September 7, 1956…NBC Debuts The Animated Peacock


September 7, 1956…NBC Debuts The Animated Peacock

57 years ago today, this animated film clip rolled at NBC for the first time at the start of ‘Your Hit Parade’ which at the time, was originating live and in living color from NBC Studio 8H. The voice belongs to legendary NBC announcer Ben Grauer. The animation was done by Electra Film Labs in New York City. The man who designed the peacock is John J. Graham.

There will be much more on this in the next post or two, but I wanted you to see this in the clear. Below in the comments section is the original peacock slide that debuted in July of 1956…fourteen months before this historic bird came to life. Enjoy and share! – Bobby Ellerbee

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ug9ndBnWi9A

www.technologynewstimeline.com In 1957, NBC used this to indicate that the following program would be in color. It was the true beginning of the color-TV era.

Source

18 Comments

  1. Dave Miller September 8, 2014

    And if you remember seeing the peacock before AFL games … Here’s one voiced by Bill Wendell, later to become Letterman’s announcer: http://youtu.be/Fnxgtkqy3qA

  2. Howard Malley September 8, 2014

    I remember being the TD on the 11 PM News on WBZ where the director (Lynn ?) inevitably ran over and said “kill the peacock” going into The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson”. He gained an additional :13 seconds.

  3. Patricia Cox September 7, 2014

    Thanks Andy Rose for the name correction. Dave Miller, that was one wacky voiceover from 1960! Can’t say I remember that one.

  4. Patricia Cox September 7, 2014

    The combination of the bright sounding woodwinds, synchronized with the cheerful colors, swirling and culminating in the unfurling of the tail feathers, and Mel Brandt’s distinctive vocal tone always warmed my heart and made me feel good. <3

    1962 NBC Laramie Peacock: http://youtu.be/VE_oHJt_V5M

  5. Lisa J. Kassner September 7, 2014

    Wow… I have not heard that theme or seen this version of the Peacock… I do not think the current Peacock though is going anywhere… “It does not have any feet” …

  6. Al Danieli September 7, 2014

    ” the following program is brought to you in living color on NBC”

  7. Don Hougland September 7, 2014

    Also, remember that during the late 50’s, NBC also aired a 5 sec TAG Video to most all programs showing of two boom mics crossing or a B&W camera changing lenses (Racking Over) or a color camera, with the words…”produced in association with the NBC Television Network”…

  8. John Roger Bolin September 7, 2014

    An iconic moment in TV history.

  9. Dave Dillman September 7, 2014

    In some desk drawer I still have a 16mm version of the peacock. I remember that NBC Chicago didn’t record the peacock but left a hole for it at the top of a program (it would be rolled in live on film). It didn’t look too good in low band quad videotape.

  10. Wally Roper September 7, 2014

    I remember they used the slide for “It Could Be You” from LA…12:30 PM EST…

  11. Bob Batsche September 7, 2014

    3-2-1- Up the bird, cue announce

  12. Robert Howe September 7, 2014

    I can’t tell you how much I love your page.

  13. Cris Allen September 7, 2014

    My favorite peacock logo was the one and done used by Saturday Night Live after NBC revived the peacock in the early 80s. The slogan was “NBC, smart as a peacock.”

  14. Rick Bozeman September 7, 2014

    I remember the original static peacock at beginning of “The Howdy Doody Show” every afternoon c.1955-56.

  15. James Stanley Barr September 7, 2014

    I remember watching that old peacock at the beginning of Mary Martin’s Peter Pan when NBC rebroadcast that in the early 90s…..and of course that 1962 peacock was much better…..seeing it on Carson’s final show and when NBC brought it out for Conan O’Brien’s first Tonight Show.

  16. David Sherman September 7, 2014

    My personal favorite of the “Peacocks.” When NBC rebroadcast the 1960 telecast of “PETER PAN” starring Mary Martin in 1988 or ’89, I taped it. When I watched it later, I didn’t know this version of the Peacock preceded it. It was the first time I had seen it in color!

  17. Glenn Mack September 7, 2014

    The peacock animation I always remembered, was the one that came after this one. The version here is used on the first couple of seasons of Bonanza on DVD.

  18. Eyes Of A Generation.com September 7, 2014

    This is the first use of the peacock logo…a slide which began to be used in July of 1956. There was various live copy read over this and one script read “You could be watching this in color”. More to come.