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Harlem Globetrotters (TV series)

Harlem Globetrotters is a Saturday morning cartoon produced by Hanna-Barbera and CBS Productions, featuring animated versions of players from the basketball team of the same name.[1]

Broadcast from September 12, 1970, to October 16, 1971, on CBS Saturday Morning, repeated from September 10, 1972, to May 20, 1973, on CBS Sunday Morning, and later re-run from February 4 to September 2, 1978, on NBC as The Go-Go Globetrotters—a two-hour show that also incorporated the animated shorts of a show of the previous year, The CB Bears. (The theme song of the new show hybrid-ed alternate versions of the theme songs of both previous shows.)

The show team members featured fictionalized versions of historical Globetrotters Meadowlark Lemon, Freddie "Curly" Neal, Hubert "Geese" Ausbie, J.C. "Gip" Gipson, Bobby Joe Mason, and Paul "Pablo" Robertson, all in animated form, alongside their fictional bus driver and manager Granny and their dog mascot Dribbles.[2]

The series worked to a formula where the team travels somewhere and typically get involved in a local conflict that leads to one of the Globetrotters proposing a basketball game to settle the issue. To ensure the Globetrotters' defeat, the villains rig the contest; however, before the second half of the contest, the team always finds a way to even the odds, become all but invincible, and win the game.

Voice cast

The voice cast included:[3]

Guard Leon Hillard was originally planned to be on the series, but was cut out of the cast prior to the start of production.[citation needed]

Production history

A total of 22 episodes of Harlem Globetrotters were eventually produced: 16 for the 1970–71 season, and six more for the 1971–72 season. Harlem Globetrotters has a place in history as being the first Saturday morning cartoon to feature a predominately African-American cast. Filmation's The Hardy Boys was the first to feature an African-American character the previous season (1969–70), and Josie and the Pussycats (1970–71), another Hanna-Barbera series which premiered 30 minutes earlier on the same day and network, was the first to feature an African-American female character.[4] Like many other Saturday morning cartoons of the era, the first season utilized a laugh track. By season 2, the full laugh track was replaced by an inferior version created by the studio.

After their show's cancellation, the animated Globetrotters made three appearances on Hanna-Barbera's The New Scooby-Doo Movies in 1972 and 1973. Dribbles, who did not appear on the show, was in the theme song sequence; several references were also made to Granny, who also did not appear on the show. Hanna-Barbera produced a second animated series starring the Globetrotters in 1979 called The Super Globetrotters, this time featuring the players as superheroes. In spring 1999, TV Land aired repeats of Harlem Globetrotters on Saturday mornings as part of its TV Land Super Retrovision Saturdaze lineup. The series has not been rerun since.

The series was a co-production of Hanna-Barbera and CBS Productions (one of the few animated TV series that CBS directly produced). Syndication rights were originally held by Viacom Enterprises and later Paramount Domestic Television, formerly owned by CBS as its syndication arm. They are currently held by CBS Media Ventures.

Episodes

Season 1 (1970–1971)

Season 2 (1971–1972)

HG-17. "A Pearl of a Game" (9/11/1971)
HG-18. "Nothing to Moon About" (9/18/1971)
HG-19. "Pardon My Magic" (9/25/1971)
HG-20. "Granny's Royal Ruckus" (10/2/1971)
HG-21. "Soccer to Me" (10/9/1971)
HG-22. "Jungle Jitters" (10/16/1971)

In other media

Soundtrack LP

Альбом саундтреков The Globetrotters был спродюсирован Джеффом Барри и выпущен в 1970 году компанией Kirshner Records (Kirshner #KES-106, распространяемый RCA Records ), в который вошли мелодии, услышанные в эпизодах сериала (во время сцен баскетбольных игр). Дон Киршнер был музыкальным руководителем как сериала, так и записи. Из этого разового релиза были созданы два сингла: кавер на мелодию Нила Седаки "Rainy Day Bells" с бывшим Cadillac J.R. Бэйли на вокале, а затем три сингла, не вошедшие в альбом. Джимми Рэдклифф вместе с Уолли Голдом продюсировал и исполнил вокал в песнях " Duke Of Earl ", "Everybody's Got Hot Pants" из первого сингла, не входящего в альбом, а также стал соавтором и продюсером "Everybody Needs Love" из второго, а также предоставил количество песен и записей к сериалу.

Фронтмен Globetrotter Медоуларк Лемон был единственным членом команды, который действительно принимал участие в проекте, время от времени добавляя бэк-вокал в некоторые треки.

Список треков дляПутешественники

(Сторона 1)

  1. Тема путешественника (Джефф Бэрри) - 0:41
  2. Globetrottin '(Барри) - 2:19
  3. Bouncin 'All Over the World ( Нил Седака и Ховард Гринфилд ) – 3:01
  4. Подлый Пит ( Руди Кларк , Джей Ар Бэйли и К. Уильямс) — 2:45
  5. Марафонская Мэри (Седака и Гринфилд) – 3:06
  6. Ривер Куин (Седака и Гринфилд) – 3:06
  7. Домашняя вечеринка (Кларк, Бейли и Уильямс) – 3:00

(Сторона 2)

  1. Грави (Кларк, Бэйли и Уильямс) – 3:19
  2. Медоуларк (Седака и Гринфилд) – 2:22
  3. Лилия Пибоди (Кларк, Бэйли и Уильямс) – 2:56
  4. Положите немного мяса на кости, Люсинда (Седака и Гринфилд) - 3:00
  5. Rainy Day Bells (Седака и Гринфилд) – 3:02
  6. Cheer Me Up (Джефф Бэрри, Рон Данте и Дж. Карр) — 2:22

Коммерческие синглы (1970)

Неальбомные синглы (1971)

Серия комиксов «Золотой ключ»

In April 1972, Gold Key Comics launched a comic adaptation of the Harlem Globetrotters animated series; their first comic book appearance was in issue #8 of Gold Key's Hanna-Barbera Fun-In published in July 1971. Several stories in early issues were based on episodes of the TV show. The comic book series lasted for four years and 12 issues through January 1975.

References

  1. ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 266–267. ISBN 978-1538103739.
  2. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 395–397. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  3. ^ Hyatt, Wesley (1997). The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television. Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 207. ISBN 978-0823083152. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  4. ^ Woolery, George W. (1983). Children's Television: The First Thirty-Five Years 1946-1981. Scarecrow Press. pp. 132–134. ISBN 0-8108-1557-5. Retrieved 14 March 2020.

External links