Believe it or not, these shows are turning 55 and 60 this year!
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.
June 26, 2025
October 24, 2015
THE MILTON THE MONSTER SHOW
Professor Montgomery Weirdo (Dayton
Allen), with the aid of his assistant, Count Kook (Larry Best), created his own
monster by pouring various sinister liquids into a mold. Fearing his creation
may become so terrifying as to turn against him, Weirdo added some “tincture of
tenderness” into the mix. Unfortunately for the not-so-good doctor, Kook caused
him to mix in a bit too much and out came Milton (Bob McFadden, using a Gomer Pyle-inspired
voice): a good-natured and clumsy monster whose hollow head would emit various
amounts of white steam or smoke depending on his mood.
Created by Hal Seeger and produced by his
production company--the first of theirs to be broadcast on television--the
series was intended to be a parody of old-time horror films. Weirdo lived in a
castle on a hill in Transylvania and was always in competition with another mad
scientist, Professor Fruitcake, who lived in another castle on top of another
hill. Also in residence in the castle was a skull-faced ghoul in a top hat
named Heebie (McFadden, impersonating Peter Lorre) and a slow-witted
cyclops named Jeebie (also McFadden) whose single sharp tooth was used to open
soda cans. When not competing with Fruitcake directly, Weirdo could always be
found trying to profit off of his monsters by selling them out to the highest
bidder or by concocting a scheme to banish Milton permanently from the castle
(which always failed). Little did Weirdo know that Kook wanted to get rid of Weirdo
as well in order to take over the castle and hatch his own plans.
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Muggy-Doo (top) in trouble as usual, and Stuffy Durma resisting Brinkley's influence. |
However, Milton was only in one of three segments in the program, and
usually the last one each episode. For most of the run, the first segment
featured the adventures of Fearless Fly (Allen); an ordinary housefly named
Hirem who ducked into a matchbox to don a red sweater and high-powered glasses
that “provided millions of mega-tons of energy through the sensitive muscles in
his head.” His primary foes were the Fu Manchu-like Dr. Goo Fee
and his sidekick, Gung Ho (both McFadden, and before racial stereotypes became
taboo in cartoons). Professor Weirdo also went up against Fearless Fly a few
times. In “Fearless Fly Meets the Monsters,” their first encounter also served
as a pilot to the overall series as it featured Milton’s creation. Except in
that instance, his name was George, he had a deeper voice, Frankenstein
monster-styled hair, and a forehead scar. Heebie and Jeebie also exchanged
voices. When not battling evil, Hirem hung out at the Sugar Bowl bistro with
his girlfriend, Flory (Bev Arnold), while dealing with bully Horsey the
Horsefly (McFadden again).
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Flukey Luke and Two Feathers (top) and Penny Pengin up to no good. |
The second segment had a rotating line-up of characters and their own
adventures. One featured Flukey Luke (Allen), an inept cowboy detective who had
a Native American sidekick, Two Feathers (Best, using an Irish accent), that
brought their skills to the big city. Luke’s name came from the fact that it
was only dumb luck that allowed him to apprehend any criminals. Another feature
starred Stuffy Durma, a hobo who inherited ten million dollars and resisted
attempts to be made civilized by his valet, Bradley Brinkley (both Allen). The
next feature starred Muggy-Doo (Best), a sly box fox who often tried to strike
it rich with a variety of schemes that often failed. The final feature starred
Penny Penguin (Arnold), a bratty teenager who often caused problems for her
parents Chester (Allen) and Beulah (Hetty Galen) ala Dennis
the Menace.
Both Muggy-Doo and Stuffy Durma appeared prior to Milton. Seeger originally created them for the comic Muggy-Doo, Boy Cat from
Stanhall Publishing
in 1953. Muggy was a blue cat whose yellow t-shirt always had a message that
changed to match his situation ala The Yellow Kid, and worked as a junkman (er, cat). Stuffy Durma
also appeared in his own feature in the comic, but was depicted as an actual
pig named Stuffy DERMA. The comic only ran for four issues, two of which were
reprinted in 1963 by I.W.
Enterprises. Muggy was later adapted for the screen in the theatrical short,
Boy Pest with Osh, which featured the
fez-wearing hound from the comic. Both characters were redesigned for the show,
with Muggy becoming a fox and Stuffy a human.
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Milton, Heebie and Jeebie hitting the road. |
Milton the Monster was co-produced
by ABC, where it also aired for its sole
season beginning October 9, 1965. Even after its run ended, ABC kept it on its
schedule until 1968 where it then entered into syndication. Despite the series’
name, the breakout character of the show was Fearless Fly, who became
incredibly popular with viewers. While the format remained the same for most of
the run, for a few episodes Milton segments were doubled up and Fearless Fly
was moved to the rotating second segment roster. The series was written by Beverly Arnold,
Kin Platt
and Heywood
Kling with music was by Winston
Sharples.
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The sole issue of Milton's comic. |
Despite its long stay on ABC, there was very little in the way of Milton merchandise. In 1966, Gold Key released a single
issue of Milton the Monster and Fearless Fly, but without any of the other featured
segments represented. That same year, Milton Bradley
produced a board
game inspired by the show. In 2007, Shout!
Factory released the complete
series to DVD.
Originally posted in 2015. Updated in 2021.