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Kukla, Fran & Ollie - One of the most delightful puppet shows to ever
debut on television was KUKLA FRAN AND OLLIE (which originally premiered on
10/13/47 as JUNIOR JAMBOREE, a 60-minute local show on WBKB-TV in Chicago).

Kukla, Burr Tillstrom, Fran Allison & Ollie the
Dragon
The program was performed live and without script. Standing in
front of a scaled-down stage (a la Punch and Judy) the beautiful, blonde hostess
Fran Allison conversed with the likes of Kukla, a balding, bulbous nosed
"Everyman" with raised eyebrows and a tiny circular mouth; and a buck toothed
creature named Oliver "Ollie" J. Dragon who was born in Dragon Retreat, Vermont
and educated at Dragon Prep. Puppeteer Burr Tillstrom provided all the voices
and manipulated all the puppets on the program.
Many of the ideas for the show came from day-to-day problems and encounters.
If the weather was cold, or if someone was sick, it was sure to be put into the
show's dialogue.
Each program began with Kukla Fran and Ollie singing "Here we are...Yes, by
gum and Yes, by golly, Kukla Fran and Ollie..."
The secret to the show's charm was the special chemistry between puppeteer
Burr Tillstrom and Fran Allison who treated the puppets like real people.
Reportedly, she never looked at the puppets back stage, always retaining the
fantasy that the puppets were alive.
Burr Tillstrom landed the job of working marionettes for the WPA Chicago
Parks District Theater in the 1930s His first puppet, Kukla was made from fabric
from a WPA (Works Progress Administration) ragbag.
While freshman at the University of Chicago in 1936, Kukla derived his name
from an encounter with Russian ballerina Tamara Toumanova who upon seeing the
sweet little puppet exclaimed "Kukla", an affectionate Russian word for doll.
Kukla's best friend Ollie originally didn't talk, but with the premiere of
"St. George and the Dragon" at the RCA exhibit of the New York's World Fair in
1939, you couldn't keep him quiet.
Besides the characters, Kukla, Fran and Ollie, the program spawned a variety
of puppet players known as the Kuklapolitans including
- Beulah the Witch, a hooked-nosed hag with a wavering voice who rode
a jet-propelled broomstick (named after producer Beulah Zachary)
- Fletcher Rabbit, a droopy-eared Postman whose mother was a women's libber
- Mercedes, an attractive ingénue
- Cecil Bill, a sailor turned stage manager with a language all his own
- Colonel Crackie, a longwinded Southern gentlemen and escort of Madame
Ophelia Ooglepuss, a haughty former opera star
- Dolores Dragon, Ollie's younger cousin
- Olivia Dragon, Ollie's elderly mother, whose hair was a staggering 75-feet
long
- Miss Clara Coo Coo, the official timekeeper of the North Pole.
The Kuklapolitans performed a number of stories including Alice in
Wonderland, Peter Rabbit, The Wizard of Oz, The Arabian
Nights, historical stories about George Washington crossing the Delaware,
Thanksgiving tales of the Pilgrims and even a puppet production of the "Mikado."

Tom Shales of the Washington Post once wrote of the Kuklapolitan
players "They were as gifted as an acting troupe in their own way as any that
ever trod the boards of any theater on Earth...They were real in the fullest
sense of the term."
The Kuklapolitans also appeared on THE PERRY COMO SHOW, THE JACK PAAR SHOW,
THE SHARI LEWIS SHOW, NBC's CHILDREN THEATRE, THE TODAY SHOW (election
commentaries in 1960), THE DICK CAVETT SHOW, THE MIKE DOUGLAS SHOW, THE MERV
GRIFFIN SHOW, the CBS CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL from 1967-71 (a series of
one-hour film specials about children around the world), and the news satire
program THAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WAS/NBC/1964-65.
An emotional hand ballet about the Berlin Wall Crisis won Tillstrom a special
Emmy on Individual Achievement in 1966.
In 1976 Burr Tillstrom created a new twenty-six week series of KUKLA FRAN
ANDS OLLIE for the PBS Network.
In March of 1985 Burr Tillstrom made an appearance with Kukla, Fran Allison
and Ollie at the Museum of Broadcasting in New York City. Nine months later, on
December 6, 1985, he died peacefully at his Palm Springs home.
Burr Tillstrom was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in March of
1986. Fran Allison posthumously accepted his award. She later died on June 13,
1989 at age 83.
Tillstrom's puppet collection was willed to the Chicago Historical Society.
TRIVIA NOTE: In 1956, Burr Tillstrom needed to
replace his worn out puppet of Oliver J. (Jethro) Dragon III. The new Ollie
sported a jaw sawed from a warped pear crate; a yellow satin face; a chin made
from chamois; spots courtesy of a phony ocelot coat (once worn by Imogene Coca
of YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS); hair of a Mongolian wolf; eyes and a tooth cut from a
kid's glove; lashes and brows clipped from wool felt, and an interior lining of
gold cloth.
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