The Little Rascals: When the Wind Blows


01:28 am - 01:50 am, Wednesday, December 3 on WJLP MeTV+ (33.8)

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About this Broadcast
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When the Wind Blows

Season 8, Episode 9

Edgar Kennedy as a bumbling cop who unwittingly abets a burglary.

repeat 2014 English
Comedy Valentines Day

Cast & Crew
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Jackie Cooper (Actor) .. Jack
Bobby "Wheezer" Hutchins (Actor) .. Wheezer
Farina Hoskins (Actor) .. Farina
Mary Ann Jackson (Actor) .. Mary
Norman 'Chubby' Chaney (Actor) .. Chubby
Pete the Pup (Actor) .. Himself
Edgar Kennedy (Actor) .. Kennedy the Cop
Charles McAvoy (Actor) .. Henry (Jack's Father)
Mary Gordon (Actor) .. Chubby's Mother
Chet Brandenburg (Actor) .. Man in Shirtsleeves

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jackie Cooper (Actor) .. Jack
Born: September 15, 1922
Died: May 03, 2011
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: American actor Jackie Cooper was in movies at the age of three; his father had abandoned the family when Jackie was two, forcing his mother to rely upon the boy's acting income to keep food on the table. Shortly after earning his first featured part in Fox Movietone Follies of 1929. Cooper was hired for producer Hal Roach's "Our Gang" two-reeler series, appearing in 15 shorts over the next two years. The "leading man" in many of these comedies, he was most effective in those scenes wherein he displayed a crush on his new teacher, the beauteous Miss Crabtree. On the strength of "Our Gang," Paramount Pictures signed Cooper for the title role in the feature film Skippy (1931), which earned the boy an Oscar nomination. A contract with MGM followed, and for the next five years Cooper was frequently co-starred with blustery character player Wallace Beery. Cooper outgrew his preteen cuteness by the late 1930s, and was forced to accept whatever work that came along, enjoying the occasional plum role in such films as The Return of Frank James (1940) and What a Life! (1941). His priorities rearranged by his wartime Naval service, Cooper returned to the states determined to stop being a mere "personality" and to truly learn to be an actor. This he did on Broadway and television, notably as the star of two popular TV sitcoms of the 1950s, The People's Choice and Hennessey. Cooper developed a taste for directing during this period (he would earn an Emmy for his directorial work on M*A*S*H in 1973), and also devoted much of his time in the 1960s to the production end of the business; in 1965 he was appointed vice-president in charge of production at Screen Gems, the TV subsidiary of Columbia Pictures. From the early 1970s onward, Cooper juggled acting, producing and directing with equal aplomb. Modern audiences know Cooper best as the apoplectic Perry White in the Christopher Reeve Superman films. In 1981, Cooper surprised (and sometimes shocked) his fans with a warts-and-all autobiography, Please Don't Shoot My Dog. Cooper died in May 2011 at the age of 88 following a sudden illness.
Bobby "Wheezer" Hutchins (Actor) .. Wheezer
Farina Hoskins (Actor) .. Farina
Born: August 09, 1920
Died: July 26, 1980
Trivia: Named after a breakfast cereal, Farina Hoskins (born Allen Clayton Hoskins) was reportedly discovered by Our Gang veteran Ernie Morrison, who recommended the African-American child actor to Hal Roach. Hoskins made his Gang debut in 1922 and remained with the team until 1931, setting an all-time Our Gang record by appearing in a total of 106 comedies. In the early years, the boy's true gender was inexplicably disguised by his wearing a dress and sporting a rather feminine cornrow hairstyle. Hoskin's sister, Jannie, who played the recurring role of Mango in the series, reportedly stood in for her brother on occasion. As the series progressed, however, Hoskins' attire became increasingly masculine. Always a favorite of Hal Roach himself, Hoskins eventually suffered the same fate as his predecessors, "old age." But he returned, along with Mary Kornman, Mickey Daniels, and Joe Cobb for an encore in 1933's Fish Hookey. There were a couple of non-Our Gang shorts as well, including a Voice of Hollywood series entry in which he was the emcee, but Hoskins' screen appearances effectively ended with a bit in Jean Harlow's Reckless (1935). After serving two tours of duty during World War II, the former child star studied acting on the G.I. Bill but was unable to find work -- even with Hal Roach. Reportedly somewhat disillusioned, he left Hollywood in favor of Northern California, where he raised a family of six and found employment as a social worker.
Mary Ann Jackson (Actor) .. Mary
Born: January 14, 1923
Norman 'Chubby' Chaney (Actor) .. Chubby
Born: January 18, 1918
Died: May 29, 1936
Trivia: Twenty thousand boys had reportedly entered the contest to replace Joe Cobb as Our Gang's resident fat kid. The year was 1929, and clocking in at 113 pounds, Baltimore's Norman "Chubby" Chaney emerged as the winner. Unlike Cobb, whose weight always remained somewhat proportional, the shorter Chaney was plain obese, and even worse, seemed to resent that fact. The screenwriters at Hal Roach Studios didn't help matters by constantly casting him as a hopelessly lovesick would-be Lothario. He made 18 shorts before his ever-increasing weight made him a target of pity rather than mirth. Completely retiring from show business in 1932, Chaney, whose weight eventually escalated to a life-threatening 300 pounds, passed away four years later from the glandular condition that had caused his obesity in the first place.
Pete the Pup (Actor) .. Himself
Edgar Kennedy (Actor) .. Kennedy the Cop
Born: April 26, 1890
Died: November 09, 1948
Trivia: American comic actor Edgar Kennedy left home in his teens, smitten with the urge to see the world. He worked a number of manual labor jobs and sang in touring musical shows before returning to his native California in 1912 to break into the infant movie industry. Hired by Mack Sennett in 1914, Kennedy played innumerable roles in the Keystone comedies. He would later claim to be one of the original Keystone Kops, but his specialty during this period was portraying mustache-twirling villains. By the early 1920s, Kennedys screen image had mellowed; now he most often played detectives or middle-aged husbands. He joined Hal Roach Studios in 1928, where he did some of his best early work: co-starring with Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chase and Our Gang; directing two-reelers under the stage name E. Livingston Kennedy; and receiving top billing in one of Roach's most enduring comedies, A Pair of Tights (1928). Kennedy was dropped from the Roach payroll in a 1930 economy drive, but he'd already made a satisfactory talkie debut -- even though he'd had to lower his voice to his more familiar gravelly growl after it was discovered that his natural voice sounded high-pitched and effeminate. During his Roach stay, Kennedy developed his stock-in-trade "slow burn," wherein he'd confront a bad situation or personal humiliation by glowering at the camera, pausing, then slowly rubbing his hand over his face. In 1931, Kennedy was hired by RKO studios to star in a series of two-reelers, unofficially titled "Mr. Average Man." These films, precursors to the many TV sitcoms of the 1950s, cast Kennedy as head of a maddening household consisting of his dizzy wife (usually Florence Lake, sister of Arthur "Dagwood" Lake), nagging mother-in-law and lazy brother-in-law. Kennedy made six of these shorts per year for the next 17 years, taking time out to contribute memorable supporting roles in such film classics as Duck Soup (1933), San Francisco (1936), A Star Is Born (1937) and Anchors Aweigh (1944). Some of Kennedy's most rewarding movie assignments came late in his career: the "hidden killer" in one of the Falcon B mysteries, the poetic bartender in Harold Lloyd's Sin of Harold Diddlebock (1946), and the classical music-loving private detective in Unfaithfully Yours (1948), which like Diddlebock was directed by Preston Sturges. On November 9, 1948, shortly after completing his 103rd "Average Man" two-reeler and 36 hours before a Hollywood testimonial dinner was to be held in his honor, Kennedy died of throat cancer; his last film appearance as Doris Day's Uncle Charlie in My Dream is Yours (1949) was released posthumously.
Charles McAvoy (Actor) .. Henry (Jack's Father)
Born: January 01, 1884
Died: January 01, 1953
Mary Gordon (Actor) .. Chubby's Mother
Born: May 16, 1882
Died: August 23, 1963
Trivia: Diminutive Scottish stage and screen actress Mary Gordon was seemingly placed on this earth to play care-worn mothers, charwomen and housekeepers. In films from the silent area (watch for her towards the end of the 1928 Joan Crawford feature Our Dancing Daughters), Gordon played roles ranging from silent one-scene bits to full-featured support. She frequently acted with Laurel and Hardy, most prominently as the stern Scots innkeeper Mrs. Bickerdyke in 1935's Bonnie Scotland. Gordon was also a favorite of director John Ford, portraying Irish, Scottish, Welsh and Englishwomen with equal aplomb (and sometimes with the same accent). She was the screen mother of actors as diverse as Jimmy Cagney, Leo Gorcey and Lou Costello; she parodied this grey-haired matriarch image in Olsen and Johnson's See My Lawyer (1945), wherein her tearful court testimony on behalf of her son (Ed Brophy) is accompanied by a live violinist. Mary Gordon is most fondly remembered by film buffs for her recurring role as housekeeper Mrs. Hudson in the Sherlock Holmes films of 1939-46 starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, a role she carried over to the Holmes radio series of the '40s.
Chet Brandenburg (Actor) .. Man in Shirtsleeves
Born: October 15, 1897
Died: July 17, 1974

Before / After
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