Tom Slick (TV series)

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Tom Slick
Tom Slick in Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper.jpg
Tom Slick in the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper
Starring Bill Scott
June Foray
Paul Frees
Daws Butler
Opening themeStan Worth
Sheldon Allman
Production
Producers Jay Ward
Bill Scott
Production company Jay Ward Productions, Inc
Original release
Network ABC
ReleaseSeptember 9 (1967-09-09) 
December 30, 1967 (1967-12-30)

Tom Slick is the cartoon star of a series of shorts that aired within the half-hour animated television series George of the Jungle (ABC, 1967). It was the work of Jay Ward Productions, the creators of Rocky & Bullwinkle and other satiric animated characters. [1] Seventeen six-minute episodes were made.

Contents

The premise

Freckled, grinning, all-American racecar driver Tom Slick (voiced by Bill Scott) competes in various races with his trusty vehicle, the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper. He is accompanied by his girlfriend Marigold (voiced by June Foray) and his elderly mechanic Gertie Growler (also voiced by Bill Scott). The two women do not always get along well. A recurring antagonist is the evil Baron Otto Matic (voiced by Paul Frees), and the Baron's stupid lackey Clutcher (voiced by Daws Butler impersonating Frank Fontaine as "Crazy Guggenheim" ), whom the Baron has a penchant for hitting across the head with a monkey wrench.

A running gag throughout the series is that the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper can be converted into virtually any type of racing vehicle, often looking nothing like the original vehicle itself. Various episodes show the Grease-Slapper as a train, stock car racer, drag racer, racing balloon, swamp buggy, submarine, even a miniaturized skateboard.

As the theme song is sung, Tom's Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper suddenly "hops" out of control off a road and into a barnyard occupied by farm animals. Tom is knocked momentarily unconscious with a chicken sitting on top of his head as he drives straight into a brick wall. But he miraculously gets out of the sudden pandemonium as his car falls apart in mid-air and suddenly falls back together again. The car then jumps onto (and off) a stone monument bearing Tom Slick's name and gets back on the road as Tom waves his hand and smiles.

Theme song

The theme song was written by the team of Stan Worth and Sheldon Allman, with Worth primarily composing the music and Allman handling the lyrics. [2] The lyrics are as follows:

Tom Slick
Tom Slick
Let me tell you why
He's the best of all good guys
Tom Slick
Tom Slick
In the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper, once he's on your tail,
He won't quit because you know there's no such word as "fail" to
Tom Slick
Tom Slick!

Tom Slick in the comics

In comic books, Tom Slick appeared as a backup feature in Gold Key Comics's two-issue George of the Jungle title (1969). [3]

Episodes

List of Tom Slick episode titles and dates

TitleAir date
1"The Bigg Race"1967-09-09
2"Monster Rally"1967-09-16
3"Send In a Sub"1967-09-23
4"Snow What"1967-09-30
5"The Great Balloon Race"1967-10-07
6"I Was Railroaded"1967-10-14
7"Dranko the Dragster"1967-10-21
8"The Cupp Cup Race"1967-10-28
9"Irish Cheapstakes"1967-11-04
10"Overstocked"1967-11-11
11"Double Cross Country Race"1967-11-18
12"The Apple-less Indian 500"1967-11-25
13"Sneaky Sheik"1967-12-02
14"Cheap Skate Board Derby"1967-12-09
15"The Badyear Blimp"1967-12-16
16"Swamp Buggy Race"1967-12-23
17"Mack Buster Trophy"1967-12-30

See also

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References

  1. Scott, Keith (2014). The Moose That Roared: The Story of Jay Ward, Bill Scott, a Flying Squirrel, and a Talking Moose. Macmillan. ISBN   978-1-4668-6743-7.
  2. Oliver, Myrna (February 8, 2002). "Sheldon Allman, 77; Actor, Songwriter, Cartoon Voice". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved November 18, 2023.
  3. Eury, Michael (2017). Hero-A-Go-Go: Campy Comic Books, Crimefighters, & Culture of the Swinging Sixties p. 217. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN   978-1-6054-9073-1.