly inspired by the East Side Kids--tough
kid characters that starred in a series of films from Monogram Pictures
between 1940-45--but took most of its inspiration from The Phil Silvers Show. The
titular Top Cat (T.C. to his friends, voiced by Arnold Stang impersonating Silvers) was the feline leader
of a gang of alley cats comprised of simple-minded Benny the Ball (modeled
after his voice actor Maurice Gosfield,
who also starred in Silvers), enthusiastic and devoted Choo-Choo (Marvin Kaplan, invoking Woody Allen), the ironically-named Brain
(Leo De Lyon), laid-back ladies’
man Fancy-Fancy (John Stephenson)
and beatnik Spook (also Lyon). T.C. would summon his gang by clanging two
garbage can lids together and then proceed to lead them on a series of (often
illegal) get-rich-quick schemes. Standing in their way was beat cop Charles
Dibble (Allen Jenkins), who
often put a stop to their schemes but was unable to evict them from the alley
or get them to stop using the police call box phone for their personal use.
Top Cat debuted on ABC on September 27, 1961, featuring music from
regular Hanna-Barbera composer Hoyt
Curtin. Co-creator William
Hanna called it one of the wittiest and most sophisticated shows he
produced that had a rare appeal to audiences of all ages. Unfortunately, the
show was only a modest success and only lasted a single season of 30 episodes
that ABC would rerun as part of their Saturday morning schedule. However, that
was just in America. Top Cat was a massive hit in Mexico, Chile, Peru
and Argentina, and T.C. has been regarded as one of the most famous cartoon
characters ever in those territories. In 1988, Hanna-Barbera produced a 2-hour
television movie called Top
Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats that aired as part of their Hanna-Barbera Superstars 10 series
of telefilms, and the characters continued to appear or make cameos in other
Hanna-Barbera shows. Mexican animation studio Ánima
Estudios would produce and release a theatrical film in 2011.
While it did well in Mexico, the English dub was widely panned. In 2015, they
released a CGI prequel
that fared no better, even in its home country.
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