Monday, April 1, 2024

TVXOHOF, APRIL 2024 - THURSTON HOWELL III


With the April candidate for membership in the Television Crossover Hall of Fame, we always favor the Fool.  I realize that with this being an election year, it would be tempting to induct a foolish millionaire who’s also a member of the League of Themselves.  There is an O’Bvious choice, but that fool [lower case] was made a member back in April of 2009.

So we should finally bring in the most famous rich fool in Toobworld history….

THURSTON HOWELL III

From Wikipedia:


Thurston Howell III (mentioned in the opening credits as: "The Millionaire") is a character on the CBS television sitcom Gilligan's Island, which ran from 1964 to 1967, and later in syndication.


Howell, portrayed by veteran character actor Jim Backus, is such a Croesus that he took hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and several changes of clothing with him for what was intended to be only a three-hour boat tour in Hawaii. Speaking with a Locust Valley lockjaw accent, Howell is a stereotypical member of the New England Yankee elite – a resident of Newport, Rhode Island, a graduate of Harvard University and a Republican. He is a member of the Newport Country Club, Oyster Bay Yacht Club, and the Union League Club where he has a "window seat".


His wife, Lovey, portrayed by Natalie Schafer, is conscious of social strata, yet seems to be a good-hearted woman with a deep sense of noblesse oblige, allowing her to interact with the other passengers and crew, though regarding them all as her social inferiors. One of the implied humorous points of the show is that Thurston continually fails to realize that all of the Howells' money is essentially useless to them on the island.


On the other hand, the other castaways apparently tolerate the fact that he refuses to do any work. One exception is when an egocentric Hollywood producer (played by Phil Silvers) "visited" the island and the Howells had to wait on him as butler and maid in order to be rescued.


One of the most unusual aspects of his character is that, even though he is married, he sleeps with a teddy bear that he calls "Teddy". The Howells, as was common practice on American sitcoms of the mid-1960s, slept in twin beds. Thurston Howell III was the basis of a character in the television sitcom 'Dusty's Trail' which was based on 'Gilligan's Island'.


Though described as a cunning, ruthless businessman, whose nickname was "The wolf of Wall Street", he is shown to have some moral scruples - when a mad scientist lures the castaways to his private island and shows Mr. Howell technology he had developed to switch peoples' bodies, he then asks for Mr. Howell's help in switching the bodies of world leaders with his personal minions to take over the world. Mr. Howell instead turns him down and tells his fellow castaways about the scientist’s intentions.


Howell was included on Forbes Magazine's 2006 list of the 15 richest fictional characters. Just how much money he had was never specified, but he was shown as owning several large corporations. In the pilot episode, when the radio announcer reads the names of the lost passengers, they refer to Mr Howell as a billionaire. Also when asked what happened to him during the Great Depression, his wife says that he was a billionaire, lost most of his money and "became just a millionaire."



Among his assets were a diamond mine, a coconut plantation, a railroad, an oil well, and 40 acres in Colorado – which included all of downtown Denver – that he bequeathed to his fellow castaways in his will. He also owned the Hatchet-Cuckoo Oil Company in Dust Bowl, Oklahoma. He tried to shove this supposedly worthless oil company on Gilligan. When he hears that an imposter is going to sell off his companies for cash, he is so enraged that he tries to swim back to the mainland three times, intent on killing the man, only to be stopped by Gilligan, the Skipper and his wife.


Backus reprised his role in the three spin-off movies of the original series, although in the last one ("The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan's Island") Backus's declining health only allowed him to make a three-minute cameo appearance at the conclusion.

Although the Howells never had any children in the original series, their son Thurston Howell IV (portrayed by David Ruprecht) is introduced in the last movie. The younger Howell's mannerisms are similar to those of his father.


Here are the reasons why Mr. Howell should join his wife and the other stranded castaways in the TVXOHOF, AND as a multidimensional….



GILLIGAN’S ISLAND
99 Episodes
(1964 – 1967)


RESCUE FROM GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(TV Movie 1978)


THE CASTAWAYS ON GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(TV Movie 1979)


THE HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS ON GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(TV Movie 1981)

MEANWHILE… IN THE TOONIVERSE



THE NEW ADVENTURES OF GILLIGAN
24 Episodes
(1974–1977)

O'Bservation - I see no reason why a live-action version of this cartoon series shouldn't be what happened to those seven stranded castaways back in the main Toobworld between the end of the sitcom and the first TV reunion movie.



Gilligan's Planet
13 Episodes
(1982–1983)


Welcome to the TV Crossover Hall of Fame, Mr. Howell!

I hope you enjoy the reunion with Lovey in the TVXOHOF's Millionaire Suite....


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