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Unread 03-13-2015, 03:53 PM   #27
Bill_in_fl
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sheepherder View Post
"The Howdy Doody Show", which was a bunch of kinda-westerny marionettes and a 'Buffalo Bob' and a clown named Clarabelle. There is a great underground tape/reel of obscene out-takes of the marionettes engaged in sexual activity...I saw it once years ago; it was hilarious. Put together between takes on the set, when the puppeteers were bored and waiting for the scenery/props to be changed. Great stuff!
I would luv to see that underground marionettes reel. That would be hilarious. There were three different actors who played Clarabelle the clown. The first actor to play Clarabelle was Bob Keeshan, who is even more famous as Captain Kangaroo. I used to be a limousine driver for Fancy Nancy limousines in Tampa, Fl back in '88 to '90 and drove a few stars. Joan Baez the folk singer and some football stars and Tone Loc the rapper (Wild Thing, Bust a move). But my most enjoyable fare was driving Bob Keeshan to a fundraiser he was doing in St Petersburg. He was so nice and I got to chat a bit with him on the drive and told him how I used to watch him and Mr Green Jeans and Mr Bear and Mr Moose and Grandfather clock when I was just a child, and he gave me a 8x10 picture of himself as Captain Kangaroo that he autographed specially to me. Sadly he's gone now.

Quote:
Originally Posted by sheepherder View Post
I don't recall the "Phantom" serials but I did follow him in the daily/Sunday comics. I especially liked the 'ancestors' storylines, a 1700's Phantom fighting pirates with the Phantom costume and two holstered flintlocks!
Oh yeah, those Phantom ancestor storylines were my favorites too. I liked how the Phantoms all created a glass front vignette booth inside the skull cave for each and every ancestor Phantom that existed and had their costume on a dummy along with their holsters and pistols and other artifacts. So the skull cave had a section that was like a museum to all the previous Phantoms. Yeah, those holstered flintlocks the original Phantom used to fight the pirates were cool. The premise of "The Ghost who walks" where when one Phantom died, his son or someone took his place and with him wearing a mask, that's why the natives called him...."The Ghost who walks" because they thought he was immortal.

Quote:
Originally Posted by sheepherder View Post
I had a Hubley cap gun once; it was the same time frame as the 'Fanner 50' but it was a top-break six-shooter. I wanted a Fanner 50 real bad, but my mother didn't know Hubley from Mattel and bought me the Hubley instead. All-zinc, shot some kind of caps, but the top-break and hinged barrel/cylinder were quite interesting. I've been trying to find it on eBay but no luck so far. Of course, back then I didn't want the Hubley, I wanted the Fanner. I cried. My mom was heartbroken.
There were two models of that top break Hubley. Mine had wide top hammers that were smooth and very suitable for fanning and were called the Hubley Colt .38 There is another Hubley that is almost exactly the same and except for the hammer practically indistinguishable from the Colt .38. Same frame only with different model name on it, same cylinder same everything except the hammer is different and is more narrow on top and serrated. I think that more narrow and serrated hammer model was called "The Texan" or something with Texas or Texan in it. Those were the only two Hubley topbreaks that I know of. So Sheepherder, you either had the Hubley "Colt .38" with the wide top flat hammers (like I had), or the more narrow top hammer that was serrated and called "The Texan" or something very similar. Can you remember if the top of your hammer was wide and flat or more narrow and serrated?


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