The gentle clown.

AuthorGehring, Wes D.
PositionRed Skelton - Biography

TWENTY YEARS AGO, as the resident humor scholar here at Ball State University, I was chosen to give the keynote address for a special ceremony awarding Hoosier-born Red Skelton with an honorary doctorate. Preparing the comments proved easy. Like many class clowns of the 1950s and 1960s, I grew up doing recess impersonations of Skelton's cast of comedy characters. I especially was adept at mimicking his Mean Widdle Kid, whose delightful signature line always had him comically agonizing over mischief before embracing the bad boy position: "If I dood it I get a lickin'.... I dood it!"

Indeed, "I dood it" became a national catch phrase after Skelton introduced it on his popular 1940s radio program--the precursor to his television show that ran from 1951-71. During World War II, Col. James Doolittle's famous 1942 surprise raid on Tokyo widely was reported by the press with the headline: "Doolittle Dood It," and the comedian himself starred in the movie "I Dood It" the following year.

Skelton's comedy characters also included Clem Kadiddlehopper, a cluck from the country who was more crackers than crackerbarrel. His boxer, Cauliflower McPugg, had a brain to match his name, and had seen more canvas than a pup tent salesman. San Fernando Red was a huckster wheeler-dealer with a bigger "pitch" than Dizzy Dean. Sheriff Deadeye was anything but, while his constantly slipping holster gave him a sissy-pants walk. Skelton's star performer, however, was Freddie the Freeloader--a comedy cross between Charlie Chaplin's Little Tramp and Emmett Kelly's Weary Willie. Freddie was a comedy diplomat from the dump of life, who mixed pathos with pratfalls--and the occasional custard pie. To all these characters and more (including his comedy seagulls Gertrude and Heathcliff), Skelton brought his supreme timing, a gift for slapstick, and a vulnerability that made him one of America's greatest and most beloved clowns.

Before his small screen success, Skelton showcased a number of other comic antiheroes in a series of very popular motion pictures. His breakthrough film was "Whistling in the Dark" (1941), a parody of the thriller which borrowed from the spoofing formula that had put Bob Hope on the movie map with "The Cat and the Canary" (1939) and "Ghost Breakers" (1940). Both comedians played antiheroes who fluctuated between comic cowardice and playing smart aleck. There would be two popular sequels in 1942 and 1943, respectively, "Whistling in Dixie" and "Whistling...

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