Tuesday, August 3, 2021

TVXOHOF, JULY, 2021 - BRONCO LAYNE

 
In August, the Television Crossover Hall of Fame celebrates the TV Western, so the Addams Family theme is on hiatus for this month.

The TVXOHOF has had Bronco Layne in its sights for awhile, especially since he was involved in the first two most populated TV crossovers.  [More on that later.]

But interest in Bronco’s membership ramped up with the passing of Ty Hardin on August 3, 2017.  Even that date seemed like Destiny.  But for one reason or another, he kept missing the cut in the following years.  We’re not holding off any longer, however.  (It was tempting to wait another year to mark the 5th anniversary of his passing.  But the 4th anniversary works as a connection to The Numbers of ‘Lost’.)

And so, today the TVXOHOF welcomes its latest inductee…

BRONCO LAYNE

Wikipedia:
When Clint Walker walked out on his ABC series ‘Cheyenne’ in 1958 during a contract dispute with Warner Bros., Hardin got his big break. Warner bought out Hardin's contract from Paramount Studios and installed him into ‘Cheyenne’ for the remainder of the season, as the country cousin "Bronco Layne".


Walker and Warner Bros. came to terms after the season ended, but Hardin had made such a big hit on the show that Jack L. Warner gave him his own series, ‘Bronco’, under the ‘Cheyenne’ title. ‘Bronco’ alternated weeks with ‘Sugarfoot’ starring Will Hutchins, and ‘Cheyenne’ for four years. The series ran from 1958 to 1962.


‘Bronco’ is a Western series on ABC from 1958 through 1962. It was shown by the BBC in the United Kingdom. The program starred Ty Hardin as Bronco Layne, a former Confederate officer who wandered the Old West, meeting such well-known individuals as Wild Bill Hickok, Billy the Kid, Jesse James, Theodore Roosevelt, Belle Starr, Cole Younger, [General William Tecumseh Sherman], and John Wesley Hardin.

At one point, Bronco & The Sugarfoot
even met Wyatt Earp!


According to the theme song, Bronco came from the Texas Panhandle, but episodes of the series are set throughout the West.


(I’m assuming his actual first name was never revealed.  If anyone in Team Toobworld knows otherwise, let me in on the secret.)

Apparently, Bronco Layne is the one cowpoke in the WB stable who had the most episodes in which he was shirtless.  I read through the IMDb episode summaries and somebody was keeping a tally of those episodes!


Here are the appearance which qualified Bronco Layne for membership in the Television Crossover Hall of Fame:


‘Bronco’
[Officially entitled ‘Cheyenne: Bronco’ or ‘The Cheyenne Show: Bronco.’ Only season 2 was called ‘Bronco’.]
68 episodes


Bronco Layne, Captain Christopher Colt,
and Tom Brewster's identical cousin, The Canary Kid

Sugarfoot
- Trial of the Canary Kid (1959)

Tom's Aunt Nancy begs him to defend his cousin---Abram Thomas, aka The Canary Kid, who's been charged with murder. Tom is reluctant, considering his past experiences with the Canary, until Aunt Nancy tells him that Canary's gang is holding a judge hostage and threatening to kill him if their leader isn't freed. Tom agrees to defend Canary, despite the judge's bias---and Canary's further shenanigans.



Warner Brothers loved doing crossovers between their shows. In addition to Hutchins, also appearing were Ty Hardin from 'Bronco' (1958), Peter Brown from 'Lawman' (1958), and Wayde Preston from 'Colt .45' (1957). This was second only to the "Hadley's Hunters" episode of 'Maverick' (1957) for most crossovers at one time.


O'Bservation - They even worked in a crossover with 'Maverick', when the Sheriff of Blanchard was seen putting up this Wanted poster....


O'Bservation - Also appearing in this episode was Adam West as Doc Holliday.  He played Holliday in episodes of two other WB TV series, 'Lawman' and 'Colt .45'.  Connecting three different TV series in the role should make Adam West's visage the official face of Doc Holliday in Toobworld.  This helps with a casting conundrum which I'll get to soon.  




Maverick
- Hadley's Hunters (1960)

A vainglorious sheriff gives Bart five days to track down a supposed stagecoach robber, Cherokee Dan Evans. Evans is innocent, and Bart has to figure out a way to avoid the bounty on his head if he fails.



Bart runs into nearly every major star on the Warner Brothers lot. He meets Will Hutchins from 'Sugarfoot' (1957), Clint Walker from 'Cheyenne' (1955), John Russell and Peter Brown from 'Lawman' (1958), Ty Hardin from 'Bronco' (1958) and Edd Byrnes from '77 Sunset Strip' (1958) (under a sign at the livery stable reading 77 Cherokee Strip). There is also a scene where Bart walks into an office. He finds a satchel on the desk, and a gunbelt hanging on the wall. This was a reference to 'Colt .45' (1957), which had just recently been canceled. Bits of their own TV themes play as they're shown on screen.


Sugarfoot
- Angel (1961)

Riding through Leadville, where a ruthless group of thugs has been forcing out or killing anyone who stakes out rival mine claims, Tom comes across a deaf-mute girl who's father has just been murdered by them. The killers think she can't identify them, but Toothy Thompson, who knows sign language, can communicate with her and finds out she can. Toothy and Tom are both deputized by the local sheriff, and Bronco Layne also arrives in town to help out.



Cheyenne
- Duel at Judas Basin (1961)

Cheyenne, Bronco Layne and Sugarfoot battle a trader suspected of selling guns to the Indians. Cheyenne and Sugarfoot work for Ian Stewart who buys an option for 10,000 acres but the trader wants to kill the sale due to its location.

Bronco Layne met plenty of historical figures, many of whom appeared in other TV shows.  This creates degrees of separation to connect Bronco to those other series.  Many of them were played by other actors in those other shows, especially Jesse James, Belle Starr, General Wallace, and even Edwin Booth.  The difference in their physical appearances could be attributed to a change in perspective, as they were being seen by other characters than Bronco Layne.

BRONCO WITH EDWIN BOOTH
GENERAL WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN
SITTING BULL

Among the historical characters he met:
  • Belle Starr in “Shadow of Jesse James” (Jeanne Cooper)
  • Jesse James in “Shadow of Jesse James” (James Coburn)
  • Cole Younger in “Shadow of Jesse James” (Richard Coogan)
  • Jim Younger in “Shadow of Jesse James” (James Westmoreland)
  • Bob Younger in “Shadow of Jesse James” (Bill Tennant)
  • John Wesley Hardin in “The Turning Point” (Scott Marlowe)
  • Edwin Booth in “Prince of Darkness” (Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.)
  • Butch Cassidy in “The Equalizer” (Steve Brodie)
  • Billy Doolin in “The Equalizer” (Sheldon Allman)
  • General William Tecumseh Sherman (Frank Ferguson)
  • General George Meade in “Burning Springs” (Morris Ankrum)
  • Sitting Bull in “Payroll of the Dead” (Francis MacDonald)
  • John Tunstall in “Death of an Outlaw” (Alan Caillou)
  • Pat Garrett in “Death of an Outlaw” (Rhodes Reason)
  • General Lew Wallace in “Death of an Outlaw” (Forrest Lewis)
  • Billy the Kid in “Death of an Outlaw” (Stephen Joyce)
  • Billy the Kid in “The Soft Answer” (Ray Stricklyn)
  • Wild Bill Hickock in “Montana Passage” (Charles Cooper)
  • Wild Bill Hickock in “One Evening in Abilene” (Jack Cassidy)
With Billy the Kid and Wild Bill, the perspective of how they looked remained Bronco’s, but with them both being recastaways, another reason must be found to splain away why they looked so different from one episode to the next.  (ESPECIALLY with Wild Bill Hickock!)




For Hickock, it has to be that Bronco’s opinion of the man changed since the last time they met.  After the legendary lawman saved Bronco’s life, Bronco’s estimation of him improved significantly.


As for Billy the Kid, it could be that enough time had passed so that Bronco was hazy on precise details as to what he looked like.  (Not that there was much difference between the two actors playing the role.  It could be a matter of weight gain....)


Here’s another historical figure with some Toobworldian questions about him due to the actor cast:

O’Bservations:


1] Breck also played Teddy Roosevelt in an episode of ‘Sugarfoot’. Tom “Sugarfoot” Brewster is also in this episode.  I’m tempted to claim that both men were snookered by a man who made a living in impersonating famous people.  (He also passed himself off several times to Bart Maverick as Doc Holliday.)  


But I would have to see both of these Teddy episodes first, just in case there are other factors (aides from Washington, etc.) which confirm that he really was Roosevelt.  If that is the case, then this could be another case in which an historical figure’s appearance depends on the point of view of whoever is looking at him.  In which case, Bronco and the Sugarfoot were in agreement as to what Teddy Roosevelt looked like.  (I think it would be pushing credulity to claim that if Peter Breck was an imposter in all three shows, then he could have actually been Nick Barkley of ‘The Big Valley’.)


2] In “The Immovable Object”, Bronco is taking two wagons of Army supplies to the U.S. Army Engineering camp plus transporting the reporter Emmett Dawson, from the New York Chronicle.  As the New York Chronicle is in the TVXOHOF, that leads to a lot of other connections to Bronco Layne, with a few degrees of separation.


3] Gary Vinson played Jamie Ringgold in “Four Guns and a Prayer” and claimed that he was the son of Johnny Ringo.  I’ve read that in the Trueniverse, Ringo had no offspring.  But things can always be different in Toobworld regarding theories of relateeveety.  At any rate, more degrees of separation connect Bronco to other shows which featured Ringo.


4] Speaking of theories of relateeveety, it could be that Bronco was related to fellow Confederate veteran ‘Hondo’ Lane, despite the difference in the spellings of their surnames.


5] If Bronco Layne's age was comparable to Ty Hardin's, the actor who played him, then he must have been one of those teen boys who joined up with the Confederacy when they were underage.  Bronco was probably at best 21 years of age when the war ended in 1865.  That means that when the Northfield, Minnesota, bank robbery attempt took place, Bronco was about thirty.  If he lived as long as Ty Hardin himself, he died anywhere between 1929 and 1933....


At any rate, welcome to the Hall, Bronco Layne.  Try to keep your shirt on....


Whoa!  Just kidding!



Sunday, July 4, 2021

TVXOHOF, JULY 2021 - CAPTAIN MERRILL STUBING (RIP)




Gavin MacLeod, known for his roles on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "The Love Boat," died Saturday, his nephew Mark See told Variety. He was 90 years old.

After a busy career of bit parts in television and film, MacLeod first achieved fame as part of the ensemble of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," a breakthrough sitcom in which he played news writer Murray Slaughter.




Following the end of that program in 1977, MacLeod moved into a starring role in "The Love Boat," the campy melodrama set on a cruise ship. MacLeod got top billing as "Your Captain," the dedicated and friendly Merrill Stubing.



The "Boat" pulled into port for the last time after nine seasons, but MacLeod continued to embrace his character, making many public appearances in costume. He also served as an “ambassador” for Princess Cruises, the company that provided the ship used in the series.
- CNN
May 29, 2021




Over the years, many members of ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’ cast have been inducted into the Television Crossover Hall of Fame:
  • MARY RICHARDS
  • LOU GRANT
  • RHODA MORGENSTERN
  • TED BAXTER
  • GEORGETTE FRANKLIN BAXTER
  • PHYLLIS LINDSTROM
Some of those only made it into the Hall with a bit of “creative accounting” (Ted and Georgette), but there was no amount of pretzel logic I could apply to get Murray Slaughter into the TVXOHOF.  He has the MTM Show and the ‘Rhoda’ episodes about her wedding.  I suppose he could have been mentioned in episodes of ‘Phyllis’ and ‘Lou Grant’ or in the TV movie “Mary and Rhoda”, but I haven’t done that kind of research.

In a way, it might be apt that he didn’t make it into the Hall; Murray never won a Teddy Award either.

But at least the late Gavin MacLeod will be represented for a major contribution to the seven seas of Toobworld….

The hot summer months are here and Pandemic restrictions have been lifted.

So howzabout a sea cruise?

CAPTAIN MERRILL STUBING

From Wikipedia:
[Gavin MacLeod’s] starring role as Captain Stubing on ‘The Love Boat’, his next television series [after ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’], was broadcast in 90 countries worldwide, between 1977 and 1986, spanning nine seasons. His work on that show earned him three Golden Globe nominations. Co-starring with him was a familiar actor and best friend Bernie Kopell as Dr. Adam Bricker and Ted Lange as bartender Isaac Washington.



(MacLeod became the global ambassador for Princess Cruises in 1986. He played a role in ceremonies launching many of the line's new ships.)




MacLeod, Kopell and Lange are the only cast members to appear in every episode of the TV series as well as the last three made-for-TV movies. MacLeod was not the captain of the Pacific Princess in the first two TV movies and did not appear in them, although when his character was introduced there was a mention of him being "the new captain".




Here are the credits which have earned him a berth on board the SS TVXOHOF:


The New Love Boat - The Newlyweds/The Exchange/Cleo's First Voyage (Pilot Movie)



The Love Boat
Captain Merrill Stubing
250 episodes (1977-1986)



Charlie's Angels
- Love Boat Angels (1979)
... Captain Merrill Stubing



The Love Boat: A Valentine Voyage (1990 TV Movie)



Love Boat: The Next Wave
- Reunion (1998)
... Captain Merrill Stubing




O’Bservations – At the beginning of the episode, we learned that Merrill Stubing was the vice president of the company and in line to become its next president.



This marked MacLeod’s last appearance as Captain Stubing.  But in many public appearances as himself, he was often seen wearing his Captain’s cap.  Those who write fanfic about the Love Boat (although I get this feeling that a lot of it is slash), might focus on Stubing’s career after his captaincy, when he was working for the company.  If so, they could use those pictures of MacLeod as himself to illustrate their stories about Stubing as he got older.

Just from those four entries – and with 250 episodes of ‘The Love Boat’ being a rare and hefty addition to anybody’s tally – Captain Stubing was assured entry into the Hall.  So I don’t need to play fast and loose with the established facts on this possibility:


The King of Queens
- S'no Job (2001)
- Hero Worship (2002)
... Uncle Stu

O'Bservations
As the father of Danny Heffernan, Uncle Stu would also be a Heffernan.  But what if “Stu” was a nickname derived from another surname in the family tree?  It’s not unheard of in the Trueniverse (my friend Jordan Shafer, for one) and it has happened before in Toobworld.  (Messmore Garrett in ‘Centennial’ comes to mind.)  With a name like Stubing Heffernan, though, it’s understandable everybody in the family would call him “Stu”.




Capt. Merrill Stubing, Ret.

Like I said, I don’t need that credit for his qualifications.  And even if I wanted to propose it just for fun, it would help if I saw the episodes first.  The IMDb might not be providing the full information as delineated in the show.  It’s just something fun to ponder.



Welcome aboard, Captain!  Good night and may God bless....

Sunday, June 6, 2021

TVXOHOF, 2021 BIRTHDAY HONORS LIST - "THE VIEW"

2021 BIRTHDAY HONORS LIST

Last year when I was doing weekly inductions into the Television Crossover Hall of Fame, I brought in the televersion of a different real-world show on the last Friday of each month.  We had TV shows from almost every genre – among the 2020 class were  ‘Star Trek’, ‘Hollywood Squares’, ‘I Love Lucy’, ‘Columbo’, ‘Gunsmoke’, ‘The Twilight Zone’, and even the Charlie Brown Christmas special.

This year, I’m using my birthday induction to bring in another worthy inductee….

“THE VIEW”

From Wikipedia:
The View is an American talk show created by broadcast journalist Barbara Walters. In its 24th season, the show has aired on ABC as part of the network's daytime programming block since August 11, 1997. It features a multi-generational panel of women, who discuss the day's "Hot Topics", such as sociopolitical and entertainment news. In addition to the conversation segments, the panel also conducts interviews with prominent figures, such as celebrities and politicians. Production of the show was originally held in ABC Television Studio 23 in New York City. In 2014, it relocated to ABC Broadcast Center, also in New York City. For now, the series is broadcast remotely due to the COVID-19 pandemic.



Throughout its run, The View has had 22 permanent co-hosts of varying characteristics and ideologies, with the number of contracted permanent co-hosts ranging between four and eight women per season. The original panel comprised Walters, broadcast journalist Meredith Vieira, lawyer Star Jones, television host Debbie Matenopoulos, and comedian Joy Behar, while the current lineup consists of Behar, entertainer Whoopi Goldberg, lawyer Sunny Hostin, television personality Meghan McCain, and television host Sara Haines. In addition, the show often makes use of male and female guest panelists, including television personality Ana Navarro, who came aboard as a weekly guest co-host in season 22.


'The View' has won 31 Daytime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Talk Show, Outstanding Informative Talk Show, and Outstanding Talk Show Host. The show has received praise from the Associated Press, Entertainment Weekly, the Los Angeles Times, Slate, as well as The New York Times, which deemed it "the most important political TV show in America". Beginning in its tenth season, the series became subject to on-air controversies and media criticism involving its panel of co-hosts. It was transferred from the helm of ABC's entertainment division to that of ABC News in 2014 following a decline in ratings. Two years later, the series saw viewership growth, averaging 2.5 million viewers by 2020.


There is ‘The View’ as seen in the Trueniverse and then there is ‘The View’ which is broadcast in Toobworld which differs from the real show in having fictional topics, fictional situations happen during a show; and fictional characters have appeared as guests.


‘The View’ also gets mentioned/watched in shows which take place in other Toobworlds – ‘The West Wing’, ‘Doom Patrol’, and a couple of shows in the horror world known as “Nosferatoob” – ‘The Vampire Diaries’ and ‘iZombie’.  Plus it has become a cottage industry to be spoofed in Skitlandia (thanks to ‘SNL’ and ‘MAD-TV’) and in the Tooniverse.  (‘Family Guy’ and ‘The Simpsons’ for example.)


O'Bservation - Seen here is 'The View' as seen in an episode of 'Spin City', which had to be sent to an alternate Toobworld because the televersion of Rudy Giuliani was already the NYC Mayor in Earth Prime-Time... for better or worse.


The following shows are all part of Earth Prime-Time and their characters have acknowledged the existence of ‘The View’ as being a TV series in their lives:


‘The Mountain’, ‘‘The Nanny’, ‘Gilmore Girls’, ‘Third Rock From The Sun’, ‘Just Shoot Me’, ‘Sabrina the Teenage Witch’, ‘Will & Grace’, ‘Everybody Loves Raymond’, ‘Scrubs’, ‘Reba’, ‘Veronica Mars’, ‘Bones’, ‘Entourage’, ‘Law & Order: SVU’, ’10 Things I Hate About You’, ‘Greek’, ‘Community’, ‘Cougar Town’, ‘Modern Family’, ‘Psych’, ‘Chuck’, ‘The Office’, ‘Drop Dead Diva’, ‘Hot In Cleveland’, ‘Happy Endings’, ‘90210’, ‘Workaholics’, ‘Us & Them’, ‘The Neighbors’, ‘Looking’, ‘Melissa & Joey’, ‘Faking It’, ‘Last Man Standing’, ‘Revenge’, ‘2 Broke Girls’, ‘Justified’, ‘The Jack and Triumph Show’, ‘The Big Bang Theory’, ‘Orange Is The New Black’, ‘’Crazy Ex-Girlfriend’, ‘The Muppets’, ‘Fuller House’, ‘Loosely Exactly Nicole’, ‘NCIS’, ‘The Goldbergs’.

Plus, there are at least three series in which ‘The View’ is not only mentioned, but characters from those shows appear on the talk show and interact with the televersions of the real-life hosts – Jenna Maroney of ’30 Rock’, Casey McCall of ‘SportsNight’, and a fictionalized ‘Bette’ Midler whose life in the eponymous sitcom is very different from that of Trueniverse Bette.  (Sorry about the quality of Bette's pic.  It came from a multi-generation copy on YouTube.)





O'Bservation - In that second image from '30 Rock', this was O'Bviously not the true televersion of Barbara Walters.  As to who it was, that has to be determined.  Master of Disguise? Professional Baba Wawa impersonator? Shapeshifter? Android? Alien?  Too bad we can't see if she has bent pinkies....

They may not be the only characters from other shows who will appear on the televersion of ‘The View’; I wouldn’t be surprised if there will be others to come.  Definitely there will be other references to the televised gabfest on other fictional programs in the future.


Welcome to the Hall!


Wednesday, June 2, 2021

TVXOHOF, JUNE 2021 - PUGSLEY & WEDNESDAY ADDAMS

JUNE 2021


It has been a tradition that in June the Television Crossover Hall of Fame celebrates pairs, if not actual twins.  And since we’re celebrating ‘The Addams Family’ this year, who better than siblings Pugsley and Wednesday?



Unlike with the other members of the Addams Family being inducted, the rules had to be bent a bit for Pugsley and Wednesday. (Probably more so for Wednesday.)

Let’s begin with the older sibling….



PUGSLEY ADDAMS

From Wikipedia:
Pugsley is the oldest child of Morticia and Gomez Addams. He is a young boy (his age is given as eight years old in the pilot episode but is changed to 10 years old in the second episode) who is almost always seen wearing a striped T-shirt and shorts. Originally unnamed (as were all of the family members), the character who was apparently the prototype for Pugsley first appeared in the Charles Addams cartoons in The New Yorker during the 1930s. In this first incarnation, he was portrayed as a deviant child with a vicious nature, shown committing deplorable acts with his sister. In all incarnations, he is overweight. In the television series, Pugsley usually eats over five pieces of cake at birthday parties.



"An energetic monster of a boy…blond red hair, popped blue eyes and a dedicated troublemaker, in other words, the kid next door…genius in his own way, he makes toy guillotines, full size racks, threatens to poison his sister, can turn himself into a Mr. Hyde with an ordinary chemical set…his voice is hoarse…is sometimes allowed an occasional cigar."
— Charles Addams

When the characters were given names for the television series, he was originally going to be called "Pubert" (a derivation of the word puberty, possibly a reflection of his age) but it was rejected as it sounded too sexual, and the name Pugsley was chosen instead.



In the American television series, Pugsley is played by child actor Ken Weatherwax. This incarnation of the character is more jovial and inventive; he displays outlandish engineering skills, including the invention of a disintegrator gun, an anti-gravity gun, and other devices. He and Gomez created a computer named Whizzo and a robot named Smiley (played by Robby the Robot). Pugsley and his younger sister Wednesday often play together, rarely exhibiting signs of sibling rivalry; they share an interest in spiders, dynamite, guillotines, and other dangerous "toys."

In an early episode, "Morticia and the Psychiatrist", the rest of the family is concerned that Pugsley is engaging in behavior they consider "odd": wearing a Boy Scout uniform, playing with a puppy, etc. When sent to a psychiatrist, Pugsley tells of boyhood incidents involving hangings, machine guns, and grenades, with no clue that others might find these accounts unusual.

In the 1977 TV movie, Ken Weatherwax played a grown-up Pugsley, who has become a witch-doctor. In the interval between the original TV series and this movie, his parents have had two more children, who look just like the original Pugsley and Wednesday.

Pugsley, as played by Ken Weatherwax, is being inducted as a multidimensional.  Not only does he exist in Earth Prime-Time with the TV series and the reunion TV movie, but Weatherwax also voiced Pugsley in one episode of the animated series.  (All of the characters from ‘The Addams Family’ oeuvre are multiversal, but we’re only concerned with those characters played on TV by the same actor.)

Here are the credits which are getting Pugsley into the Hall:

The Addams Family
64 episodes




The Addams Family
- The Addams Family at the Kentucky Derby
(Voice only)

Halloween with the New Addams Family
(TV Movie reunion)
Now known as:
Pugsley Sr.




And now we turn our attention to his little sister.  (In other words, don’t turn your back on her….

WEDNESDAY ADDAMS

From Wikipedia:
In Addams' cartoons, which first appeared in The New Yorker, Wednesday and other members of the family had no names. When the characters were adapted to the 1964 television series, Charles Addams gave her the name "Wednesday", based on the well-known nursery rhyme line, "Wednesday's child is full of woe". The idea for the name was supplied by the actress and poet Joan Blake, an acquaintance of Addams. She is the sister of Pugsley Addams.

Wednesday Addams is obsessed with death. Wednesday does most of her experiments on her brother Pugsley Addams for fun or for punishment. Wednesday has tried to kill Pugsley many times. She likes raising spiders and researching the Bermuda Triangle. She has a tendency of freaking most people out due to her gothic personality.

Wednesday's most notable features are her pale skin and long, dark braided pigtails. She seldom shows her emotions and is generally bitter. Wednesday usually wears a black dress with a white collar, black stockings and black shoes.

In the 1960s series, she is sweet-natured and serves as a foil to the weirdness of her parents and brother, although her favorite hobby is raising spiders; she is also a ballerina.



Wednesday's favorite toy is her Marie Antoinette doll, which her brother guillotines (at her request). She is stated to be six years old in the television series' pilot episode. In one episode, she is shown to have several other headless dolls as well. She also paints pictures (including a picture of trees with human heads) and writes a poem dedicated to her favorite pet spider, Homer. Wednesday is deceptively strong; she is able to bring her father down with a judo hold.

Wednesday has a close kinship with the family's giant butler Lurch. In the TV series, her middle name is "Friday".



In the 1977 television holiday-themed special, "Halloween with the New Addams Family", Lisa Loring plays a grown-up Wednesday, who mostly entertains their party guests with her flute, and can hear and understand coded help messages by bound-up members of the family, and dispatch help to free them. In the time interval between the original TV series and this television movie, her parents had two more children who look just like the original Pugsley and Wednesday.

Here are the official credits for Wednesday’s eventual induction:




The Addams Family
64 episodes

Halloween with the New Addams Family
(TV Movie reunion)
Wednesday Sr.

As you can see, she only has two general credits, one less than needed to achieve eligibility.  But I think we have a way around that….

It took me a long time to finally accept it, but I finally, begrudgingly, accepted that computer content from the Internet could be integrated into the greater mosaic of Toobworld.

So why not use that to my advantage?

Probably the most popular moment for Wednesday during the run of the series could be the scene in which she taught Lurch how to dance the Drew:


With the advent of the Internet and YouTube, variations began to crop up:







I have no problem in accepting these to be part of the Toobworld Dynamic.  And there are more out there; probably more to come....

Who says that Wednesday only danced the Drew with Lurch that one time?  Perhaps it became a daily routine in which Wednesday continued Lurch's dancing lessons, with a different song used each day.

Some of these songs didn’t come out until after the TV series ran its course.  Again, no problem.  These are the Addamses!  Think of all the weird things about the family – not just the freakish physical attributes (Cousin Itt of course, but also Cousin Bleak with that drooping middle eye, Grandpa Slurp with two heads), but also the adventures undertaken by some of their ancestors.  (Usually ending with them being executed.)

So why couldn’t one of them be a time traveler?  They could have gone into the future and brought back Tomorrow’s music for Wednesday during a visit unseen by the audience back home in the Trueniverse.
Therefore, I’m including those YouTube reworkings as minisodes acceptable to Toobworld Central.

Welcome to the Hall, Pugsley & Wednesday! 


I'm inducting you both on a Wednesday in honor of Wednesday Friday Addams.

Sorry, Pugsley, but she scares me....


O'Bservation:
This is my first attempt at using the updated method to add videos.  I'm hoping it worked....