The Little Rascals: Spooky Hooky


10:40 pm - 11:05 pm, Today on KFFV MeTV+ (44.5)

Average User Rating: 8.27 (11 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

Spooky Hooky

Season 15, Episode 4

A phony absence excuse placed on the teacher's desk by the Gang may mean they'll miss out on a circus trip planned for the next day.

repeat 2014 English HD Level Unknown
Comedy Valentines Day

Cast & Crew
-

George 'Spanky' McFarland (Actor) .. Spanky
Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzer (Actor) .. Alfalfa
Billie 'Buckwheat' Thomas (Actor) .. Buckwheat
Eugene "Porky" Lee (Actor) .. Porky
John Collum (Actor) .. Student
Rosina Lawrence (Actor) .. Miss Jones
Dudley Dickerson (Actor) .. Sam the Janitor

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

George 'Spanky' McFarland (Actor) .. Spanky
Born: October 02, 1928
Died: June 30, 1993
Trivia: American actor Spanky McFarland (born George Emmett McFarland in Forth Worth, TX) was the most popular member of the Our Gang children's comedy troupe. He got his start while still a baby as an advertising model for a bakery in Dallas because he looked so fat and happy. It was his pudginess as a toddler that led him to the Our Gang series of shorts when he was hired to replace Joe Cobb as the tubby child. In addition to appearing in that series, McFarland also appeared in a few feature films and in other shorts. By the mid-'40s, his acting career was over and he found gainful employment elsewhere.
Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzer (Actor) .. Alfalfa
Born: August 07, 1927
Died: January 21, 1959
Birthplace: Paris, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Juvenile performer Carl Switzer and his brother, Harold, began singing at local functions in their Illinois hometown. While visiting an aunt in California, the Switzer boys accompanied their mother to Hal Roach Studios, then proceeded to warble a hillbilly ditty in the Roach cafeteria. This performance won them both contracts at Roach, though only Carl achieved any sort of stardom. Nicknamed "Alfalfa," Carl became a popular member of the Our Gang kids, his performances distinguished by his cowlicked hair, vacuous grin, and off-key singing. Few who have seen The Our Gang Follies of 1938 can ever forget the sight of Alfalfa being pelted with tomatoes as he bravely vocalizes the immortal aria "I'm the Bar-ber of Sevilllllle!" The boy remained with Our Gang when Roach sold the property to MGM in 1938; his last Gang short was 1940's Kiddie Kure. Switzer found it hard to get film roles after his Our Gang tenure, especially when he began to mature. By the early '50s, his movie appearances had dwindled to bits. Switzer's handful of worthwhile adult film roles include a 100-year-old Indian in director William Wellman's Track of the Cat (1954); he was also a semi-regular on Roy Rogers' TV series. Throughout most of the 1950s, he supported himself as a hunting guide and bartender. Miles removed from the lovable Alfalfa, 32-year-old Carl Switzer was killed in a boozy brawl over a 50-dollar debt.
Billie 'Buckwheat' Thomas (Actor) .. Buckwheat
Born: March 12, 1931
Died: October 10, 1980
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Appeared as a background actor in the 1934 Our Gang (Little Rascals) shorts The First Round-Up, For Pete's Sake and Washee Ironee before landing the role of Buckwheat.Joined the U.S. Army at age 23 in 1954 and earned a National Defense Service Medal and a Good Conduct Medal in 1956.Chose a career in film editing with the Technicolor corporation instead of acting upon returning from active duty.Was moved to tears when he received a standing ovation at a Little Rascals reunion at the Sons of the Desert convention in 1980.The Buckwheat Scholarship for students at California State University Northridge was established in his honor by his son Bill Thomas Jr. in 1992.
Eugene "Porky" Lee (Actor) .. Porky
Born: October 25, 1933
Died: October 16, 2005
John Collum (Actor) .. Student
Born: January 01, 1925
Died: January 01, 1962
Rosina Lawrence (Actor) .. Miss Jones
Born: January 01, 1914
Died: July 23, 1997
Trivia: A bruised knee led Rosina Lawrence to a brief but successful acting career with Hal Roach studios during the 1930s. Laurel and Hardy buffs may remember her for playing Mary Roberts in the comic duo's classic Western spoof Way Out West (1937), while those familiar with the Our Gang series of shorts may recognize her playing school teacher Miss Lawrence in the 1930s. Born Rosina Marchiso in Ontario, Canada, she moved to Hollywood with her family in the 1920s. Her father worked as a set builder and he sometimes allowed her to accompany him to work. When she was ten, Lawrence fell and badly bruised her knee. Her parents had her take dance lessons as physical therapy and it was while dancing that she was "discovered." As an actress, Lawrence debuted in Lady of Quality (1924). She subsequently spent a decade honing her performing skills, which included singing, vaudeville, and film roles. She worked with Fox studios for a while, appearing opposite such stars as Will Rogers and Spencer Tracy. She got her first real break, however, when an uncredited role in The Great Ziegfeld (1936) landed her a contract with Hal Roach studios. She first worked in the Our Gang shorts before teaming with Laurel and Hardy in the aforementioned film and in Pick a Star (1937). In 1939 Lawrence appeared in the Italian movie In Campagna è Caduta una Stella (In the Country Fell a Star) (1939) and then retired from acting. Lawrence died of cancer on June 23, 1997, in Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, at the age of 84.
Dudley Dickerson (Actor) .. Sam the Janitor
Born: November 27, 1906
Died: September 23, 1968
Trivia: Like most African-American performers of his generation, comic actor Dudley Dickerson played more than his fair share of Pullman porters, bell-boys, waiters, and shoe-shine boys. But from the late '30s until the mid-'50s, Dickerson was the most prominent black actor working in two-reel comedies. Contracted by Columbia's short subject department, the roly-poly supporting comic brought a refreshing energy to his portrayals of, yes, Pullman porters, shoe-shine boys, and the always demeaning "frightened Negro domestic." Closer in type to Mantan Moreland than Stepin Fetchit, Dickerson was especially good opposite Charley Chase in His Bridal Fright (1940) and the Three Stooges in A-Plumbing We Will Go (1940). Dickerson played a Pullman porter once again in his final film The Alligator People (1959), after which he concentrated on television work. The veteran comic died of cerebral thrombosis.

Before / After
-