News

Despite the fact that it has since been discontinued, this once-popular vintage children's TV show found great success with ...
The original Howdy Doody puppet belongs with the Detroit Institute of Arts, no strings attached, a federal judge ruled. The ruling settles a dispute between the museum and the family of Rufus Rose ...
WHAT: An original production Howdy Doody marionette associated with the 1950s TV show featuring the red-haired figure sold for $15,860 recently in an antique toy auction at Pook & Pook. While it ...
Pictures and videos have gone viral of a 2,200-pound Watusi African bull riding shotgun with his owner. The owner's car, a Ford Crown Victoria, is gliding down the streets of Norfolk, Nebraska, as ...
Howdy Doody will be freed from his confinement in a Rhode Island bank vault for a home in Detroit, where his new keepers at the Detroit Institute of Arts are planning a grand unveiling. After a ...
Matthew Gruber manufactured a Howdy Doody automaton, a mechanically driven puppet synchronized to a tape played on a continuous loop.
The bull named Howdy Doody is owned by Lee Meyer, a resident of Neligh, Nebraska. The two have become quite famous.
Matthew Gruber manufactured a Howdy Doody automaton, a mechanically driven puppet synchronized to a tape played on a continuous loop.
“And then there’s Howdy Doody, wingman to an American original. Lee’s granddaughter made the mistake of telling the retired machinist ‘it was a bad idea and that it’d never work.’ ...
From the early 1950s to the ‘60s, Brinker helped create many characters on the “Howdy Doody Show,” as described on the “Eyes of a Generation” website.