1970–1971 American animated comedy television series
For the revue musical based on the words and music of Tom Lehrer, see Tomfoolery. For the 1936 German comedy film, see Tomfoolery (film).
The Tomfoolery Show is a 1970–1971 American animated comedy television series, based on the works of Edward Lear which aired on NBC.[1] The animation was done at the Halas and Batchelor Studios in London and Stroud. Though the works of other writers were also used, notably Lewis Carroll and Ogden Nash, Lear's works were the main source, and characters like the Yongy-Bonghy-Bo and the Umbrageous Umbrella Maker were all Lear creations. Other characters included the Enthusiastic Elephant, the Fizzgiggious Fish, and the Scroobious Snake.[2] The show's writing was credited to Lear, Carroll, and Romeo Muller, the latter being responsible for the adaptations of the earlier writers' works. Some original material was also written based on characters created by Lear, although much of the material was a straight recital of poems and limericks or songs using Lear's poems set to music. A recurring joke had a delivery boy running around trying to deliver a large plant and shouting, "Plant for Mrs Discobolus!"
In Children's Television: The First Thirty-five Years, George W. Woolery said, "A bit too literary and lofty, Tomfoolery was a noble failure."[3] David Perlmutter agreed in The Encyclopedia of American Animated TV Shows, saying that the show was "a failed attempt... The problem was that the approach to the material did not do it justice — the program was structured in the style of a revue à la Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In rather than a proper narrative...The odd mélange lasted only a year on the air despite its noble intent."[1]
References
^ abPerlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 652. ISBN978-1538103739.
^Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 863. ISBN978-1476665993.