Run Buddy Run (TV Series 1966–1967) Poster

(1966–1967)

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7/10
Excellent Spoof of the Organized Crime-type Gangster Film, with a little 'Reverse Polarity' of "THE FUGITIVE" tossed in, for good measure.(and Laughs, too!)
redryan644 April 2008
One good thing about the Movies and Television is there are so many different types of screen stories out there. We may see Westerns, Romances, Cops and Robbers, Bio-Pics, Historical, Musical, Adventure and any combination of two or more of these types. There is also another classification that we enjoy and that is the Gangster Picture.

SINCE the earliest of times of the Silver Screen this variety of shoot-em-up has captivated our collective fascination. From the earliest of the Silents like THE BLACK HAND (1906) up through the Age of the strictly visual medium's lifespan to the Sound Era we saw many films with Organized Crime themes.

With the coming of Sound and the "All Talking", "All Singing" and "All Boogalooing" movies. Sound was everything and the "Rat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat…….." of the Thompson Sub-Machine or 'Tommy Gun' soon was familiar to the American Movie-Going Public; indeed, as well as the rest of the World* We ere bombarded with such outstanding Gangster Fare as THE BIG HOUSE, LITTLE CEASAR, THE PUBLIC ENEMY, SCARFACE, THE PETRIFIED FOREST, MANHATTAN MELODRAMA, 20,000 YEARS IN SING-SING, DEAD END, ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES, THE ROARING TWENTIES and ROGER TOUHY GANGSTER.

In the 1950's, the Genre underwent a revival, due at least in part to the success of THE UNTOUCHABLES TV Series (Desilu/Langford Prod./ABC TV, 1959-63). We then saw a seemingly endless of parade of titles; leading right to the present day. Names we saw come along were the likes of: AL CAPONE (Rod Steiger), THE PURPLE GANG, THE ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE, CAPONE (Ben Gazarra), THE YAKUZA, THE BROTHERHOOD, THE GODFATHER, THE GODFATHER PART II, THE GODFATHER PART III, THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE, BUGSY, GOODFELLAS, DONNIE BRASCO, CASINO and most recently American GANGSTER with Denzel Washington.

We sure do love our Gangster Flix! And the one thing we like even more is Gangster Film Spoofs!

Both JOHNNY DANGEROUSLY and BUGSY MALONE were good examples of the theatrical cinematic film; as are ANALYZE THIS and the sequel, ANALYZE THAT. (We anxiously await ANALYZE VARIOUS OTHER THINGS, the working title.) #As for the old Tube, we saw a couple there too. One comes to mind is THE CHICAGO TEDDY BEARS (Warner Brothers/CBS Television, 1971) and the other is our honored guest of the day, the recipient of the award at today's "roast', RUN BUDDY RUN (Talent Associates/CBS Television, 1966-67). Neither lasted into a second season; but we preferred the BUDDY Saga and thought it deserved a better fate.

OUR STORY (At Long Last!)…………………….Main character Buddy Overstreet (Jack Sheldon) accidentally overhears some improper phrase, "Chicken Little", as uttered by some lower ranking Organized Crime member of "the Syndicate". Whatever the meaning, it caused a Nation-wide search and destroy mission seemingly on the part of every Gangster in the country! (The ones in the City, too!)

Week to week, we would see Buddy Overstreet on the go; relocating from one town to another burg, always managing to stay a jump ahead of the bad guys! The plot line was not serialized, but rather had a neat relationship with the other episodes; yet each stood on their own. The plot line would truly grow stale in short order if it hadn't been for the humor generated by some of the principal players; the first one being Jack Sheldon's Buddy Overstreet and the other is Mr. Bruce Gordon, by this time the grand old man of the TV Gangsters.

Acting as a sort of "Straight Man" to Buddy's comical bumbling (even though the two seldom shared the screen) it was Bruce Gordon who made the series what it was. He displayed a heretofore largely unknown sense of comic improvisation and timing. Who knows perhaps under other circumstances he would've been another Clarence Kolb or a Bud Abbott; arguably the best straight men of all time!

But the real element was this self-parodying of Gordon's "Frank Nitti characterization from hid days on THE UNTOUCHABLES. As this Nitti-variant addresses his Nationwide Criminal Enterprise via a super Closed Circuit Television Hook-Up. In all sorts of offices in establishments, underlings receive their instructions via TV screens; monitors hidden behind paintings, in back of mirrors, in drawers or in a tropical fish tank. And we can remember the Frank Nitti-like speech that Mr. Gordon made. Holding a photo of the wanted Buddy Overstreet up to the TV the Crime Chieftain states: "This is Buddy Overstreet; Male, 5'10", 160 lbs., brown hair, kinda cute!" The assignment was to get Buddy, dead not alive!

The premise was simple, but as we said before, very workable thanks to these principal players. The presentation and pacing of each week's story seemed very similar to another Talent Associates' production, GET SMART. Even the communications hook-up via the closed circuit TV was a ploy used by C.H.A.O.S. at least once or twice. Though meeting with a degree of success, the series had an uneasy life on the Network's bubble.

Bruce Gordon, whom we have met several times at Courts' Hollywood Collectibles Show here in Chicago, explained it like this: "The network executives had a meeting with the cast and crew in order to pledge their support to the series. Next thing we knew; we were canceled!" Treachery in Gangland, betrayal in Hollywood; it's just another case of "Life imitating Art!

NOTE * Our Dad, Clem Ryan (1914-74) was in the U.S. Navy during World War II; being stationed in Southampton, England, U.K. When some English kids near the base asked him, "Hey Yank, where're ya' from?" and he answered "Chicago"; the kid said "Oh yeah", then feigning having a Machine Gun in his hands, mimicked the "Ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah" sound. We still get that attitude about Chicago!
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8/10
Real Trivia
DKosty12329 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I had nearly forgotten about this show. It's run was so short that having 2 runs in the title is almost one more than there were shows.

Still the show was well produced and Jack Sheldon and Bruce Gordon were the perfect cast. The shows were funny, at least back when I saw them. I liked the show but there were so many good shows in 1966 that this one somehow got lost in the shuffle.

This is anti mob comedy that was right on the mark. Bruce Gordon was perfect casting as he always played mobsters well in other TV shows. This series was too good thanks to Leonard Stern and the production and casting. Hope the whole thing so-mes out on DVD. It does as well if not better than "Some Like It Hot" the classic Monroe film does with making fun of mobsters.
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8/10
Ice-cream trucks?
spectrum-157 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Was this the series where a lot of the guys chasing after the hero were in ice-cream trucks and getting their orders through close-circuit TVs in same? I remember being somewhat scared of the real ice-cream truck and the loud, jangling tune that it played over its tannoy speakers as a kid. I was always impressed with shows that were perceptive enough to also see through the ice-cream truck's innocent facade!

But perhaps I'm conflating this with the ice-cream truck in the "Man from U.N.C.L.E." episode "The Suburban Affair". It had smoke-bomb, grenade and black-jack Popsicles but I don't think that the bad guys there (T.H.R.U.S.H. - the Technical Hierarchy for the Removal of Undesirables and the Subjugation of Humanity) were advanced enough for video links with HQ, only audio from what we would now call cell-phones.
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Overlooked and funny. Would be a cult item today.
BobLib11 April 2004
Produced and written by Leonard Stern, associate producer of "Get Smart," "Run, Buddy, Run" had many similarities to "Smart" in that it combined crime and comedy in equal proportions, with the one never getting in the way of the other. It had two top-drawer character men, Jack Sheldon and Bruce Gordon, as the leads, and it had a good spot on the schedule. Just about everyone I know who saw it, myself included, enjoyed it.

Why, then, did it fail? There could be any number of reasons. The most likely of all, I think, was that too many shows with similar formats had established themselves by then, leaving "Buddy" with, literally, nowhere to run. Also, the somewhat offbeat premise didn't help much, either. Nowadays, such a show would have been given more time to build up an audience. In 1966, it was axed halfway through the season.

Pity, as this was one of the most creative, funny shows to emerge from the Golden Age of Sitcoms.
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6/10
One of many comic failures of the 1960s
theowinthrop13 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
A slightly better than average sit-com for it's period, RUN BUDDY RUN was a comic turn based on THE FUGITIVE. Instead of David Jannsen's Dr. Richard Kimble running from Barry Morse's Inspector Gerard on The Fugitive to clear himself of his wife's murder (and find the one armed man who did it), Buddy (Jack Sheldon) was running from the mob. In the opening episode we see that Buddy went into a steam room which was full of mobsters led by Bruce Gordon (an interesting choice: the actor who played Frank Nitti on THE UNTOUCHABLES, but here doing the part of mob boss for laughs). Buddy overhears a sinister plot involving "Chicken Little" and then is discovered by the others. He is chased out and he finds himself constantly in danger for the rest of the series.

It was amusing. In one episode he goes to a psychiatrist for help and the mob decides to make him look like a madman by not doing anything to him for awhile. The shrink actually convinces Buddy that he's been imagining everything, until at the conclusion the shrink witnesses the mobsters dropping their pretense and chasing their prey again.

My favorite moment of the show was Gordon's. In one episode he is having another high level dinner/meeting with his fellow capos. After discussing all sorts of skulduggery they are involved in, it's time to relax. One of his lieutenants says they have the motion picture room ready for the movies they'll show that night. Fine says Gordon, but nothing like LITTLE CAESAR please. It's too violent for his taste!

The show only lasted one season. It would be certainly worth a second glance.
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10/10
Total Comedy Genius
symfonichanson21 May 2019
When this excellent production was cancelled after a brief run, I was disappointed and angry. And yet another example of a bad-executive-decision. Jack Sheldon told this joke on a Bob Hope gig I was on: 'I wish Glenn Miller would have lived and his music would have died !' The whole band cracked up. Jack was funny, and so was this show, and it should have continued.
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It was fun
Doc Scot6 April 1999
I remember this show as fun and would like to see it again in syndication (since Buddy was running from the "Syndicate"). It is also somewhat timely in light of the activities of John Gotti and his son "Junior". It was a product of a more innocent time and was amusing without being vulgar or offensive. I really miss this type of creative entertainment.
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How Buddy Gets into Trouble
robacosta18 October 2005
The writer commented he could not remember if

Buddy overheard or witnessed something that got

him into trouble with the mob.

The answer is that while minding his own business in a sauna when some mob members come in and start

discussing a recent hit...unaware anyone else was there because of all the steam...

It was interesting noticing how the actor playing Buddy visibly lost weight during the course of its one season...from all the running I suppose...
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the power pills are from another show
jbrotychoorion16 February 2006
to the person who thought Buddy used power pills, I think you are recalling another show that was on CBS around the same time called Mr. Terrific. I think of both shows in the same breath as well. They had a similar look and sensibility about them. The scene I remember about this show, and I don't know why , is where Buddy ( who wasn't too smart) is working at a Coney island type snack bar. Hes being instructed on the art of selling frosty type ice cream cones.....when a little girl comes up and asks for a frosty....he goes to the frosty machine, swirls the ice cream onto the cone and hands it to girl, who says , "thank you ", and walks away......he asks the person training him how he did, and they say "great, except for one thing, you didn't get her money!"....as a kid, that struck me as funny......
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I have seen this recently
asajb200020 October 2006
I have a DVD of four episodes of this series and it's quite entertaining. Bernie Kopell plays Buddy Overstreet's brother Albert. He appeared in Get Smart as well playing the head of KAOS. Leonard Stern also produced Get Smart. More similarities: David Ketchum, who appeared in Get Smart, also appeared in Run, Buddy Run. The very first episode was executive-produced by David Susskind but other episodes I have did not list him. The pill-taking Superhero was either Captain Nice or Mr. Terrific. These shows also include the network id (CBS) but did not include the original commercials. My copies were done from 16mm film. According to some information I have, Jack Sheldon is a musician and got his start in show-business as a musician and his son also is a musician now. When watching this, it reminded me of the naiveté of Will Ferrell's character in "Elf" and Jack Sheldon looked a little like Will Ferrell in that movie. Buddy Overstreet appears to be a simpleton.
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Run was a short one?
brojabber16 February 2006
My memory of this show was that it was a vignette within another; i.e. it was a very short format that was used something like an intermission within another show.

But I do remember some of the words to the theme tune --went something like "Run Buddy Run" (what a whiz I am ;)and the Turkish bath scene does ring a bell--thanks for the memory-jog.

I must have got this idea from another show--does anyone remember what that might be? and keeping in mind I was only 6 at the time and watching in London, England it may well have been sandwiched between two episodes of the same show--which may well have been Get Smart.
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The Running Man circa 1966 comedy style.
yenlo24 August 2000
Buddy Overstreet witnesses or hears (can't remember which) some mob goings on and the syndicate boys begin chasing him to silence him. Each episode was about Buddy's on going attempts to elude the mob. It was a comedy and the show was short lived but had it's moments of hilarity. Where is it today? Who knows. It would be fun to see the few episodes again. Bruce Gordon who portrayed Frank Nitti on the Untouchables was cast once again as a mobster.
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Did Buddy Take Super Power Pills?
f18abcd14 December 2000
I remember a show from childhood in which the protagonist takes a huge pill and gets 20 or 30 seconds of super power, just enough to beat the bad guys. Was this show Run Buddy Run? (I can't imagine why I remember a show that only ran 16 episodes when I was 5.)
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looking for Run Buddy, run
xrated133200012 September 2008
I'm trying to find the complete 17 episodes of run buddy run..does anyone have it, or know where or how to acquire it?? Any help appreciated-

And for the person who wanted to know about the theme song it was a calm monologue by Jr. ( Mr. D's son), detailing how Buddy overheard the words "chicken little", and the orders given by the head of the Syndicate, My dad (Jr.s add his association to the plot). Then the scene flashes to Mr. D pounding fist to desk screaming " kill him, kill him, kill him!!" The Rest was instrumental, and no words to my recollection-

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Now to the webmaster for this site- why is it that if you type in capitals, you have to be screaming?? some of us no longer have the vision you younger people do.. And if you plan on blocking such, why don't you write that at the beginning, so a bad typer like me don't have to type everything twice??
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