Playlist of 13 Sid & Marty Krofft Lidsville videos, starring Butch Patrick (who also played Eddie Munster in the...

Originally shared by Jazzy Lemon

Playlist of 13 Sid & Marty Krofft Lidsville videos, starring Butch Patrick (who also played Eddie Munster in the 1960s television show The Munsters).

Lidsville is Sid and Marty Krofft's third television show following H.R. Pufnstuf (1969) and The Bugaloos (1970). As did its predecessors, the series combined two types of characters: conventional actors in makeup filmed alongside performers in full mascot costumes, whose voices were dubbed in post-production. Seventeen episodes aired on Saturday mornings for two seasons, 1971–1973. The opening was shot at Six Flags Over Texas. Otherwise, the show was shot at Paramount Pictures film studio in Los Angeles.

Lidsville resembles an earlier British series, Hattytown Tales, produced by Hattyland Enterprises & FilmFair Ltd. in 1969, which used an almost identical concept but different characters and was produced in claymation.

Like predecessors H.R. Pufnstuf and The Bugaloos, Lidsville ran for only one season (1971–1972), with reruns airing the following year (1972–1973). Also like H.R. Pufnstuf, Lidsville's title and subject matter were often interpreted as references to drug use: the word "lid" is slang for a hat or cap (as in "flip your lid"), but "lid" is also early-1970s slang for 3/4 of an ounce of cannabis (marijuana).

Like most children's television shows of the era, Lidsville contained a laugh track.

The show involved a teenage boy named Mark (Butch Patrick) who fell into the hat of Merlo the Magician (Charles Nelson Reilly) following his show at Six Flags Over Texas and arrived in Lidsville, a land of living hats. The hats on the show are depicted as having the same characteristics as the humans who would normally wear them. For example, a cowboy hat would act and speak like a cowboy. The characters' houses were also hat-shaped.

The villain of the show was a magician named Horatio J. HooDoo (also played by Charles Nelson Reilly in a magician's costume and make-up). The vain, short-tempered, but somewhat naive HooDoo flew around in his Hatamaran, blasting the good citizens of Lidsville with bolts of magic (referred to as "zapping") and keeping them in fear, demanding that they pay him their Hat Checks. Mark helped the good hats resist as he attempted to find a way back home. HooDoo, trying to reclaim control of the androgynous Weenie from Mark, often enlisted the services of four Bad Hats.

In his high hat home, HooDoo was besieged by the taunting music of the Hat Band, as well as all of his talking knicknacks (the parrot, Mr. Skull, the mounted alligator head, the sawed-in-half lady, etc.). HooDoo also experienced further aggravation at the hands of his aides, the dim Raunchy Rabbit and his two-faced card guard Jack of Clubs. HooDoo watched the action going on in downtown Lidsville from his hat home by using his Evil Eye, a device similar to a TV set that resembling an eyeball. He also had a hot hatline phone. The show relied on an endless array of puns based on hats. One such pun was "Derby Dunes," an area in Lidsville which sand dunes were shaped like derby hats. Mark, a suspected spy against HooDoo on behalf of the good hat people, was captured at Derby Dunes by HooDoo's minions the Bad Hats the moment he had fallen into the world of Lidsville. He escapes from his clutches alongside a genie named Weenie (Billie Hayes).

Many of the episodes were about Mark trying to get back home, but the evil HooDoo prevented him from leaving. Weenie, being a nervous bumbler, was, in fact, a genie, but many of the tricks and spells didn't work right anymore after being a slave to HooDoo for so long. In the show's final episode, scenes from some of the past episodes were featured as HooDoo's mother (played by Muriel Landers, but not listed in the closing credits) had paid a visit to find out what has been going on in Lidsville while making sure that her son is still bad.

Music was also a part of the show, with songs being performed by the characters in several episodes.

Characters:
Mark (portrayed by Butch Patrick) - A teenage boy who serves as the main protagonist of the series. He fell into the hat of Merlo the Magician and ended up in Lidsville.
Weenie the Genie (portrayed by Billie Hayes) - An androgynous genie (referred to as a male) who befriends Mark.
Horatio J. HooDoo (portrayed by Charles Nelson Reilly) - An evil magician who serves as the primary antagonist of the series. Most of his plans involve trying to prevent Mark from leaving Lidsville and attempting to reclaim Weenie.
Raunchy Rabbit (performed by Sharon Baird, voiced by Walker Edmiston) - A dimwitted rabbit who serves as Horatio J. HooDoo's henchman. Wears a fez.
Jack of Clubs (voiced by Walker Edmiston) - A walking deck of playing cards With a Jack-of Clubs as the face card. Wears a clubbed crown. Both top and bottom heads can talk.
The Bad Hats - A group of four hats who work for HooDoo.
Mr. Big (performed by Angelo Rossitto, voiced by Lennie Weinrib) - A gangster fedora who is the leader of the Bad Hats. Despite his name, he is one of the shortest of the Bad Hats.
Captain Hooknose (voiced by Lennie Weinrib) - A pirate hat. Literally has a hook in place of a nose.
Bela (voiced by Walker Edmiston impersonating BĂ©la Lugosi) - A vampire hat. A bat-eared top hat with a fanged brim on top of a Cowl-like body.
Boris (voiced by Walker Edmiston impersonating Peter Lorre) - An executioner's hood. Usually carries an axe.
Imperial Wizard (voiced by Walker Edmiston) - The Imperial Wizard is an evil wizard who is HooDoo's master.
Rah-Rah (portrayed by Jerry Maren, voiced by Lennie Weinrib) - An football helmet. "Dumb Jock" persona, but often comes thru in a pinch.
Madame Ring-a-Ding (voiced by Joan Gerber) - A party hat with a party favor nose who serves as Lidsville's social director.
Mother Wheels (voiced by Joan Gerber) - A elderly, grey-haired motorcycle helmet dressed in black leather and usually on a motorcycle. Her catchphrase is "Hiya, Hon-ees".
Nursie (voiced by Joan Gerber) - A bespectacled nurse's hat who is the closest thing Lidsville has to a doctor.
Twirly (voiced by Joan Gerber) - A beanie hat. Apparently the youngest member of the cast, he speaks with a little boy voice and can use his propeller to fly.
Colonel Poom (performed by Felix Silla, voiced by Lennie Weinrib in a British accent) - A pith helmet who is the unofficial leader of the good hats. Colonel Poom is an old hunter/explorer.
Mr. Chow (voiced by Lennie Weinrib in a Chinese accent) - A chef's pinafore with a long Machurian moustache. Lidsville's top cook/baker.
Pierre LeSewer (voiced by Lennie Weinrib) - One of the few good hat cast members who WEARS a hat rather than IS a hat. Lives in the Lidsville sewers and pops his head out from under the manhole covers which resemble French berets. It was never explained in the series why he can't leave the sewers.
Scorchy (voiced by Lennie Weinrib) - A talking, walking, fire hydrant with a long hose for a nose who wears a firefighter's hat. Serves as Lidsville's warning system.
Tex (voiced by Lennie Weinrib impersonating John Wayne) - A cowboy hat.
Tonsilini (performed by Van Snowden, voiced by Lennie Weinrib) - An opera-singing hat. Sings EVERY line of his dialogue.
Hiram (voiced by Walker Edmiston) - A farmer's straw hat.
Little Ben (voiced by Joan Gerber) - A talking piglet that is usually carried by Hiram.
Admiral Scuttlebutt (voiced by Walker Edmiston) - A green Admiral's bicorne. Talks in old naval cliches.
Big Chief Sitting Duck (voiced by Walker Edmiston) - A feathered Indian chief's hat. His body is covered by a thick Indian blanket.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S66E0K7XQf8&list=PLjT3Z589ba7NdGmUmXJCX8_ISKIZzb8No

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