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Wikipedia

Bill Jackson (television personality)

Bill Ray Jackson (September 15, 1935 – January 17, 2022) was an American television personality, cartoonist, and educator. He was best known for having hosted the children's programs The BJ and Dirty Dragon Show and Gigglesnort Hotel.[1]

Bill Jackson
Jackson greets viewers at a personal appearance at a Chicago area mall, 1969.
Born
Bill Ray Jackson

(1935-09-15)September 15, 1935
DiedJanuary 17, 2022(2022-01-17) (aged 86)
SpouseJo
Career
Show
  • Popeye and Little Rascals' Club
  • Mickey Mouse Club (local-Indianapolis)
  • The Bill Jackson Show
  • Clown Alley
  • Here Comes Freckles
  • Cartoon Town
  • The BJ and Dirty Dragon Show
  • BJ's Bunch
  • Gigglesnort Hotel
  • Firehouse Follies
Stations

Early life and career edit

Jackson was born in Unionville, Missouri.[2] His father worked with a traveling carnival. He said he was very influenced by both comic strips and comic books, with Li'l Abner and Donald Duck being his favorites.[3] Jackson graduated from the University of Missouri's school of journalism with a degree in television production in 1957, but did not get interested in puppetry until later.[1][3]

His first broadcasting job was at KTVO in Ottumwa, Iowa, where he was a weatherman, copywriter and the station's art director. After a year at the station, Jackson joined the Army and was assigned to the Armed Forces Network in Hollywood. It was there that he created his first puppets.[4]

His earliest appearance in children's television was in 1960 when he hosted a program in Fort Wayne, Indiana, called the Popeye and Little Rascals Club; this was broadcast for two years. The show was such a success that he moved on to Indianapolis for another three years with the Mickey Mouse Club on WLWI (now WTHR), later renamed The Bill Jackson Show, where he created his most enduring character, Dirty Dragon, based on a friend in Indianapolis.[3]

Chicago edit

Jackson's work attracted the attention of WBBM-TV in Chicago, which gave him a program in 1965, known variously as Clown Alley (weekday version) or Here Comes Freckles (Sunday morning version). This show broadcast for two seasons. Jackson played the title character, Freckles the Clown; although many of the puppet characters continued to appear on later series, Jackson usually played himself (or "B.J.", as his puppet co-stars called him) throughout the remainder of his career.[1][5][6]

Jackson was then hired by another Chicago station, the then-independent WFLD, which was looking for a show to air opposite WGN-TV's highly popular Garfield Goose and Friends. Jackson responded in 1968 with a program initially called Cartoon Town based on the small town where he grew up. The show was later renamed The BJ and Dirty Dragon Show. Jackson, playing the mayor of the town, featured his existing puppet character, Dirty Dragon, as well as several new ones named "Weird", "Wally Goodscout", "Mother Plumtree", and "The Old Professor".[7][6] Some of the new puppet characters were based on his former Unionville neighbors, while the character "Weird" was based on a Chicago friend.[3] He also introduced a character called "Blob" which was made of clay and could, with Jackson's ad-hoc scultping, assume any form.[7][6]

Jackson wrote and produced the show, performed all of the puppet characters' voices, and built and designed the sets and puppets.[8] The show featured a variety of cartoons, including Underdog, Popeye (the early 1960s made-for-TV King Features version), "Out of the Inkwell" (the made-for-TV version produced by Hal Seeger) and George of the Jungle. The show was broadcast for five years on WFLD, but ended after the station's owner, Field Communications, sold an interest to Kaiser Broadcasting, and Kaiser reduced local productions on its group of stations.[9] The final WFLD episode (#1311) was broadcast July 27, 1973; one month later, The BJ & Dirty Dragon Show (now in a new setting of "Carefree Corners") began a one-year run on WGN.[10]

Meanwhile, Jackson began commuting between Chicago and New York, where he produced and hosted another local show, BJ's Bunch, featuring many of the same characters.[11][12] By the fall of 1974, WGN cancelled The BJ & Dirty Dragon Show, after which Jackson produced a one-off holiday special, A Gift For Granny, which aired on WMAQ-TV, Chicago's NBC affiliate.[1]

Later career edit

Jackson and his puppets next appeared in the educationally-themed program Gigglesnort Hotel in 1975, which brought most of the old Cartoon Town characters back, plus a few new creations. Produced and broadcast by WLS-TV, Chicago's ABC affiliate, the show ran for three seasons. Jackson said his inspiration for the show was Fawlty Towers.[3] Jackson then developed a program in 1979–1980, his last, called Firehouse Follies that featured his Gigglesnort Hotel characters. When the show was not picked up he left television to teach at California Institute of the Arts for the School of Film/Video for 12 years, retiring in 1990.[1][13]

In a 2001 interview, Jackson expressed some frustration at seemingly not being able to fit into the criteria established for children's programming on network television. He said, "I am not "teachy" enough for PBS and am not considered worthy enough for Nickelodeon."[3] At the end of its three-year run, Gigglesnort Hotel was syndicated nationally, and reruns continued to air on WLS in Chicago through 1985. Several episodes were released by Karl-Lorimar Home Video in the 1980s in a series of six volumes, one of which consisted of two holiday specials Jackson produced in California after he left Chicago: Billy Joe's Thanksgiving --aka Salute To The Turkey-- and a later remake of A Gift For Granny, which featured a green incarnation of Dirty Dragon and a female voice artist as Mother Plumtree.[1]

In later years, Jackson continued living in California with his wife and started a website to sell DVDs of his old programs online.[1] While his shows were on the air, Jackson received two Iris Awards for the best locally produced children's show in the United States, as well as local Emmys for the shows and his role in them.[8][14][15][16][17][18]

In 2005, Jackson became a member of the Chicago chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Silver Circle.[19][20] Ten years earlier, he had donated all his original puppets to Chicago's Museum of Broadcast Communications.[10]

In 2008, he published a memoir called The Only Kid on the Carnival.[4] In 2009, he produced a documentary, Remembering Cartoon Town and B.J. & Dirty Dragon. Jackson said in an interview when the DVD was released that many of the Cartoon Town episodes were not preserved.[8] Jackson also appeared for a presentation for the Museum of Broadcast Communications, "Saturday Morning with B.J. and Dirty Dragon: Bill Jackson, Live in Person—One Last Time", in December 2009. He indicated this would be his last time appearing as a performer.[14][21]

Death edit

Jackson was hospitalized with COVID-19 shortly before his death, but was released.[22] He died in Paso Robles, California, on January 17, 2022, at the age of 86.[23][24][25] His official cause of death was not announced.[26]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Caro, Mark (October 1, 2009). "Master of puppets". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  2. ^ Okuda & Mulqueen 2004, p. 135.
  3. ^ a b c d e f . Toonarific. April 1, 2001. Archived from the original (Wayback Machine) on November 19, 2017. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Jackson, Bill, ed. (2008). The Only Kid on the Carnival. IUniverse. p. 228. ISBN 978-0-595-51748-0.
  5. ^ Okuda & Mulqueen 2004, pp. 139–140.
  6. ^ a b c Hollis 2001, p. 104.
  7. ^ a b Okuda & Mulqueen 2004, pp. 139–141.
  8. ^ a b c Potempa, Phillip (July 26, 2011). "B. J. and Dirty Dragon remembered with new DVD documentary". NorthWest Indiana Times. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  9. ^ Buckner, Scott (April 28, 2010). "The Clown Prince of Chicago Kiddie TV". The Beachwood Reporter. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  10. ^ a b Hollis 2001, p. 105.
  11. ^ Okuda & Mulqueen 2004, p. 149.
  12. ^ "Bill Jackson". TV Party. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  13. ^ Hafferkamp, Jack (November 25, 1979). "Firehouse Follies". TV Week-Chicago Tribune. p. 6. Retrieved April 24, 2015.
  14. ^ a b "Last Chance To Gigglesnort". Illinois Entertainer. October 30, 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  15. ^ . National Associates of Television Program Executives. Archived from the original on April 2, 2011. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  16. ^ "Chicago Emmy Awards" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 1977–1978. Retrieved January 22, 2022.(PDF)
  17. ^ "Chicago Emmy Awards" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 1976–1977. Retrieved January 22, 2022.(PDF)
  18. ^ "Chicago Emmy Awards" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 1971–1972. Retrieved January 22, 2022.(PDF)
  19. ^ "Bill Jackson-Silver Circle Honorees" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Retrieved February 13, 2011. (PDF)
  20. ^ "Bill Jackson-Silver Circle Honorees". Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 2005. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  21. ^ . Museum of Broadcast Communications. November 12, 2009. Archived from the original on December 5, 2010. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  22. ^ Richards, Dean (January 18, 2022). "Bill Jackson, mainstay of Chicago children's television, dies at 86". WGN-TV. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  23. ^ "Remembering Chicago children's television legend Bill Jackson". WGN Radio. January 18, 2022. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  24. ^ "Bill Jackson, mainstay of Chicago children's television, dies at 86". WGN 9. January 18, 2022. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
  25. ^ "Bill Jackson, creative mind behind Dirty Dragon and the Blob, dead at 86". ChicagoSunTimes. January 24, 2022. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  26. ^ "Obituary: Bill Jackson, Chicago children's TV host known for 'BJ and the Dirty Dragon,' dies at 86". ABC7 Chicago. January 19, 2022. Retrieved January 22, 2022.

General bibliography edit

  • Hollis, Tim (2001). Hi There, Boys and Girls! America's Local Children's TV Programs. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-578-06396-3 – via Project MUSE.
  • Okuda, Ted; Mulqueen, Jack (2004). The Golden Age of Chicago Children's Television. Lake Claremont Press. ISBN 978-1-893-12117-1.

External links edit

  • Thanks to TV Party.com for the information
  • Bill Jackson at IMDb
  • Chicago Tribune
  • BJ & Dirty Dragon Show October 9, 2018, at the Wayback Machine various clips

bill, jackson, television, personality, bill, jackson, september, 1935, january, 2022, american, television, personality, cartoonist, educator, best, known, having, hosted, children, programs, dirty, dragon, show, gigglesnort, hotel, bill, jacksonjackson, gree. Bill Ray Jackson September 15 1935 January 17 2022 was an American television personality cartoonist and educator He was best known for having hosted the children s programs The BJ and Dirty Dragon Show and Gigglesnort Hotel 1 Bill JacksonJackson greets viewers at a personal appearance at a Chicago area mall 1969 BornBill Ray Jackson 1935 09 15 September 15 1935Unionville Missouri U S DiedJanuary 17 2022 2022 01 17 aged 86 Paso Robles California U S SpouseJoCareerShowPopeye and Little Rascals Club Mickey Mouse Club local Indianapolis The Bill Jackson Show Clown Alley Here Comes Freckles Cartoon Town The BJ and Dirty Dragon Show BJ s Bunch Gigglesnort Hotel Firehouse FolliesStationsKTVO WLWI WBBM TV WFLD WGN TV WNBC TV WLS TV Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Chicago 3 Later career 4 Death 5 Citations 6 General bibliography 7 External linksEarly life and career editJackson was born in Unionville Missouri 2 His father worked with a traveling carnival He said he was very influenced by both comic strips and comic books with Li l Abner and Donald Duck being his favorites 3 Jackson graduated from the University of Missouri s school of journalism with a degree in television production in 1957 but did not get interested in puppetry until later 1 3 His first broadcasting job was at KTVO in Ottumwa Iowa where he was a weatherman copywriter and the station s art director After a year at the station Jackson joined the Army and was assigned to the Armed Forces Network in Hollywood It was there that he created his first puppets 4 His earliest appearance in children s television was in 1960 when he hosted a program in Fort Wayne Indiana called the Popeye and Little Rascals Club this was broadcast for two years The show was such a success that he moved on to Indianapolis for another three years with the Mickey Mouse Club on WLWI now WTHR later renamed The Bill Jackson Show where he created his most enduring character Dirty Dragon based on a friend in Indianapolis 3 Chicago editJackson s work attracted the attention of WBBM TV in Chicago which gave him a program in 1965 known variously as Clown Alley weekday version or Here Comes Freckles Sunday morning version This show broadcast for two seasons Jackson played the title character Freckles the Clown although many of the puppet characters continued to appear on later series Jackson usually played himself or B J as his puppet co stars called him throughout the remainder of his career 1 5 6 Jackson was then hired by another Chicago station the then independent WFLD which was looking for a show to air opposite WGN TV s highly popular Garfield Goose and Friends Jackson responded in 1968 with a program initially called Cartoon Town based on the small town where he grew up The show was later renamed The BJ and Dirty Dragon Show Jackson playing the mayor of the town featured his existing puppet character Dirty Dragon as well as several new ones named Weird Wally Goodscout Mother Plumtree and The Old Professor 7 6 Some of the new puppet characters were based on his former Unionville neighbors while the character Weird was based on a Chicago friend 3 He also introduced a character called Blob which was made of clay and could with Jackson s ad hoc scultping assume any form 7 6 Jackson wrote and produced the show performed all of the puppet characters voices and built and designed the sets and puppets 8 The show featured a variety of cartoons including Underdog Popeye the early 1960s made for TV King Features version Out of the Inkwell the made for TV version produced by Hal Seeger and George of the Jungle The show was broadcast for five years on WFLD but ended after the station s owner Field Communications sold an interest to Kaiser Broadcasting and Kaiser reduced local productions on its group of stations 9 The final WFLD episode 1311 was broadcast July 27 1973 one month later The BJ amp Dirty Dragon Show now in a new setting of Carefree Corners began a one year run on WGN 10 Meanwhile Jackson began commuting between Chicago and New York where he produced and hosted another local show BJ s Bunch featuring many of the same characters 11 12 By the fall of 1974 WGN cancelled The BJ amp Dirty Dragon Show after which Jackson produced a one off holiday special A Gift For Granny which aired on WMAQ TV Chicago s NBC affiliate 1 Later career editJackson and his puppets next appeared in the educationally themed program Gigglesnort Hotel in 1975 which brought most of the old Cartoon Town characters back plus a few new creations Produced and broadcast by WLS TV Chicago s ABC affiliate the show ran for three seasons Jackson said his inspiration for the show was Fawlty Towers 3 Jackson then developed a program in 1979 1980 his last called Firehouse Follies that featured his Gigglesnort Hotel characters When the show was not picked up he left television to teach at California Institute of the Arts for the School of Film Video for 12 years retiring in 1990 1 13 In a 2001 interview Jackson expressed some frustration at seemingly not being able to fit into the criteria established for children s programming on network television He said I am not teachy enough for PBS and am not considered worthy enough for Nickelodeon 3 At the end of its three year run Gigglesnort Hotel was syndicated nationally and reruns continued to air on WLS in Chicago through 1985 Several episodes were released by Karl Lorimar Home Video in the 1980s in a series of six volumes one of which consisted of two holiday specials Jackson produced in California after he left Chicago Billy Joe s Thanksgiving aka Salute To The Turkey and a later remake of A Gift For Granny which featured a green incarnation of Dirty Dragon and a female voice artist as Mother Plumtree 1 In later years Jackson continued living in California with his wife and started a website to sell DVDs of his old programs online 1 While his shows were on the air Jackson received two Iris Awards for the best locally produced children s show in the United States as well as local Emmys for the shows and his role in them 8 14 15 16 17 18 In 2005 Jackson became a member of the Chicago chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Silver Circle 19 20 Ten years earlier he had donated all his original puppets to Chicago s Museum of Broadcast Communications 10 In 2008 he published a memoir called The Only Kid on the Carnival 4 In 2009 he produced a documentary Remembering Cartoon Town and B J amp Dirty Dragon Jackson said in an interview when the DVD was released that many of the Cartoon Town episodes were not preserved 8 Jackson also appeared for a presentation for the Museum of Broadcast Communications Saturday Morning with B J and Dirty Dragon Bill Jackson Live in Person One Last Time in December 2009 He indicated this would be his last time appearing as a performer 14 21 Death editJackson was hospitalized with COVID 19 shortly before his death but was released 22 He died in Paso Robles California on January 17 2022 at the age of 86 23 24 25 His official cause of death was not announced 26 Citations edit a b c d e f g Caro Mark October 1 2009 Master of puppets Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 23 2021 Okuda amp Mulqueen 2004 p 135 a b c d e f Bill Jackson Interview Toonarific April 1 2001 Archived from the original Wayback Machine on November 19 2017 Retrieved January 22 2022 a b Jackson Bill ed 2008 The Only Kid on the Carnival IUniverse p 228 ISBN 978 0 595 51748 0 Okuda amp Mulqueen 2004 pp 139 140 a b c Hollis 2001 p 104 a b Okuda amp Mulqueen 2004 pp 139 141 a b c Potempa Phillip July 26 2011 B J and Dirty Dragon remembered with new DVD documentary NorthWest Indiana Times Retrieved February 13 2011 Buckner Scott April 28 2010 The Clown Prince of Chicago Kiddie TV The Beachwood Reporter Retrieved February 13 2011 a b Hollis 2001 p 105 Okuda amp Mulqueen 2004 p 149 Bill Jackson TV Party Retrieved February 13 2011 Hafferkamp Jack November 25 1979 Firehouse Follies TV Week Chicago Tribune p 6 Retrieved April 24 2015 a b Last Chance To Gigglesnort Illinois Entertainer October 30 2009 Retrieved February 14 2011 IRIS Awards National Associates of Television Program Executives Archived from the original on April 2 2011 Retrieved February 14 2011 Chicago Emmy Awards PDF Chicago chapter National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences 1977 1978 Retrieved January 22 2022 PDF Chicago Emmy Awards PDF Chicago chapter National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences 1976 1977 Retrieved January 22 2022 PDF Chicago Emmy Awards PDF Chicago chapter National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences 1971 1972 Retrieved January 22 2022 PDF Bill Jackson Silver Circle Honorees PDF Chicago chapter National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Retrieved February 13 2011 PDF Bill Jackson Silver Circle Honorees Chicago chapter National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences 2005 Retrieved February 13 2011 B J and Dirty Dragon s Bill Jackson to Revisit the Golden Age of Chicago Children s Television with LIVE Performance Museum of Broadcast Communications November 12 2009 Archived from the original on December 5 2010 Retrieved February 13 2011 Richards Dean January 18 2022 Bill Jackson mainstay of Chicago children s television dies at 86 WGN TV Retrieved April 23 2023 Remembering Chicago children s television legend Bill Jackson WGN Radio January 18 2022 Retrieved January 19 2022 Bill Jackson mainstay of Chicago children s television dies at 86 WGN 9 January 18 2022 Retrieved January 20 2022 Bill Jackson creative mind behind Dirty Dragon and the Blob dead at 86 ChicagoSunTimes January 24 2022 Retrieved January 24 2022 Obituary Bill Jackson Chicago children s TV host known for BJ and the Dirty Dragon dies at 86 ABC7 Chicago January 19 2022 Retrieved January 22 2022 General bibliography editHollis Tim 2001 Hi There Boys and Girls America s Local Children s TV Programs University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 578 06396 3 via Project MUSE Okuda Ted Mulqueen Jack 2004 The Golden Age of Chicago Children s Television Lake Claremont Press ISBN 978 1 893 12117 1 External links editBill Jackson s official website Thanks to TV Party com for the information Bill Jackson at IMDb BJ amp Dirty Dragon Photo Gallery Chicago Tribune BJ amp Dirty Dragon Show Archived October 9 2018 at the Wayback Machine various clips Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bill Jackson television personality amp oldid 1191434148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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