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Paul Shannon

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Occupation
  
actor

Name
  
Paul Shannon


Role
  
Television actor

Movies
  
The Outlaws Is Coming

Paul Shannon piacasdadtripodcomsitebuildercontentsitebuilde

Born
  
November 11, 1909 (
1909-11-11
)
Crafton, Pennsylvania

Resting place
  
Queen of Heaven Catholic Cemetery in McMurray, Pennsylvania

Died
  
July 25, 1990, Lantana, Florida, United States

Paul Vincent Shannon (November 11, 1909 – July 25, 1990) was a veteran Pittsburgh radio announcer in the days before commercial television. He worked for years at KDKA radio in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and hosted his own show as the Dream Weaver, reading romantic poetry to electric organ accompaniment in the style of Peter Grant on the famous Cincinnati radio program Moon River over WLW. He also hosted the syndicated science-focused program Adventures in Research with Thomas Phillips.

Paul Shannon Paul Shannon Wikipedia

After moving to WTAE-TV, he became a Pittsburgh legend, particularly to the baby boom generation, as host of the popular children's television block Adventure Time. The show aired on WTAE channel 4 in the afternoons. The show showed Three Stooges shorts, the vast library of Warner Bros. Cartoons, Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons, Little Rascals shorts, and the first color anime, Kimba the White Lion, in serialised form along with skits and songs.

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Shannon also played to a studio audience that attended each broadcast, usually scout troops and amused his audiences with his alter ego, "Nosmo King", a play on "No Smoking" signs (but not to be confused with H. Vernon Watson (1886–1949), the British music hall artist who also performed as Nosmo King). Puppeteer Hank Stohl had another puppet called Knish, which was nicer than Nosmo King.

He also used a prop he dubbed "The Magic Sword."

A high point of the show came each Christmas season, when Paul Shannon read children's letters to Santa Claus, placed them into a rocket, and launched it to the North Pole.

Shannon was one of several 1950s-1960s children's TV hosts to begin presenting reruns of the Three Stooges on Adventure Time, bringing the trio's 1930s and 1940s comedy shorts to an entirely new audience. It helped revive the Stooges as a viable act at a time when they were considered ancient history, leading to an entirely new career of stage and film appearances. In gratitude to Shannon and several other hosts, the Stooges featured them in cameo roles in their feature film. Shannon played Wild Bill Hickok in the Three Stooges film, The Outlaws Is Coming.

He retired and moved to Lantana, Florida in 1975, and died there of brain cancer at age 80 in 1990.

Filmography

Actor
1990
Shark in the Park (TV Series) as
Uniformed branch
- Nothing But the Truth (1991) - Uniformed branch
- A Little Help for My Friends (1991) - Uniformed branch
- Loyalties (1991) - Uniformed branch
- A Sensitive Family Matter (1991) - Uniformed branch
- Lovers and Losers (1991) - Uniformed branch
- The Only Thing to Fear (1991) - Uniformed branch
- Et Tu, Brute (1991) - Uniformed branch
- Suffer Little Children (1991) - Uniformed branch
- You've Gotta Have Mates (1991) - Uniformed branch
- Silver Spurs (1991) - Uniformed branch
- All Sorts (1991) - Uniformed branch
- White Heat (1991) - Uniformed branch
- Double or Quits (1990) - Uniformed branch
1965
The Outlaws Is Coming as
Wild Bill Hickok
Archive Footage
2015
Hey Moe, Hey Dad! (TV Series documentary) as
Various characters
- Curtain Call (2015) - Various characters (uncredited)
1994
Biography (TV Series documentary) as
Wild Bill Hickok
- Stooges: The Men Behind the Mayhem (1994) - Wild Bill Hickok (uncredited)

References

Paul Shannon Wikipedia


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