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A photo of  "Buffalo Bob Smith"   Host of The Howdy Doody Show

"Buffalo Bob Smith" Host of The Howdy Doody Show 1917 - 1998

Buffalo Bob Smith of Flat Rock, Henderson County, North Carolina United States was born on November 27, 1917 in Buffalo, Erie County, NY. He was married to Mildred Carolyn Metz Smith on November 28, 1940, and they were together until Buffalo Bob's death on July 30, 1998. Buffalo Bob Smith had children Ronald Smith, Christopher Smith, and Robin Smith.
Buffalo Bob Smith
Robert Emil Schmidt - at birth only
Flat Rock, Henderson County, North Carolina United States
November 27, 1917
Buffalo, Erie County, New York, United States
July 30, 1998
Flat Rock, NC
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Buffalo Bob Smith's History: 1917 - 1998

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  • Introduction

    About Robert Emil Schmidt, nicknamed Buffalo Bob, was an American radio and television personality and presenter; he was well-known as the host of the children's show Howdy Doody. Born: November 27, 1917, Buffalo, NY Died: July 30, 1998 (age 80 years), Hendersonville, NC Children: 3 Place of burial: Pinecrest ARP Church, Flat Rock, NC Spouse: Mildred Metz (m. 1940–1998) Feedback
  • 11/27
    1917

    Birthday

    November 27, 1917
    Birthdate
    Buffalo, Erie County, New York United States
    Birthplace
  • Personal Life & Family

    Television, Radio
  • 07/30
    1998

    Death

    July 30, 1998
    Death date
    Heart attack
    Cause of death
    Flat Rock, NC
    Death location
  • Obituary

    Buffalo Bob Smith, 'Howdy Doody' Creator, Is Dead at 80 By Richard Severo July 31, 1998 Buffalo Bob Smith, a singing piano player, and chatty radio disk jockey who created Howdy Doody and then teamed up with the puppet on one of early television's most enduring children's shows, died of cancer yesterday at a hospital near his home in Flat Rock, N.C. Mr. Smith was 80. ''Say, kids, what time is it?'' Buffalo Bob would ask his Peanut Gallery of children ages 3 to 8, gathered in an NBC studio at 30 Rockefeller Plaza every afternoon, five days a week, in the late 1940s and 1950s. ''It's Howdy Doody time,'' they'd respond with the lung power that only children of that age can demonstrate. And then they'd sing their Howdy Doody theme song, set to the tune of ''Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay:'' It's Howdy Doody time, It's Howdy Doody time. Bob Smith and Howdy, too, Say 'howdy doo' to you. Let's give a rousing cheer, 'Cause Howdy Doody's here. It's time to start the show, So, kids, let's go! ''Howdy Doody'' was the first daily show NBC produced in color and the first to have live music. For many years in the 1950s, Buffalo Bob and Howdy were on Monday to Friday at 5:30 P.M. After the theme, they'd be joined for an hour by their friends, some human, some made of wood. These included Clarabell the Clown, human (he said nary a word but hopped around honking a Harpo Marx-type horn to signal yes or no and spraying Buffalo Bob with a bottle of seltzer); Chief Thunderthud, the human, official representative of the Ooragnak Indians (Ooragnak was kangaroo spelled backward); Princess Summerfall Winterspring (she began as a puppet, then was transformed into a human because Buffalo Bob, who hired the actress Judy Tyler, wanted something beautiful and life-sized for girls to identify with and Ms. Tyler was all of that); and such puppets as Phineas T. Bluster, the always grumpy but never evil mayor of Doodyville; his Latin and Anglo brothers, Don Jose Bluster and Hector Hamhock Bluster, and Flub-a-Dub, a meatball-eating wild animal made up of eight different animals that Buffalo Bob claimed he had caught in a jungle in South America. There was also a machine of sorts, a Super Talkscope, that enabled Buffalo Bob and Howdy to instantly see what was going on any place in the world, any time they wanted to. There were songs, too, one of which was ''Iggly Wiggly Spaghetti,'' a big hit with the Gallery. Mr. Smith was a big man with an easy smile who almost always wore a fringed cowboy outfit. At first, Howdy called him ''Mr. Smith,'' but as the years progressed, he became known to one and all as Buffalo Bob, a name that had nothing to do with the Wild West but instead with his hometown in upstate New York. Howdy started as an unprepossessing piece of wood in 1947 after Mr. Smith talked NBC into letting him do a children's show. He grew out of a character Mr. Smith had created on his radio quiz show, ''The Triple B Ranch,'' a bumpkin called Elmer, who opened the show with a ''howdy doody.'' His audiences soon came to call the puppet Howdy Doody. That first Howdy was quickly retired when NBC and Mr. Smith got into a dispute with Frank Paris, the puppet-maker, who declared that Howdy would forever be his property. Nobody else's the creative fortunes of Buffalo Bob and his writer notwithstanding. Mr. Smith then found Velma Dawson, the artist who refined Howdy into a 27-inch-tall boy with prominent ears who wore jeans, a bandanna, and a checked shirt. He had 48 freckles, one for each state. His delivery sounded suspiciously like Mortimer Snerd, a dummy hayseed created on the radio by the ventriloquist Edgar Bergen for the madcap top-hatted wiseacre Charlie McCarthy. The second Howdy was so successful that Mr. Smith commissioned a stand-in, whom he called Double Doody, and a third puppet with no strings attached who posed for photos. He was called Photo Doody. But Buffalo Bob was neither a ventriloquist nor a puppeteer and never tried to engage in the kinds of pungent exchanges between Mr. Bergen and Charlie McCarthy. Professional puppeteers off-camera manipulated Howdy's movements whenever he and Mr. Smith had a conversation. Mr. Smith prerecorded all of Howdy's responses, and when they were on television, the exchanges between Buffalo Bob and Howdy were all controlled by an engineer. He put his finger on the record and stopped the turntable when Mr. Smith was talking, then took his finger off and let the turntable roll when it was Howdy's turn. As he was developed by the writer Eddie Kean, Howdy was neither excruciatingly thick like Mortimer nor wickedly and unredeemably sophisticated like Charlie. Howdy was somehow direct without being intrusive, friendly, and supportive of Buffalo Bob without becoming dull to the Peanut Gallery. ''The character of Howdy Doody was a sissy,'' said Mr. Kean on one occasion. ''He was me as a child. I have always preferred studying to playing baseball. I never hit anybody. No one ever hit me. He was the dullest character on the show. No offense to Bob, but he was because I made him so.'' The first Clarabell was Bob Keeshan, who became Captain Kangaroo. Clarabell never had a line to say until the show went off the air (after 2,343 performances) on Sept. 30, 1960, when he looked into the camera and said, and wistfully, ''Goodbye, kids.'' Buffalo Bob moved to Florida, bought three radio stations and a liquor store, and thought he was out of the Howdy Doody business. But it was not to be. It could never be a permanent goodbye for the youngsters who grew up watching Buffalo Bob, then went off to serve in the war in Vietnam or to oppose it. After the tumult of the 1960s, they felt they needed to return to simpler times. A Howdy Doody revival started at the University of Pennsylvania in 1970. Someone asked students there what they would like to do most of all, and many of them said they would like to revisit the world of Howdy Doody. On Feb. 14, 1970, Buffalo Bob and Howdy showed up at Penn and served as hosts for a repeat of Howdy's 10th-anniversary show of Dec. 28, 1957. They were a hit, and Buffalo Bob never stopped being Buffalo Bob after that. Buffalo Bob Smith was born Robert Schmidt on Nov. 27, 1917, in Buffalo, N.Y., the son of Emil H. Schmidt and Emma Kuehn Schmidt. For years, Mr. Schmidt had earned his keep as a coal miner in Illinois. One day, there was a cave-in, and Mr. Schmidt was one of only three miners to survive. At his wife's suggestion, he left the mines and moved his family to Buffalo, where he became a carpenter. Young Bob was encouraged to learn to play the piano and organ. By age 15, he was singing on a Buffalo radio station. He formed a three-man vocal group called the Hi-Hatters. One member of the Hi-Hatters was Foster Brooks, who later became famous as the drunk and frequently appeared on Dean Martin's television program in the 1970s. After several years of making his way on upstate New York radio, he moved to New York City in August 1947 and got a job as a disk jockey on radio station WEAF, then owned by the National Broadcasting Co. Early in his career, he changed his name to Robert E. Smith. By 1947, Mr. Smith had a Saturday morning quiz show for kids. The ''Howdy Doody'' show started that same year, first on Saturdays, then on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, and finally, five times a week. It was successful from the very beginning. ''Howdy Doody'' was so popular that people gathered in the streets before appliance store windows to watch it, as they did with baseball games and wrestling matches. Howdy's popularity was what it was, and it was announced in 1948 that he would run for president of all the boys and girls. Harry S. Truman was also running that year and won the election over New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey. But Howdy did get a great many votes, becoming president of the boys and girls. All was not trouble-free, however. In 1949, Mr. Smith ran afoul of NBC executives when, during his early morning talk show, he announced that a spaceship had landed in Virginia and contained the bodies of Liliputian-like men attired in 15th-century outfits. He read it as though it had come from the wires of United Press, and although it did not cause the alarm of Orson Welles's ''Martian invasion'' of 1938, it frightened many people, especially those living in Virginia. NBC told him never to do anything like that again. In 1954, Mr. Smith suffered a heart attack, and for a time, he did the show from a studio built in the basement of his home in Mount Vernon, N.Y. He returned to the NBC studio in 1955. Mr. Smith is survived by his wife, Mildred, to whom he was married for 57 years; three sons, Robin, Ronald and Christopher, three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. None of his sons went into show business.
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3 Memories, Stories & Photos about Buffalo Bob

 "Buffalo Bob Smith"   Host of The Howdy Doody Show
"Buffalo Bob Smith" Host of The Howdy Doody Show
Buffalo Bob and Ron Howard.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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 "Buffalo Bob Smith" and Howdy Doody.
"Buffalo Bob Smith" and Howdy Doody.
Host of The Howdy Doody Show.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Buffalo Bob & Howdy Doody
Buffalo Bob & Howdy Doody
Buffalo Bob Smith and Howdy Doody - the Howdy Doody Show was a staple of the 1950's. What time is it kids? It's Howdy Doody time!

The Peanut Gallery, Clarabelle, J. Corny Cobb, Chief Thunderthud (Kowabonga!), Princess Summerfall Winterspring . . . so many memories!
Date & Place: in USA
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Buffalo Bob Smith's Family Tree & Friends

Buffalo Bob Smith's Family Tree

Parent
Parent
Partner
Child
Sibling
Marriage

Mildred Carolyn Metz Smith

&

"Buffalo Bob Smith" Host of The Howdy Doody Show

November 28, 1940
Marriage date
Buffalo Bob's Death
Cause of Separation
July 30, 1998
Buffalo Bob's death date
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Friendships

Buffalo Bob's Friends

Friends of Buffalo Bob Friends can be as close as family. Add Buffalo Bob's family friends, and his friends from childhood through adulthood.
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2 Followers & Sources
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