(1964–1965)

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10/10
Shenanigans Clips!
tomlinski3 April 2009
Check it out! I just found this clip (and more) on YouTube! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eg6KV6xi4rk&feature=related Thanks to whoever posted these, I am somewhat obsessed with memories of Shenanigans, and reading this thread drove me to search for some clips.I too would love to have this on DVD! My favorite game was Pie in the Eye. I wanted to be on this show so bad, but was only 5-6 at the time and the contestants all seemed to be like 9-12. Saturday mornings were so fantastic when we could lounge around watching shows like Sky King and Lone Ranger with Ralph Williams commercials every 10 minutes. Then we had to go out and play (bummer!) Thanks for the memories!
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10/10
My Thoughts on "Shenanigans"
garry_hickman24 July 2008
I watched both Video Village and Shenanigans as a kid. I loved the concept of making the contestants the actual playing pieces, and loved the stunts.

Stubby Kaye was an excellent host, very enjoyable. The theme song and "exit" song were well done. I can still see him, as "Mayor" of the town, singing it as he walked away from the camera, turning back each time he sang the word "Shenanigans".

I really wish there was a full version on DVD of this show, but I've been told only 11 minutes of it survive. I'd appreciate it if, provided my information is incorrect in this, anyone could direct me to somewhere I could find recordings of this show.

Also wish I could get a "map" of all the spaces used on both shows.
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10/10
"Shenanigans" is Pure, Classic and FUN Nostalgia!
loufairfax-11 March 2009
Jonesy74-1 hit the nail on the head with the "Shenanighoul" (but it did look like a 'griffin' in a way), and scared the heebee-jeebies outta me, but it was fun watching the entire show. I appreciate all the comments, as they brought back some great memories of this to me, and was I was glued to the set for this show.

I can tell you that I've not seen anything on YouTube or anything on this, since I saw the show in 1964 and early 1965.

The numbers were all up on the wall, along with the letters of "S-H-E-N-A-N-I-G-A-N-S" and the numbers 1 through 6 were randomly below each of the letters. Random lights (a la "Press Your Luck") would flash very quickly in any spot until the 'presser' (could have been a parent of the contestant) would press the button to stop the light on a number, which would stay lighted, and that's how the player got to move to the selected spot.

I believe the "Shenanighoul" was about four or five spaces from the finish line, and if memory serves me right (doesn't seem like over 40 years ago), the first season only allowed the player to enter, if he/she landed on the spot. A short change in the show, later, blocked the player with an old "fence" coming out of the wall, in order to stop the player in moving any further, and the THUNDER would just make me jump!! I remember one young lady as a contestant just let out a short, but effective SCREAM! She'd go inside the wall where the Shenanighoul was waiting with two boxes (that music didn't help me, either - lol), and come out with either a good or bad prize.

All youngsters who earned Shenaniganzas would turn them in, at the end of the show to purchase their prizes.

I, too, would love a map of the actual TV game board!

The show was in color, and only where the "Shenanighoul" was, was in glorious black and white!
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Giant t.v. set acts as game board for kids
jonesy74-18 October 2005
Stubby Kaye... when the game show, "Shenanigans" first aired, it seemed like everyone knew who he was, but couldn't remember what he played in. It seems most today remember him as "Marryin' Sam" from "Little Abner," however, the performance that sticks out in my mind is, the guy who stole the show in "Guys and Dolls" who sang, "Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat." Speaking of singing, Kaye had a wonderful voice and began and ended the show each week with a song about the game show - "Shenanigans." It was catchy and got you to watch the show.

I owned the Milton Bradley board game of the show.

My recollection of the show includes a different boy and girl each week who would act as the playing pieces of a board game. How you got to advance, I'm not sure... spinning a wheel perhaps? They would advance through the squares performing various actions - one I remember in particular was called "Pie in the Eye" where they threw a pie into a big plastic eye that would open and close. You had to time it just right to get it into the hole, which was the eye's pupil. Also, there was something about reaching into a hole in the wall or something and identifying an item just by feeling it(?).

The game, 'Operation' came out of this show. The players played a life-size version of the game before the scaled down version was released.

The announcer, playing a role as a Keystone Cops-styled "Kenny the Cop," participated in the game, running commentary on the game action.

The last action that needed to be performed actually scared the bejeebers out of me. It seems to me (and correct me if I'm wrong) there was a haunted house at the end of the game and the players had to take something that was guarded by THE SHENANIGHOUL! (a guy in a suit, but a very SCARY suit to little kids like me). The Shenanighoul would protect the item that was sitting on a table or tree stump or something, while the kids would try to get it. It would hover around lurching, lunging and trying to nab the kids while they, in turn, tried to grab the item and run away. The show was over when they grabbed the object - they'd won, in other words.

For the time, this was a VERY creative show and it kept me coming back week after week.
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10/10
Great Game Show!
thelobe25 May 2010
It was quite obvious to me that 1964's "Shenanigans" was simply 1960's "Video Village" re-imagined for children. Both were Heater-Quigley productions where you had to navigate a town to get to the finish line. But with "Shenanigans," the writers had a field day creating the magical town. The currency you earned along the way were not dollars but "shenaniganzahs," and the "shenanighoul," while scary, would always 'steer' the child contestant into taking the 'better' of two boxes. Stubby Kaye was wonderful, and his hosting duty here led me to numerous viewings of "Cat Ballou," wherein he played a strolling balladeer alongside Nat King Cole. Now all we need is to find the three young towheaded boys who played the theme music for Joe Pyne's 1966 classic game show "Showdown!"
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9/10
Song Went Like This
shg102020038 December 2019
Shenanigans S H E N A N I G A N S Shenanigans

say the word then spell it out then repeat the word again
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7/10
A Fun Kids Game Show
hfan7724 July 2013
In 1964, Merrill Heatter and Bob Quigley revived their first game show Video Village by changing the title to Shenanigans and putting the show in ABC's Saturday morning kids line up.

Sponsored by Milton Bradley, the show featured two kids playing the role of pieces on a game board as the played versions of the sponsor's games and collected shenanaganzas to be redeemed for prizes.

I saw the show for the very first time on youtube.com and i thought it was a fun kids game show. Stubby Kaye, best known for his roles in the musical comedies Guys and Dolls and L'il Abner, did an outstanding job in hosting what would turn out to be his only game show. He brought a lot of energy and enthusiasm to the proceeding and more important, he had very good rapport with the young contestants. He also sang the show's theme song. It's a shame that any game show producer never offered him another hosting job. He would have also done well hosting an adult game show.

It was also one of the few times veteran Heatter-Quigley announcer Kenny Williams appeared on camera. He portrayed "Kenny the Cop" and added a lot to the show.

If you never seen or heard the show, view it on youtube. You'll have a shenanaganza.
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Shenanigans
cliffoa8 March 2005
One of my all time favorite shows when I was a kid. I was around 9 and it was the very top of entertainment! All of the prizes won by the kids playing were the very ones I'd dream about for the next Christmas season. I couldn't wait for the next Saturday! I loved watching TV on Saturday morning when I was a child and this show had a large impact on me. Strange how things that lasted a short time affect you...I remember thinking "Wow..what a tremendous star Stubby Kaye must be to be in Lil Abner!!" I suspect that if we could bottle what attracted us to this show when we were kids, maybe we wouldn't be rich but we'd be so much more happier. Any way...Bless all of ya'll (ya, I'm from Texas) that also enjoyed this show with me.
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A great game show that deserves another look
LudoRex25 February 2005
Shenanigans debuted with little fanfare on Saturday morning September 26, 1964. Two players, a girl and a boy, traversed a studio sized gameboard in a race to the finish line. Players moved the number of spaces designated by a flashing display that was stopped by yet another child whenever the host declared, "Ready, presser press!" Along the way, the children would be subject to random event and carnival-like stunts. Success was rewarded with prizes, such as harmonicas and record players, and play money called Shenaniganzas. Shenaniganzas could be redeemed for prizes in the first season but in the second season they could be redeemed for trading stamps when S&H became a sponsor.

The show was sponsored by Milton Bradley, the makers of the home version of the game. Each time the home game was mentioned, it was noted that the home game was "an exact duplicate" of the television show. That was a lie. The home game had fewer spaces and many of the activities from the series such as "Touch & Go" were missing.

After a successful first season, the show was renewed for a second season and the gameboard changed to add "Operation" and "Where's Willie?", two games added to Milton Bradley's catalog. To make sure these games received their due, the players were stopped in their tracks to play these new games.

The novelty had worn off and Shenanigans had its last broadcast on December 18, 1965. For the last time Stubby Kaye would lip synch, "...funny how the minutes seem to fly. Until next week it's time to say goodbye."
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A one-of-a-kind children's game show.
TheDog-23 July 1999
Stubby Kaye hosted this children's game show. The child contestants were the "game" pieces on a life size game board. A lot of action, and a lot of fun. Kaye was the perfect host with his large size and great smile.
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Great kids active/thinking game; too bad it's forgotten
larryn7523 July 2003
I LOVED this show (I was 5, nearly 6) and made my own home board version when I couldn't get it soon enough. It aired on ABC. Some of the major stops/spaces were Pie in the Eye, where you tried to cream a pie in between the opening/closing eyelids/lashes of a giant eye; Punchboard, where you punched in a large button to pick your question; and Haunted House, where you had to run inside and get something scary that turned out to be a prize. There were several other major spaces like that. Prizes were also Milton Bradley games, the sponsor (mostly); MB also had a home version of the game, of course. There were lots of spaces to land on along the (I think) squared-U shaped live board; all the events took places on a horizontal wall along the outer edge, something like an old-style midway wall. The theme song (didn't think about it at the time, but I bet Stubby sang it (not live)) began something like: *Shenanigans--Come on along and play Shenanigans--...* (??) For the life of me, tho, I donÔt recall how the players/tokens moved around the board (dice, spinner, etc.)
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