‘Mr. I Magination’…First CBS Childrens Show

‘Mr. I Magination’…First CBS Childrens Show

I must admit, I’m to young to have seen this, but have heard about it. Do you remember this?

This show debuted on CBS on April 24, 1949 and ran live as a half-hour weekly show till 1952. In a way, this was the CBS answer to ‘Howdy Doody’ on NBC and ‘The Small Fry Club’ on Dumont, but those shows were M-F shows. It’s likely the WCBS had a local kids show, but I don’t know…do you?

The host, Mr. I. Magination (Paul Tripp), dressed as a train engineer, and each week, different child actors would come in and ask questions about occupations, historical figures and activities and guests would come in to answer. The train could also travel in time so figures like Annie Oakley could be interviewed as is the case in this 1952 video. https://archive.org/details/Mr.I.Magination1952

Guests were as diverse as Damu, a lion tamer from Ringling Brothers Circus, and test pilot Scott Crossfield. Yul Brynner served as the director of the show at times, but did not appear as a performer. Two other actors that were later famous did perform on the show…Walter Matthau and Richard Boone. Incidentally, Tripp later made an appearance on Boone’s ‘Have Gun Will Travel’. Enjoy, share and help us fill in the blanks if you know more on this and ealy WCBS kids shows.

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5 Comments

  1. Alan Rosenfeld July 13, 2014

    Born in 52 so I never saw, do remember his later shows. My first recollection of CBS kids is Captain Kangaroo.

  2. Geoffrey Mark July 12, 2014

    He did this show locally on WCBS long after it went off the air nationally.

  3. Kerry Manderbach July 12, 2014

    According to Tim Hollis in “Hi There, Boys & Girls!”, this program was local to New York for a short period before going to the network. Other local WCBS show would have been The Chuck Wagon, Half-Pint Party, Space Funnies and Captain Safari of the Jungle Patrol.

  4. Gary Walters July 12, 2014

    I’ve never seen that kine before. Thanks for sharing!

  5. Warner W. Johnston July 12, 2014

    We did not get a television until some time after the 1952 political conventions. My parents got it explicitly so they could watch the 56 conventions, and host watching parties, but they bought it well before that. Probably 1953. VHF only, big RCA cube.