Sitcoms Online - Main Page / Message Boards - Main Page / News Blog / Photo Galleries / DVD Reviews / Buy TV Shows on DVD and Blu-ray

View Today's Active Threads (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / View New Posts (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / Mark All Boards Read / Chit Chat Board

View Latest Threads in All Other TV Shows / All Other TV Shows Photo Galleries

All Other TV Shows / Cooking and Food Shows / Court Shows / Laurel & Hardy / Mighty Morphin Power Rangers / Mister Rogers' Neighborhood / Our Gang / The Little Rascals / Pee-wee's Playhouse / Sesame Street / Sid and Marty Krofft Shows / The Three Stooges / TV Parades


Sitcoms Online Message Boards - Forums  

Go Back   Sitcoms Online Message Boards - Forums > All Other TV Shows > Pee-wee's Playhouse
Register Community View Today's Active Threads (No CC/CC Only) Search Photo Galleries Calendar FAQ

Notices

SitcomsOnline.com News Blog Headlines Facebook X/Twitter Bluesky Threads Instagram YouTube RSS

Remembering Legendary Sitcom Director James Burrows; The Audacity Season 2 Coming in 2027
Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of June 22, 2026)
SitcomsOnline Digest: Fox Agrees to Purchase Roku; Mickey Mouse Set to Star in Home Alone Remake
Apple TV Comedy Brothers Details; Jimmy Kimmel Live! Summer Guest Hosts
Still Hot in Cleveland Podcast with Valerie Bertinelli; Final Season of The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder
Home Alone and Mickey Mouse Come Together; New Tubi Movie Starring Sophia Bush and Jerry O'Connell
Netflix's The Four Seasons Renewed for Season 3; Two Season Renewal for Apple TV Series


New on DVD and Blu-ray

Happy's Place - Season One (Blu-ray) Two and a Half Men - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Abbott Elementary - The Complete Fourth Season (DVD) I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (DVD) The Office - The Complete Series - Superfan Extended Episodes (Blu-ray)

11/04/25 - Happy's Place - Season One (Blu-ray) (DVD)
11/11/25 - Rick and Morty - Season 8 (Blu-ray) (DVD)
11/11/25 - SpongeBob SquarePants - The Complete Fifteenth Season (DVD)
11/11/25 - Two and a Half Men - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
12/02/25 - Tom and Jerry - The Golden Era Anthology (1940-1958) (Blu-ray) (DVD)
12/16/25 - Lippy the Lion and Hardy Har Har - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
12/16/25 - Wally Gator - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
01/20/26 - The Woody Woodpecker and Friends Golden Age Collection (Blu-ray)
01/27/26 - The New Fred and Barney Show - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
02/11/26 - Tom and Jerry - The Complete CinemaScope Collection (Blu-ray)
03/24/26 - Looney Tunes Collector's Vault - Volume 2 (Blu-ray)
04/11/26 - Abbott Elementary - The Complete Fourth Season (DVD)
04/21/26 - Famous Studios Champion Collection (Blu-ray) (DVD)
05/19/26 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (DVD)
05/19/26 - Looney Tunes Cartoons - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) (DVD)
07/14/26 - The Office - The Complete Series - Superfan Extended Episodes (Blu-ray)
07/28/26 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (Blu-ray)

More Recent and Upcoming TV DVD and Blu-ray Releases / TV Shows on DVD, Blu-ray and Prime Video / DVD Reviews Archive


Search Sitcoms Online:



Donate

Please make a donation if you can help with Sitcoms Online's web hosting costs. Thanks for your support!

We receive a small commission on all DVDs, Blu-rays, CDs, Books, and any other items ordered through our Amazon.com links as an associate. Thanks for using our links for your online shopping!

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 08-02-2023, 01:58 AM   #16
TMC
Member
Forum Idol
 
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,458
Default

Pee-wee Herman and Pee-wee’s Playhouse paved the way for Greta Gerwig’s Barbie

Quote:
I hope Paul Reubens was well enough to see “Barbie” before he died this past Sunday, at the age of seventy, following six years of privately battling cancer. Greta Gerwig’s spectacularly popular film wouldn’t exist in quite the same way, I don’t think, without the example of “Pee-wee’s Playhouse,” the ostensible kids’ show that Reubens created and starred in as his signature character and seeming alter ego, Pee-wee Herman. There is a debt, conscious or not, small but true.

Think of Gerwig’s Barbie as Pee-wee Herman’s great-niece. With a Pepto-Bismol-meets-aspartame production design and an arch, winking take on both Barbieland and the so-called real world, the film is at once a sendup and an earnest tribute to (not to mention a two-hour commercial for) a sixty-four-year-old toy. Back in the nineteen-eighties, when postmodernism was still fresh and dewy, “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” staked out similar territory: a self-conscious riff on mid-century children’s television and, simultaneously, a relatively sincere reboot of the genre. The show, which aired on CBS between 1986 and 1990, was funny, knowing, refreshing. Influence can be a two-way street, however. Barbie predated Pee-wee Herman by several decades, and the Dreamhouse aesthetic was certainly part of the plastic postwar clutter that inspired the Playhouse. Pee-wee’s lifeguard pal Tito, evincing no personality beyond shirtlessness, has a dollop of Ken in him—the circle of kitsch, if you will. I should also note that the series’ proudly ersatz vibe emerged not in a vacuum but rather from a contemporary atmosphere thick with retro New Wave bands, Kenny Scharf paintings, Pyramid Club drag shows, and zines full of clip art.


Just as “Barbie” (in tandem with “Oppenheimer,” its marketplace Ken) appears to have reawakened a love of movie-going, “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” was a reminder in its day that TV could be worth watching—at least, it was if you were me. I was in my late twenties when Reubens’s series began its Saturday-morning run. The medium, in those days, was still mostly in thrall to mediocrity. “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” was my and many of my cohort’s first acquaintanceship with so-called appointment television. Did kids watch it, too? They must have, since CBS kept it on for five seasons; with all due respect to Reubens and Pee-wee, there couldn’t have been that many young adults willing to watch TV at ten o’clock on a Saturday morning.

The show was aware of its own tropes, a pioneer of TV irony alongside “Late Night with David Letterman.” Where Captain Kangaroo had a handful of sidekicks—Mr. Moose, Mr. Green Jeans, Bunny Rabbit—Pee-wee had dozens upon dozens: the aforementioned Tito, Miss Yvonne (“the most beautiful woman in Puppetland”), Captain Carl, Cowboy Curtis, the King of Cartoons, Reba the Mail Lady, Jambi the genie. And those were just the humans. There was also Pterri (a pterodactyl), Conky (a robot), Randy (a pugnacious red-headed marionette), and Globey (a globe). Nearly every corner of the Playhouse was animate: Mr. Window, Chairry, Floory, Chandelier. The series’ archness drove its rat-a-tat-tat rhythms—Hi, Chairry! Hi, Conky! Let’s dance! Tito, what’s shaking? How ’bout a cartoon?—which either mimicked or induced short attention spans. “The Simpsons,” “Family Guy,” and “SpongeBob SquarePants,” with their breakneck pacing and throwaway absurdities, owe Reubens a debt, too.

At the center of this cheerful frenzy was Pee-wee: pale of face, red of bow tie, and dressed in a suit several sizes too small. He existed somewhere on a continuum between winning imp and annoying brat, given to nasal comebacks like “I know you are but what am I?” and “If you love it, then why don’t you marry it?”—but also open-hearted and accepting of all manner of weirdos. If you were a fan, you forgave Pee-wee his trespasses, the way you might a mildly spoiled nephew. If you were not a fan, you might find him to be a painful echo of Jerry Lewis or Lou Costello or any other whiny man-boy comedian.

Reubens was born Paul Rubenfeld in Peekskill, New York, in 1952. His dad owned a car dealership; his mom taught elementary school. In 1961, the family moved to Sarasota, Florida, and opened a lighting store. It was in Sarasota that Paul first cultivated a taste for the surreal. The city was the winter home of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, and the Rubenfelds’ neighbors included the high-wire troupe the Flying Wallendas and a family whose talent was getting shot out of a cannon.

Paul was an avowed fan of the TV he would riff on as an adult, especially “Howdy Doody,” on which he once appeared as a member of the studio audience, known as the Peanut Gallery—the sort of notionally fateful moment that a future Reubens bio-pic might make corny use of. As he told me in a 1999 interview for Vanity Fair, he was bereft when the show went off the air: “I remember sitting on the floor of our living room watching the last episode just in tears, crying, sitting there as a really little kid and thinking, What kind of world is this?” He was eight.

In the seventies, Reubens moved to Los Angeles for a stint studying acting at the California Institute of the Arts, and joined the improv group the Groundlings, where he developed the Pee-wee character. Frustrated after an unsuccessful audition for “Saturday Night Live” (a silver lining: he missed out on the legendarily awful 1980-81 season), he created his own stage show around Pee-wee, which, following a run in L.A., became an HBO special, in 1981. That led to the movie “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure,” in the summer of 1985; it was a surprise hit and introduced both Pee-wee and the film’s director, Tim Burton, to the pop-culture mainstream. God bless whichever CBS executive then offered Reubens a Saturday-morning series.

Onstage, Pee-wee had a juvenile but genuine sexual edge, taping mirrors onto his shoes and so forth. If that Pee-wee was PG-13, the TV version was a soft PG, though the show never shied away from innuendo, as when Pee-wee used his daily wish to ask Jambi for a new pair of boots for Cowboy Curtis.

“What size?” Jambi (a head floating in a box) asks.

“Size 12, double-E,” Curtis replies laconically. Jambi appears more than intrigued.

“What big feet!” Pee-wee exclaims.

Curtis: “Well, you know what they say.”

Pee-wee: “No. What?”

Curtis: “Big feet, big boots!” A deflating doink is heard on the soundtrack. Jambi’s face registers disappointment; Pee-wee’s, mere perplexity. For many kids, the show was an early introduction to high camp. As the TV critic James Poniewozik noted in a Times appreciation, the show’s implicit queerness might sadly generate more ire if it débuted in 2023 than it did back in the days of Ronald Reagan, when moral scolds were more worked up about dirty rock and rap lyrics.


ADVERTISEMENT

A young Laurence Fishburne, by the way, played Cowboy Curtis. Credit must be paid to Reubens’s eye for talent, and to the quality and diversity of his collaborators; Phil Hartman, a fellow-Groundling, co-wrote “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure” and played Captain Carl in the first season of “Pee-wee’s Playhouse.” S. Epatha Merkerson was Reba the Mail Lady. A seven-year-old Natasha Lyonne appeared in the first season as a member of the Playhouse Gang, a trio of kids who turned up in several episodes. The artist and underground cartoonist Gary Panter was one of the original production designers (the angry, ****-jawed marionette Randy, a cross between Howdy Doody and a Dead End Kid, is clearly Panter’s creation), and the series showcased the work of many other artists, animators, and designers. The show was expensive to produce, by Saturday-morning standards, and it looked it. In an era when most commercial television was carelessly made junk—if you think you have lingering nostalgic affection for “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe,” give it another watch—“Pee-wee’s Playhouse” respected its audience.

Reubens retired the show after its fifth season. Burned out, he decided to take a year off from show business, uncertain where the “Playhouse” world would go from there and whether he even wanted to be Pee-wee anymore. Unfortunately, many such decisions were taken out of his hands when, in the summer of 1991, he was arrested in a pornographic movie theatre while visiting his parents in Sarasota, and charged with indecent exposure. He eventually pleaded no contest, paying a small fine and doing seventy-five hours of community service while maintaining his innocence.

Many celebrities have bounced back from far worse, but being a children’s entertainer magnified Reubens’s scandal to ludicrous proportions. His arrest came four days after Jeffrey Dahmer’s and seemed to capture as much attention. “For a week I was leading the news,” Reubens told me in 1999, still incredulous, “followed by Dahmer eating people, boring holes into their heads and turning them into zombies. It was . . . just so bizarre.”

Reubens did reëmerge, and he continued working steadily, if less flashily than in his “Playhouse” days. He did guest spots on series like “Murphy Brown” (for which he earned an Emmy nomination), “Reno 911!,” “30 Rock,” and “The Blacklist,” and voice work on animated series and in video games. He eventually brought back Pee-wee, too, most prominently in a 2010 revival of his stage show, which ran in Los Angeles and on Broadway, and in a 2016 movie for Netflix, “Pee-wee’s Big Holiday,” produced by Judd Apatow.

In our 1999 interview, Reubens told me, “Pee-wee Herman certainly had a nice dark mean streak that I never tried to hide. I mean, I always thought that was funny. But he was basically goodhearted, and there is a sweetness, I think, to what I do.” I agree. There was a genuine warmth to Pee-wee. He encouraged kids to be nice and to brush their teeth; his door was open to everyone, even the nosy neighbor Mrs. Rene. Gerwig’s “Barbie” ultimately owes something not only to Pee-wee but to Pinocchio, another character suspended between the toy world and the real one. Pee-wee, beneath his shtick, was always real, or real enough. As in the “Tequila” dance atop a bar in “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure,” Reubens walked the line with preposterous grace. ♦
TMC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-02-2023, 01:59 AM   #17
TMC
Member
Forum Idol
 
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,458
Default

Pee-wee Herman and Pee-wee’s Playhouse paved the way for Greta Gerwig’s Barbie

Quote:
Just as “Barbie” today appears to have reawakened a love of movie-going, “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” was a reminder in its day that TV could be worth watching.

By Bruce Handy

August 1, 2023

I hope Paul Reubens was well enough to see “Barbie” before he died this past Sunday, at the age of seventy, following six years of privately battling cancer. Greta Gerwig’s spectacularly popular film wouldn’t exist in quite the same way, I don’t think, without the example of “Pee-wee’s Playhouse,” the ostensible kids’ show that Reubens created and starred in as his signature character and seeming alter ego, Pee-wee Herman. There is a debt, conscious or not, small but true.

Think of Gerwig’s Barbie as Pee-wee Herman’s great-niece. With a Pepto-Bismol-meets-aspartame production design and an arch, winking take on both Barbieland and the so-called real world, the film is at once a sendup and an earnest tribute to (not to mention a two-hour commercial for) a sixty-four-year-old toy. Back in the nineteen-eighties, when postmodernism was still fresh and dewy, “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” staked out similar territory: a self-conscious riff on mid-century children’s television and, simultaneously, a relatively sincere reboot of the genre. The show, which aired on CBS between 1986 and 1990, was funny, knowing, refreshing. Influence can be a two-way street, however. Barbie predated Pee-wee Herman by several decades, and the Dreamhouse aesthetic was certainly part of the plastic postwar clutter that inspired the Playhouse. Pee-wee’s lifeguard pal Tito, evincing no personality beyond shirtlessness, has a dollop of Ken in him—the circle of kitsch, if you will. I should also note that the series’ proudly ersatz vibe emerged not in a vacuum but rather from a contemporary atmosphere thick with retro New Wave bands, Kenny Scharf paintings, Pyramid Club drag shows, and zines full of clip art.

Just as “Barbie” (in tandem with “Oppenheimer,” its marketplace Ken) appears to have reawakened a love of movie-going, “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” was a reminder in its day that TV could be worth watching—at least, it was if you were me. I was in my late twenties when Reubens’s series began its Saturday-morning run. The medium, in those days, was still mostly in thrall to mediocrity. “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” was my and many of my cohort’s first acquaintanceship with so-called appointment television. Did kids watch it, too? They must have, since CBS kept it on for five seasons; with all due respect to Reubens and Pee-wee, there couldn’t have been that many young adults willing to watch TV at ten o’clock on a Saturday morning.

The show was aware of its own tropes, a pioneer of TV irony alongside “Late Night with David Letterman.” Where Captain Kangaroo had a handful of sidekicks—Mr. Moose, Mr. Green Jeans, Bunny Rabbit—Pee-wee had dozens upon dozens: the aforementioned Tito, Miss Yvonne (“the most beautiful woman in Puppetland”), Captain Carl, Cowboy Curtis, the King of Cartoons, Reba the Mail Lady, Jambi the genie. And those were just the humans. There was also Pterri (a pterodactyl), Conky (a robot), Randy (a pugnacious red-headed marionette), and Globey (a globe). Nearly every corner of the Playhouse was animate: Mr. Window, Chairry, Floory, Chandelier. The series’ archness drove its rat-a-tat-tat rhythms—Hi, Chairry! Hi, Conky! Let’s dance! Tito, what’s shaking? How ’bout a cartoon?—which either mimicked or induced short attention spans. “The Simpsons,” “Family Guy,” and “SpongeBob SquarePants,” with their breakneck pacing and throwaway absurdities, owe Reubens a debt, too.

At the center of this cheerful frenzy was Pee-wee: pale of face, red of bow tie, and dressed in a suit several sizes too small. He existed somewhere on a continuum between winning imp and annoying brat, given to nasal comebacks like “I know you are but what am I?” and “If you love it, then why don’t you marry it?”—but also open-hearted and accepting of all manner of weirdos. If you were a fan, you forgave Pee-wee his trespasses, the way you might a mildly spoiled nephew. If you were not a fan, you might find him to be a painful echo of Jerry Lewis or Lou Costello or any other whiny man-boy comedian.

Reubens was born Paul Rubenfeld in Peekskill, New York, in 1952. His dad owned a car dealership; his mom taught elementary school. In 1961, the family moved to Sarasota, Florida, and opened a lighting store. It was in Sarasota that Paul first cultivated a taste for the surreal. The city was the winter home of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, and the Rubenfelds’ neighbors included the high-wire troupe the Flying Wallendas and a family whose talent was getting shot out of a cannon.

Paul was an avowed fan of the TV he would riff on as an adult, especially “Howdy Doody,” on which he once appeared as a member of the studio audience, known as the Peanut Gallery—the sort of notionally fateful moment that a future Reubens bio-pic might make corny use of. As he told me in a 1999 interview for Vanity Fair, he was bereft when the show went off the air: “I remember sitting on the floor of our living room watching the last episode just in tears, crying, sitting there as a really little kid and thinking, What kind of world is this?” He was eight.

In the seventies, Reubens moved to Los Angeles for a stint studying acting at the California Institute of the Arts, and joined the improv group the Groundlings, where he developed the Pee-wee character. Frustrated after an unsuccessful audition for “Saturday Night Live” (a silver lining: he missed out on the legendarily awful 1980-81 season), he created his own stage show around Pee-wee, which, following a run in L.A., became an HBO special, in 1981. That led to the movie “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure,” in the summer of 1985; it was a surprise hit and introduced both Pee-wee and the film’s director, Tim Burton, to the pop-culture mainstream. God bless whichever CBS executive then offered Reubens a Saturday-morning series.

Onstage, Pee-wee had a juvenile but genuine sexual edge, taping mirrors onto his shoes and so forth. If that Pee-wee was PG-13, the TV version was a soft PG, though the show never shied away from innuendo, as when Pee-wee used his daily wish to ask Jambi for a new pair of boots for Cowboy Curtis.

“What size?” Jambi (a head floating in a box) asks.

“Size 12, double-E,” Curtis replies laconically. Jambi appears more than intrigued.

“What big feet!” Pee-wee exclaims.

Curtis: “Well, you know what they say.”

Pee-wee: “No. What?”

Curtis: “Big feet, big boots!” A deflating doink is heard on the soundtrack. Jambi’s face registers disappointment; Pee-wee’s, mere perplexity. For many kids, the show was an early introduction to high camp. As the TV critic James Poniewozik noted in a Times appreciation, the show’s implicit queerness might sadly generate more ire if it débuted in 2023 than it did back in the days of Ronald Reagan, when moral scolds were more worked up about dirty rock and rap lyrics.

A young Laurence Fishburne, by the way, played Cowboy Curtis. Credit must be paid to Reubens’s eye for talent, and to the quality and diversity of his collaborators; Phil Hartman, a fellow-Groundling, co-wrote “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure” and played Captain Carl in the first season of “Pee-wee’s Playhouse.” S. Epatha Merkerson was Reba the Mail Lady. A seven-year-old Natasha Lyonne appeared in the first season as a member of the Playhouse Gang, a trio of kids who turned up in several episodes. The artist and underground cartoonist Gary Panter was one of the original production designers (the angry, ****-jawed marionette Randy, a cross between Howdy Doody and a Dead End Kid, is clearly Panter’s creation), and the series showcased the work of many other artists, animators, and designers. The show was expensive to produce, by Saturday-morning standards, and it looked it. In an era when most commercial television was carelessly made junk—if you think you have lingering nostalgic affection for “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe,” give it another watch—“Pee-wee’s Playhouse” respected its audience.

Reubens retired the show after its fifth season. Burned out, he decided to take a year off from show business, uncertain where the “Playhouse” world would go from there and whether he even wanted to be Pee-wee anymore. Unfortunately, many such decisions were taken out of his hands when, in the summer of 1991, he was arrested in a pornographic movie theatre while visiting his parents in Sarasota, and charged with indecent exposure. He eventually pleaded no contest, paying a small fine and doing seventy-five hours of community service while maintaining his innocence.

Many celebrities have bounced back from far worse, but being a children’s entertainer magnified Reubens’s scandal to ludicrous proportions. His arrest came four days after Jeffrey Dahmer’s and seemed to capture as much attention. “For a week I was leading the news,” Reubens told me in 1999, still incredulous, “followed by Dahmer eating people, boring holes into their heads and turning them into zombies. It was . . . just so bizarre.”

Reubens did reëmerge, and he continued working steadily, if less flashily than in his “Playhouse” days. He did guest spots on series like “Murphy Brown” (for which he earned an Emmy nomination), “Reno 911!,” “30 Rock,” and “The Blacklist,” and voice work on animated series and in video games. He eventually brought back Pee-wee, too, most prominently in a 2010 revival of his stage show, which ran in Los Angeles and on Broadway, and in a 2016 movie for Netflix, “Pee-wee’s Big Holiday,” produced by Judd Apatow.

In our 1999 interview, Reubens told me, “Pee-wee Herman certainly had a nice dark mean streak that I never tried to hide. I mean, I always thought that was funny. But he was basically goodhearted, and there is a sweetness, I think, to what I do.” I agree. There was a genuine warmth to Pee-wee. He encouraged kids to be nice and to brush their teeth; his door was open to everyone, even the nosy neighbor Mrs. Rene. Gerwig’s “Barbie” ultimately owes something not only to Pee-wee but to Pinocchio, another character suspended between the toy world and the real one. Pee-wee, beneath his shtick, was always real, or real enough. As in the “Tequila” dance atop a bar in “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure,” Reubens walked the line with preposterous grace. ♦
TMC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-02-2023, 09:37 AM   #18
howilu
Member
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 20, 2003
Location: St. Louis Park, MN
Posts: 1,959
Default

Paul Reubens put a lot into his character Pee-Wee Herman. I remember watching Pee-Wee's Playhouse on Saturday mornings and to me it was a very avant-garde show that was also very funny.

One non Pee-Wee role I remember well was Andrew Lansing III on Murphy Brown. He will b missed.
howilu is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-02-2023, 02:20 PM   #19
dee2364
Member
Forum Regular
 
dee2364's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 20, 2019
Posts: 643
Default

Just in case anyone is curious, Paul Reubens was inspired by a 1950s kid's show host named Pinky Lee, so Pee Wee's Playhouse was an homage to that era of children's television, which is why so many adults watched it. It was like being a kid again!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHbgN7grePU
dee2364 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-02-2023, 08:18 PM   #20
TMC
Member
Forum Idol
 
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,458
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dee2364 View Post
Just in case anyone is curious, Paul Reubens was inspired by a 1950s kid's show host named Pinky Lee, so Pee Wee's Playhouse was an homage to that era of children's television, which is why so many adults watched it. It was like being a kid again!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHbgN7grePU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Evz621DNNyM

Quote:
Four years after his stage debut, Pee-Wee Herman starred in his first movie... changing Hollywood forever in the process. Let's find out how, shall we?
⭑ Chapters ⭑
TMC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-02-2023, 08:47 PM   #21
GoldenTV
Member
Senior Member
 
GoldenTV's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 10, 2019
Posts: 1,030
Default Pee-wee Herman (Paul Reubens) dead at 70

Pee-wee Herman was big in the eighties who had a starring role in couple of movies and had his own children TV show. But his career nose dived when he got arrested for indecent exposure back in 1991 and his career never recovered. I hope celebrities would realize that when you are a public figure, you keep your private parts to yourself as the same thing happened to the singer George Michael. RIP

GoldenTV is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-02-2023, 09:03 PM   #22
Dude111
Forum Legend
 
Dude111's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 05, 2013
Posts: 35,899
Default

Very sad yes
Dude111 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2023, 01:40 PM   #23
Torgo
Omaha & Fritz
Forum Star
 
Torgo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 06, 2004
Location: Oregon
Posts: 19,025
Oh No

My sister took me to see Pee Wee's Big Adventure when it came to the theaters. She had already seen his 1981 comedy show The Pee Wee Herman Show, which was basically an adult themed special that was the basis for the later Saturday morning series Pee Wee's Playhouse (minus all of the adult oriented jokes). Seemed like after seeing Big Adventure, Pee Wee was everywhere.

Reubens even appeared as his Pee Wee character on an episode of the early 80s sitcom Madame's Place (which you can find on Youtube), Paul Reubens I popped up in small roles in a bunch of movies I had seen pre Big Adventure, but at the time I wasn't aware of who he was. Midnight Madness, The Blues Brothers, two Cheech & Chong movies, and the horror spoof Pandemonium where he plays alongside Tom Smothers.
__________________
"I'm going to go do something productive. I'm gonna go watch television." - Ray Peterson, The 'burbs

"I am the literary equivalent of a Big Mac and Fries." - Stephen King

"There's nothing wrong with G-rated movies, as long as there's lots of sex and violence." - Elvira
Torgo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2023, 02:48 PM   #24
JamesG
Freakshow
Moderator
Forum Icon
 
JamesG's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,045
Default

^ My sister was really into Danny Devito’s Matilda from the mid-90s and he appeared as an FBI agent.

Of course, he was also the vampire from the original Buffy film.
JamesG is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2023, 07:09 PM   #25
GoldenTV
Member
Senior Member
 
GoldenTV's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 10, 2019
Posts: 1,030
Default Thanks guys

I can't stop thinking that if Hollywood ever decide to make a movie about Pee-wee Herman, Sheldon Cooper character from The Big Bang Theory sitcom probably would be perfect for that role. Both characters act, sound and look so similar.

GoldenTV is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-06-2023, 06:06 AM   #26
Yong Fang
Member
Forum 3000 Club Member
 
Join Date: Aug 04, 2009
Location: Memphis Tennessee
Posts: 3,073
Default

I never was a fan of his Pee Wee act but he played other characters I thought were interesting. He played a character in a Johnny Depp film about a cocaine smuggler. He played a side character in a Cheech and Chong film. He also played the original brother in law of Robert on “Everybody Loves Raymond” but lost that gig because of what happened in the porn theater (which was the exact thing that happened to Fred Willard) and was replaced.

Ruebens and the late Phil Hartman were friends for awhile at the beginning of their careers doing stuff and brainstorming ideas with each other and the two men were close for a period of time. I think Hartman was sort of behind the genesis of the Pee Wee character. For some reason the two had a falling out and ceased their relationship. I don’t know why, I saw it in a documentary. Just an opinion but wasn’t a fan of either actor although Ruebens I felt was great playing edgy characters and not that ridiculous Pee Wee. But Pee Wee made him wealthy and money is God.
Yong Fang is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-06-2023, 12:20 PM   #27
Mario500
Member
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 14, 2011
Posts: 1,072
Default

"Remembering Pee-wee Herman creator Paul Reubens" (audio)
Quote:
We remember Reubens, who died July 30, by listening back to a 2004 interview with him, and to archival interviews with Laurence Fishburne and S. Epatha Merkerson, who appeared on Pee-wee's Playhouse.
Mario500 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-06-2023, 05:15 PM   #28
DJM77
Member
Forum Veteran
 
DJM77's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 15, 2001
Location: Missouri
Posts: 5,560
Send a message via ICQ to DJM77
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yong Fang View Post
He also played the original brother in law of Robert on “Everybody Loves Raymond” but lost that gig because of what happened in the porn theater (which was the exact thing that happened to Fred Willard) and was replaced.
No. The porn theater incident happened 11 years before he was on Everybody Loves Raymond. He got fired from Everybody Loves Raymond because of a child pornography charge. The charge was eventually dropped in exchange for a guilty plea to a lesser misdemeanor obscenity charge.
__________________
Marge: There are only 49 stars on that flag.
Abe: I'll be deep in the cold, cold ground before I recognize Missouri!
DJM77 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-07-2023, 08:08 PM   #29
TMC
Member
Forum Idol
 
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,458
Default

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQradk2M9e0

Quote:
Welcome to a whimsical journey through the colorful and eccentric history of Pee-Wee's Playhouse!

In this deep dive, we're peeling back the curtain on one of television's most beloved and bizarre shows. From its humble beginnings to its status as a cultural phenomenon, join us as we explore the incredible evolution of Pee-Wee's Playhouse.

Discover the creative genius of Paul Reubens, the man behind the bowtie and red bicycle, and how he brought Pee-Wee Herman to life. We'll take you behind the scenes, revealing fascinating anecdotes, surprising facts, and the magic that made this show a must-watch for kids and adults alike.

So, whether you're a lifelong fan or just curious about this wacky world, join us on this nostalgic journey into the Playhouse that redefined children's television and pop culture forever.

Get ready to relive the fun, nostalgia, and quirkiness of Pee-Wee's Playhouse - a place where anything can happen and where imagination knows no bounds!
TMC is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:03 AM.


Although the administrators and moderators of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards will attempt to keep all objectionable messages off this forum, it is impossible for us to review all messages. All messages express the views of the author, and neither the owners of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards, nor vBulletin Solutions Inc. (developers of vBulletin) will be held responsible for the content of any message. The owners of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards reserve the right to remove, edit, move or close any thread for any reason.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.