Clarabell the Clown Dies at 84
 
Lew Anderson, who captivated young baby boomers as
the Howdy Doody Show's final Clarabell the Clown, died at the age
of 84 May 17, 2006.
 
The musician and actor died Sunday in Hawthorne of complications of
prostate cancer, said his son, Christopher Anderson.
 
Long mute as Clarabell, Anderson broke the clown's silence in the
show's final episode in 1960. With trembling lips and a visible tear
in his eye, he spoke the show's final words: "Goodbye, kids."
 
Though Anderson was not the only man to play "Buffalo Bob" Smith's
mute sidekick, he was the best, Smith said in his memoir.
 
With the Peanut Gallery looking on, Anderson used bicycle horns to
give yes and no answers. For more expressive moments, he wielded a
bottle of seltzer.
 
The show, which launched in 1947 when televisions were still a
novelty, was the first network weekday children's show. Anderson
joined "Doodyville," a circus town peopled with puppets and human
actors and watched by a Peanut Gallery of kids, in the mid 1950's.
 
Though his fame as Clarabell followed him throughout his life,
Anderson was also a success as a musician and bandleader. In recent
years, his All-American Big Band appeared on Friday nights at New
York's Birdland jazz club.
 
Anderson was born in 1922 in Kirkman, Iowa. He started a band while
serving in the Navy during World War II and later toured the Midwest
with bands before landing in New York.
 
It was when he joined the Honey Dreamers, a singing group that
appeared on radio and early television shows, that he met Smith and
became a clown
 
"Clarabell just fell into his lap," said his stepdaughter, Lorie George.
Anderson followed Bobby Nicholson, who later played Doodyville's J.
Cornelius Cobb, into the role. The first to play the mute clown was
Bob Keeshan, who later became known as Captain Kangaroo.
 
Anderson, who lived in South Salem, is survived by his wife, Peggy,
two sons, his stepdaughter and five grandchildren. (AP)
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