Wonderama
Wonderama is a children's television program that originally appeared on the Metromedia-owned stations from 1955 to 1977. The show was revived from 1980 to 1987, and again in 2017.
Hosts
- Al Hodge
- Jon Gnagy
- Sandy Becker
- Chuck McCann
- Pat Meikle
- Herb Sheldon
- Bill Britten
- Doris Faye
- Sonny Fox
- Bob McAllister
- various teenagers
- David Osmond
Original series
In the 1960s, Wonderama aired in a one-hour weekday version in addition to the three-hour Sunday show. The one-hour program lasted until 1970.
The show scaled back to two hours in 1977 before WNEW canceled it in December of that year. The last produced show was taped December 21 before airing on December 25. In an interview on WNEW's local talk show Midday with Bill Boggs on the day of Wonderama's cancellation, host Bob McAllister claimed to have no idea why the show ended. However, in a 1990s interview with the Southern California interview show Remember When, McAllister stated that an advertisement that he bought in The New York Times telling viewers to stop watching Wonderama might have led to the program's cancellation. McAllister bought the Times ad after he became upset when an ad for the 1972 Charles Bronson movie The Mechanic aired during the show.
After its cancellation, Wonderama continued in two-hour Sunday morning reruns from January 1978 to June 1980. McAllister reportedly was unhappy with edits to the reruns, which usually eliminated celebrity performances in order to avoid having to pay royalties.
The Sonny Fox years
Independent television network Metromedia hired Fox to host Wonderama on its New York flagship station, WABD, succeeding the team of Bill Britten and Doris Faye. Hiring Fox ended what some called the "musical-hosts syndrome" that Wonderama had for its first few years. Fox became Wonderama's sole host for eight years, until August 1967.Suave, witty, and congenial, Fox juggled the slapstick and the serious, turning the marathon Wonderama into a weekly academy at which anything could happen and often did; whether Shakespearean dramatizations, guest celebrities, magic demonstrations, art instruction, spelling bees, learning games, or other elements.
Fox was deft at turning a potential haphazard hodgepodge into a seamless whole, and he was consistent in never talking down to his young guests or viewers, treating them with legitimate respect and tolerance. The result was that Wonderama was rarely if ever known to have bored either the children who appeared on the show or those who watched it.
For a few years it seemed Fox owned children's weekend television in the New York metropolitan area. In the same year he joined Wonderama, he reached back to the "color war" team competitions he knew as a child in summer camp to create and host Just For Fun, a two-and-a-half hour Saturday morning show involving two teams of kids in blue and gold jumpsuits to compete in contests ranging from the mildly athletic to the wildly bizarre. One mainstay was the Treasure Chest competition where one contestant from each team would be placed in front of a locked chest and 1,000 keys. When the winner found the key to open his or her chest, a siren would sound, and whatever was happening at the time was interrupted. The winner would stand with arms outstretched and a towering pile of board games and toys would be placed in his or her arms.
During this time, Fox made countless personal appearances throughout the New York metropolitan area. The Wonderama show was featured at the Hollywood Arena at the Freedomland U.S.A. theme park in The Bronx. Several shows at Freedomland were filmed and broadcast on the following Sunday mornings. Fox' memories about his appearances at the theme park are captured in Freedomland U.S.A.: The Definitive History.
Fox also hosted ABC's first original Saturday morning program, On Your Mark, a game show in which children ages 9 through 13 answered questions about various professions. On Your Mark lasted one season, but the lively Just For Fun lasted until 1965.
Fox has since become an Emmy award-winning producer of his Broadway Songwriters Series, has his own website, and has a "Wonderama with Sonny Fox" Facebook group hosted by Randy Bucknoff, who is both administrator of the group and of Fox's website.
Fox recently met with President Obama in Washington D.C. at an event in the Israeli Embassy.
The Bob McAllister years
Following the frequent turnover of hosts throughout the 1950s, Wonderama experienced its greatest viewership by way of one-time Baltimore kids' show host Bob McAllister, who replaced Sonny Fox as host in 1967 and remained in that role until 1977. Each show's taping included education, music, audience participation, games, interviews, and cartoon shorts.The program aired for three hours, including several breaks to allow for cartoon insertions. On most of Metromedia's stations, these would be Warner Bros. cartoons from the 1940s and 1950s. On KMBC in Kansas City, an ABC affiliate, the show only ran two hours without the cartoon inserts.
The program's closing theme song, sung by McAllister, was called "Kids Are People Too", which was later adapted as the show's title when ABC picked it up as a Sunday morning kids show. The song was also featured on an album of music from Wonderama by McAllister called Oh, Gee, it's Great to be a Kid.
Features
Popular features of Wonderama during the McAllister years included the following:- "Snake Cans": the classic game in which Bob would pick kids from the audience one by one to open one of ten cans, nine of which were filled with spring-loaded "snakes". The tenth one contained an artificial flower bouquet, which earned the holder the grand prize, along with other prizes for answering trivia questions.
- "Wonderama A Go-Go" : a dance contest similar in style to American Bandstand, in which the best dancer won a prize. After it was renamed "Disco City", each contestant did his or her own dance to the same record; the record was introduced at the beginning of the segment by The Disco Kid, a boy dressed in a costume reminiscent of The Lone Ranger. Originally, The Disco Kid's theme was a loop of the chorus from The Raspberries' "Overnight Sensation", but this was later replaced with the song "Ride On, Disco Kid".
- "Does Anybody Here Have an Aardvark?": a song which Bob sang before a segment asking members of the audience to produce unusual objects for prizes. This usually occurred at the beginning of the show.
- "Exercise, Exercise!": this most often included jumping jacks and three-way burpees, involving all the kids in the audience. The segment had its own theme song.
- "Good News": audience members were selected to read "good" news items from around the country before McAllister sang a song:
- "Guess Your Best": a game show segment in which three contestants made predictions of the outcome of audience polls and relay races. McAllister hosted the game, using the pseudonym Bert Beautiful.
- "Eye Spy" : A masquerade game, in which five pre-selected kids, all pretending to be the same person and all wearing the same type of costume, were ushered on stage, and an audience member was selected to figure out which one was the actual person.
- "Whose is Whose is Whose": contestants were introduced to four children and four adults, and had to guess which adult was which child's father. To help, the children and parents were sometimes asked to do things such as jump up in the air. McAllister adopted a silly pseudonym for this segment as well, calling himself either Chuck Chuckles or Chuck Roast.
- "Head Of The House": selected kids took part in a series of quirky competitions, including gerbil races, balloon-breaking contests, and so forth. The child who won the most events or scored the most points was crowned the Head of the House.
Parting gifts
- A Lactona toothbrush
- An issue of Dynamite Magazine or Golden Magazine
- A supply of Good Humor ice cream
- A box of Hostess Twinkies
- A 6-pack of RC Cola
- A Goo Goo Cluster candy bar
- A tube of Hold! cough lozenges
- A package of Fruit Stripe Gum
- A gift certificate for Burger King or McDonald's
- Nandy Candy, a chocolate bar containing fruit
- A pack of Lender's Bagelettes; each child also got a necklace made from a real, shellacked Lenders Bagelette, which had either their name or their last initial painted on it
- A 45 rpm record of one of the music artists who had performed on the Wonderama episode that week
- Harvey Comics comic books
Guests
- Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes
- The Sylvers
- ABBA
- Jerry Lewis
- Jodie Foster
- Van Halen
- Neil Sedaka
- Roger Daltrey
- David Cassidy
- Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier: in a build-up to their rematch bout, Ali and Frazier appeared in January 1974, competing in a game of marbles.
- José Feliciano
- The Jackson 5
- Monty Python
- The Amazing Randi
- DeForest Kelley
- Leif Garrett
- Soupy Sales
- Billy Crystal
- Wolfman Jack
- Lena Zavaroni
- Eddie Money
- Evel Knievel
- The Bay City Rollers
- Ann B. Davis
- Rosey Grier
- Doug Henning
- Gladys Knight & The Pips
- Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five
- Melba Moore
- Don McLean
- Richard Rodgers
- Maria Von Trapp
- Marvin Hamlisch
- Penny Marshall
- Cindy Williams
- Will Geer
- Tracy Austin
- Johnny Bench
- Reggie Jackson
- Walt Frazier
- Don Newcombe
- the cast of Annie
- Scott Baio
- Donovan
- Eddie Kendricks
- Van McCoy
- Tavares
- Kenny Rankin
- Abraham Beame
- Sam Savitt
- Lee Salk
- Henry Heimlich
- David Essex
- The Hues Corporation
- Joanne Worley
- Joe Raposo
- Jacques Cousteau
- Sister Sledge
- Paul Williams
- Burt Bacharach
- Melissa Manchester
- Kiki Dee
- Billy Preston
- Ray Stevens
- Bob Keeshan
- Harry Chapin
- Pearl Bailey
- Dick Van Dyke
- The cast of Grease
- The Muppets
- Jim Henson
- Tim Moore
- Rodney Dangerfield
- George Barris
- Al Flosso
- Ann Reinking
- Dick Clark
- Don Most
- Colonel Sanders
- Mark Wilson
- Arthur Ashe
- Billie Jean King
- Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus
- Marcel Marceau
- Vanilla Fudge
1980 revival
2017 revival
A new version of Wonderama, hosted by David Osmond, debuted on WPIX-TV in New York with special on December 25, 2016, followed by a national rollout on Tribune Broadcasting stations on January 8, 2017.Fans of the original may recall the popular "Snake in a Can" game alongside new show elements including "Wonder-mojis," "Cool Science" and "DJ Dance Emergency" featuring DJs Coco and Breezy.
Season 1 featured 16 Episodes