Robert C. "Bob" McAllister (June 2, 1935 – July 21, 1998) was an American television personality, magician, and children's entertainer and a host of Wonderama.
This led to his being hired on at WJZ-TV Channel 13 in Baltimore, Maryland in 1963 on The Bob McAllister Show, a half-hour program of comedy character and puppet sketches, magic acts, pantomime, cartoons, and sight gags intended to revive the absurd visual surrealism of Ernie Kovacs' television work.
The Bob McAllister Show was a big success and led to an offer from WNYW Channel 5 in New York City to host his own program there, where it premiered on September 9, 1968. The New York City version of the show was not as successful as the Baltimore broadcast, and time constraints and budget restrictions led to its cancellation on Friday, September 5, 1969,[1] http://www.tvparty.com/lostny2mcallister.html after which it went into reruns.
The musical theme of McAllister's Wonderama was an orchestral arrangement by Andre Kostelanetz of the song "I Ain't Down Yet" from Meredith Willson's Broadway theatre musical The Unsinkable Molly Brown. Audience children typically waved their arms in a diagonal criss-cross fashion over their heads to the beat of the music when it opened and closed each show.
McAllister also hosted reproduced Wonderama shows at various locations, including the Six Flags Great Adventure amusement park in Jackson Township, New Jersey, and the Harvard Club of New York City. He also found the time to host a few children's television specials for WNEW-TV during the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The weekday afternoon version of Wonderama was not as successful as the original Sunday afternoon/Sunday morning format and was dropped on Friday, August 21, 1970, returning to its Sunday morning schedule where it continued until Sunday morning, December 25, 1977.
This song bore a resemblance to the Boodleheimer song by Stuart Hample, originally published in The Silly Book in 1961.
In 1975, Monty Hall, impressed by McAllister, flew him out to Los Angeles to host a pilot for a new ABC game show called Carnival. By all accounts, the pilot was well-done, but it was never picked up as a series.
He was forced to leave Wonderama following the series' Christmas Day 1977 broadcast. In the fall of 1978, McAllister briefly returned to children's television as the host/performer and interviewer of ABC TV's Kids Are People Too, a show that took its name from the title of McAllister's closing Wonderama theme. However, the show that he was hired to emcee was aimed at teens, not children, and this led to creative disputes with the producers and network executives. In November 1978, Bob McAllister was fired from Kids Are People Too! and he was replaced by Michael Young and later Randy Hamilton as the program's host.
He tried a return to children's television with an in-school educational program called Tuned In, produced by WNET for PBS in the early 1980s. He played the teacher Mr. Graff, who involved his pupils in television production. He made an appearance in the 1980s at The Galleria in White Plains, New York which ended with him singing the original Wonderama closing theme song, “Kids are People Too”.
He received recognition in the magic field with numerous awards, including the Magician of the Year Award from the Society of American Magicians.
Later years
Death
External links
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