MovieChat Forums > Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids (1972) Discussion > Does anybody remember the Original 1969 ...

Does anybody remember the Original 1969 special?


I am 44 and like you grew up watching fat albert and the cosby kids on saturdays. I recall it being on 12:30 on the east coast every saturday. How ever, do any of you ole heads like me remember the original pilot for the show from a few years before the saturday series that aired as a one time special? It was different in that I dont think you could see fat albert from the neck up on the screen because he ws so huge (obvious for comical effect) and everytime fat albert appeared they played this funky R& B riff like his own personal theme song. It was greatness being born.

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I never saw the original special but I have the soundtrack and the funky R&B riff was courtesy of Mr. Herbie Hancock who composed and performed the music for the 1969 pilot. It's available in a stand alone CD called the 'Fat Albert Rotunda' or you can find it on a double CD called 'Mwandishi'. It's a great CD and has enough stuff to keep R&B and Jazz fans happy.

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SOMEBODY NEEDS TO UPLOAD THIS OR MAKE A DVD OF IT OR SOMETHING MAN

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i saw it at the museum of television and radio. it is AWESOME! the layout is cartoon line drawings over live backgrounds with traffic and some of the best music ever!!

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I look forward to hearing it.

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It was called "Hey, Hey, Hey, It's Fat Albert" and here's a bit more about it...

The first special, "Hey, Hey, Hey - It's Fat Albert," looked totally different from the familiar Filmation style to come. To cut costs, animator Ken Mundie eliminated a couple of steps from the traditional process of animation. Instead of drawing on paper, transferring the images to a cel and then having everything inked and painted, Mundie and his crew drew directly onto cels with grease pencils.

A similar rough style can be seen in Mundie's animated opening to the TV series "Wild Wild West."

"It was rough but it worked," Mundie said. "I thought it worked."

But Cosby didn't like the early work on the special. He rejected Mundie's original vision of how the characters should look.

"The first bunch that I designed were a little rough looking," Mundie said, "because I went back to my background. I'm from Detroit. The neighborhood kids were a little bit rougher. He didn't want that. He wanted them to be more a fun bunch of kids."

Cosby also told the animators how he wanted the characters to walk, demonstrating what he meant. "He'd say, 'You know a guy walks different when he's in his neighborhood than he does when he's downtown with the white folks,'" Mundie said.

"Hey, Hey, Hey" blended live-action and animation. Mundie used footage of Philadelphia as background. During shots of Fat Albert running, Mundie interspersed footage of buildings collapsing.

The Mundie-designed Fat Albert truly was obese. The Filmation version was a slimmed-down version. Fat Albert's size proved the crux of the special. Taunted by his friends because of his size, Fat Albert sat out of a football game against a rival neighborhood team. But he shrugged off the insults to play and win the game.

Cosby provided other important roles as well. He got Herbie Hancock to write and record the music. And he found the children who would round out the cast.

Cosby gathered a cast of children - the average age was 14 - to give voice to the characters he wasn't portraying. As in the TV series to come, Cosby played the key parts of Fat Albert and Bill. But getting professional performances of these children proved difficult; they were stiff at the recording session, until Cosby stepped in.

"Instead of having the kids simply read their lines into the microphone, Cosby gave them something to respond to," TV Guide reported before the premier of "Hey, Hey, Hey." "When the script called for shouts of encouragement, Cosby got realism by arm-wrestling one of his youthful actors - promising to treat the gang to movies if the youngster could beat him. When cheers of victory were needed for Fat Albert's touchdown run in a game of street football, Cosby galloped about the studio, dodging chairs."

To get the right sound for the character of Russell, portrayed as bundled in a heavy winter coat, his mouth obscured by a scarf, Cosby draped a jacket over the young actor's head.

NBC ran the special two more times after its initial airing, on Nov. 12, 1969, and expectations were that NBC would pick up the idea for the Saturday morning series. But the planned emphasis on education apparently turned NBC and then ABC against the show. That left CBS.

Scheimer believes CBS was willing to take on "Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids" because the network wanted Cosby for a nighttime variety show. CBS picked up both shows, but the variety program was gone within a year.

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Wonder why NBC was hesitant to air a possible Saturday Morning series feature Fat Abert?

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I remember it, I would have been three in '69, so I doubt I saw that airing, but if it was rerun, I probably saw one of those, and I recall seeing it just about when the show premiered, but I do recall that.

I didn't pay much attention to the show, but I remember them animated in city street scenes.

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