Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
SABRINA, THE TEENAGE WITCH (1970) /
SABRINA AND THE GROOVIE GOOLIES / THE SABRINA COMEDY HOUR (CBS, September 12-
December 26, 1970) Filmation Associates
For the history of Sabrina, check out the post here.
When
Filmation acquired the rights to adapt Archie Comics’ Sabrina, the Teenage
Witch, she was still a fairly new and minor character; only appearing
sporadically in the pages of the anthology Archie’s Mad House. To test
her out with audiences, it was decided to include her as part of the expanded The
Archie Show, The
Archie Comedy Hour. The Sabrina segments proved a hit with
audiences, and for her second season on the air she was split off into her own
series. Sort of.
Sabrina with her cousins Wolfie, Drac and Frankie.
In similar
fashion, Filmation had another untested property they wanted to do. Called The
Groovie Goolies, it was their comedic take on the Universal
Monsters combined with a healthy dose of Rowan and Martin’s
Laugh-In. Since both featured witches, they paired them up with Sabrina
to form Sabrina and The Groovie Goolies (alternatively known as The
Sabrina Comedy Hour). Both shows were developed by Jack Mendelsohn,
with Jim
Mulligan also working on Goolies.
Sabrina with Salem.
The first
half hour focused on the adventures of Sabrina Spellman (Jane Webb), your
ordinary teenage girl attending ordinary Riverdale High. Well, ordinary except
for the fact that she was a witch accidentally created by her aunts, Hilda and
Zelda (both also Webb). They sought to create another wicked witch like themselves
and instead mixed in the ingredients for a typical teenaged girl. Residing with
them was their magical cat, Salem (Dallas McKennon), and occasionally popping
in to cause trouble was warlock cousin Ambrose (Howard Morris, replacing John Erwin
from the previous season). Sabrina’s human friends consisted of her bumbling
boyfriend Harvey Kinkle (Don Messick), best friend Ophelia (Treva Frazee),
girl-crazy Archie Andrews (McKennon), mischievous Reggie Mantle (Erwin),
girl-next-door Betty Cooper, spoiled rich girl Veronica Lodge (both Webb),
eternally-hungry Jughead Jones, big lummox Moose Mason, and genius Dilton
Doiley (all Morris). Head witch Della (Webb) frequently popped in to give
Sabrina a headache; especially when tasking her with watching her naughty
nephew, Hexter (Erwin).
Rocking out with the Goolies.
The second half hour focused on the
Goolies, who were members of a band based out of a creepy castle called
Horrible Hall. The primary group was comprised of Drac (Larry Storch), a
pastiche of Dracula, the
short-tempered leader who played the pipe organ; Frankie (Howard Morris, doing
a loose impersonation of Boris
Karloff), based on Frankenstein’s
monster, who was the easygoing head of the Muscleleum Gymnasium and played
either bone xylophones or drums (later misinformation would call Frankie the
son of Drac and Hagatha); and Wolfie (also Morris), based on the wolfman, who spoke in a
mix of beatnik, surfer and hippie slang and played a lyre-like instrument. Despite
the separation of the two shows, the characters often crossed over. The Goolies
were said to be Sabrina’s cousins, and typically she had to try and keep their
true natures a secret from her mortal friends lest her own witchcraft be
exposed.
Sabrina spending time with Aunts Hilda and Zelda.
Sabrina
and the Groovie Goolies debuted on CBS on
September 12, 1970. The series was written by Mendelsohn and Mulligan with Bob Ogle, Chuck Menville, Len Janson, Jim Ryan and Bill Danch. The series’ music
was provided by Horta-Mahana Corp. and Jan Moore, with the background score
done by Ray Ellis and David
Jeffrey. The series was a hit, becoming the highest-rated children’s program of
1970. Despite that, however, this would be the last time new episodes of Sabrina
would be produced until 1977 in The New Archie and Sabrina Hour.
Worlds collide.
For the
1971 season, CBS split up the two shows into their own half-hours. Reruns of
both seasons’ worth of episodes continued on Saturday morning under the newly-titled
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch. The Groovie Goolies became its own entity,
completely omitting Sabrina from their intro, and was moved to Sunday morning
to air alongside Tom and Jerry; however, they remained in the Sabrina
episodes in which they appeared. Sabrina remained on the network
until 1973 and would be sold into syndication with Archie and Goolies
in 1976.
EPISODE GUIDE (see The Archie Comedy Hour for the
previous season): “Short Changed / Rose-Colored Glasses” (9/12/70) – Reggie
comes over for lunch and ends up doused with a shrinking potion by Hilda. /
Hilda’s rose-colored glasses give Mr. Weatherbee a skewed view of the world. “Mis-Guided Tour / Living Dolls” (9/19/70) – Sabrina’s
bringing Hexter on a class trip has Miss Grundy doubting her sanity. / Hida
shrinks the Goolies and they’re discovered by The Archies. “That Old Track Magic / Cake Bake” (9/26/70) – A concussion
causes Ambrose to help Riverdale high’s oppoents in the track meet. / Hagatha
and Hilda fight dirty to beat each other in a cake-baking contest. “Moose’s Alter-Falter / Hot Rod Derby” (10/3/70) – Sabrina
must get Moose’s good and bad sides back under control. / Sabrina gets roped
into helping Wolfie with the local car race. “Mortal Terror / The Bear Facts” (10/10/70) – Della grants
Sabrina’s wish to be mortal, which ends up spoiling her bowling date with
Reggie. / Riverdale High’s photography class decides to set up in the same area
the Goolies have decided to inhabit. “Weather or Not / Child Care” (10/17/70) – Sabrina’s
magic-altering illness ends up getting Jughead expelled from school. / Sabrina
conjures a dragon to entertain her Goolie cousins, but it ends up going out of
control in town. “Flying Sorcery / Witches Golf Open” (10/24/70) – Reggie
catches Sabrina emerging from a flying saucer. / The Archies play caddy for
Hilda and the Goolies during a nighttime golf game. “Too Many Cooks / Rummage Sale” (10/31/70) – Archie and
Reggie make a bet to stay in an empty mansion the same night as an annual
witches gathering there. / The Goolies’ contributions to the school’s rummage
sale ends up leading to problems for Sabrina. “Ambrose’s Amulet / High School Drop-Ins” (11/7/70) – Ambrose
loans Big Ethel his amulet, forgetting it changes people into animals. / The
Goolies decide to get a high school education. “Auto-Biography / Big Deal” (11/14/70) – Hilda accidentally
turns herself into Archie’s car. / Ratso and Batso dog-sit Hot Dog, whom
Hauntleroy causes to grow as large as a house. “Tragic Magic / Frankie” (11/21/70) – Jughead enlists
Sabrina’s help to be a better magician for the charity magic show. / Frankie
just wants to help out his friends, but all his efforts always end in disaster. “A Nose for News / Beached” (11/28/70) – When Reggie is made
editor of the school paper he starts blackmailing his fellow students with
their embarrassing secrets. / Sabrina’s beach day is spent keeping the Goolies
hidden and protecting her friends from bullies. “Ouch” (12/5/70) – Sabrina must keep Hilda’s loud music from
disturbing the neighbors. “Smog” (12/12/70) – Sabrina must intervene when smoke from
Horrible Hall gets Archie’s Pollution Committee to investigate. “Dirty Pool” (12/19/70) – Sabrina and the Goolies ask The
Archies to help stop the pollution of Horrible Hall’s moat by the Crosstown
Gang’s car-wash. “The Grayed Outdoors” (12/26/70) – Sabrina and the Goolies
must protect the environment from the Crosstown Gang’s construction of a bike
track.
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