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He was a founding member of the Jackson 5, who went on to have their own animated series using his name and likeness, and his voice during song segments.
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.
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He was a founding member of the Jackson 5, who went on to have their own animated series using his name and likeness, and his voice during song segments.
You can read the full story here.
He voiced Space Marshall Vaughn in Space Ace; Felix the
Furrier, the President and Monkey #2 in “The Bollo Caper” episode of ABC
Weekend Specials; The Master Renegade, Water Walk and Psycho in Challenge
of the GoBots; Master Blaster in Kidd Video; Ebenezer Scrooge in The
Real Ghostbusters; Jack in Oggy and the Cockroaches; Frederick
Vincent, Austrain Emperor, Town Cryer and Carmine in Jem; Master Splinter,
General Traag, Vernon Fenwick, Napoleon, Myron Bimbleton, Tony “The Butcher”
Vivaldi, CY-CLOMPS, Wilbur Weazell, Mr. X, Pinky McFingers, Big Louie, Krang’s
Android Body, Bogart Flywheel, Phantom, Orange Android and various minor
characters in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987); Gratchit and
Pixling Elder in The Adventures of Raggedy Ann & Andy; Detective
Logan in Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventures; Derek Blunt in Darkwing
Duck; 2nd Longshoreman in Batman: The Animated Series; Bailiff,
Judge Lupine and Abraham Lincoln in Animaniacs; Fortress I Captain, a
father and a commander in Gargoyles; Shadow Priest in Mortal Kombat:
Defenders of the Realm; an auctioneer in The New Batman Adventures;
a news anchor, clerk and captain in Superman: The Animated Series; and Louie
Z. Anna, a TV announcer and an auctioneer in The Sylvester & Tweety
Mysteries.
He also provided additional voices for Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1979), Alvin & the Chipmunks (1983), Snorks, Wildfire (1986), CBS Storybreak, The Karate Kid: The Animated Series, The Pirates of Dark Water, Aladdin and The Savage Dragon.
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best known for his signature deep voice that embodied Star Wars’ Darth Vader and The Lion King’s Mufasa. Along with being considered the first celebrity guest on Sesame Street, he made several more appearances later on, provided the narration for “The Parsley Garden” episode of ABC Weekend Specials, Diablo in an episode of Garfield and Friends, and reprised the role of Mufasa for The Lion Guard: Return of the Roar.
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He appeared as Mr. De Luca in an episode of Saved by the Bell: The New Class.
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He appeared on an episode of Sesame Street “covering” the revelation that Mr. Snuffleupagus was real, and in two of their specials.
The celebrity grid, comprised of Rich Little, Rose Marie, John Davidson, Sandy Duncan, Paul Lynde, Totie Fields, Charley Weaver, Leslie Uggams and George Gobel. |
Storybook Squares debuted on
NBC on January 4, 1969. Rather than cash and prizes, the contestants
played strictly for prizes for as many games as time permitted. A “Secret
Square” was in play for the first two rounds of the episode, similar to the
1968 primetime version. A random celebrity was labelled as the “Secret Square”
and awarded a prize for the contestant that correctly agreed or disagreed with
them. If the prize was missed in the first round, it was carried over into the
second. At the end of each episode, the contestants were brought over to the stage
entrance to meet the panelists as they walked off during the credits. Unfortunately,
the concept ended up being short-lived as it would end its run on April 19th.
Of the spinoff, Marshall would say in a 2003 interview for E! True Hollywood
Story that while the concept was good, the character introductions took
too much time away from actual gameplay. Heatter-Quigley would revisit the
concept during the 1976-77 season of Squares for special episodes of the
daytime series. The set was redesigned to expand the medieval theme around the
panel grid as well. This time around, a boy would play with his father and
grandfather against a girl and her mother and grandmother, alternating between
each family member per round. $50 was awarded for each captured square, $300
for each game, and the most money at the end of play won a large prize.
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Best known as the original long-serving host of Hollywood Squares, he hosted a Saturday morning version called Storybook Squares in 1969.