HERB MCALLISTER
In late 1955 Herb McAllister created Froggy Doo as a hand puppet for use on a children's television show entitled "Happy Herb's Show". The show first aired on KFBB in Great Falls, Montana, and incorporated a studio audience. Happy Herb
visited with children on the show, taught them how to draw cartoons, and performed magic and ventriloquism with Froggy and his other puppet Clarence.
In 1956 Herb designed and constructed the marionette Froggy Doo which made its debut on Halloween. Froggy became so popular that the show was renamed "Happy Herb and Froggy Doo" and aired for eight years on KFBB-TV. For three years Herb also featured Froggy on a Saturday morning radio program which included reading children's letters and stories. Of course, Froggy added spice by playing his famous piano.
During the autumn of 1963, KGHL-TV in Billings (Now KULR-TV) hired Herb to perform "Happy Herb and Froggy Doo". Then a calamity struck. In October 1966, burglars broke into the station and stole thousands of dollars of electronic equipment and… Froggy Doo. The perpetrators sent a ransom note through the mail demanding $150 plus $10 in quarters. But a few days later, a boy who was riding his horse on the outskirts of Billings found Froggy's body hanging on a fence post. About a month later, three children spotted Froggy's head lying on the back seat of a car in an alley in downtown Billings. But all was not lost. Froggy just needed new clothes and Herb painstakingly repaired his long time friend. For ten more years Happy Herb and Froggy Doo enjoyed an exciting and successful run on KULR- TV.
After twenty-two years on television, Herb retired and moved to Palm Springs, California, to create oil paintings of landscapes and Western subjects. In 1978, Herb moved to Denver, and worked as an illustrator for Jeppesen Sanderson, a division of Times Mirror. For seven years, he free-lanced for CM Comics. Following his retirement from that company, he returned to his native Montana, first to Billings then to Kalispell. He continues to paint and occasionally perform as a magician. His trusty sidekick Froggy Doo still keeps him company in his studio each day.
The Legacy Project
Darlene Craney
Norma Ashby
Lonnie Bell
Conrad Burns
Cato Butler
Jerry Black
Ron Cass
Donna Kelley
Herb McAllister
Bob Merrill
Dan Miller
Vic Miller
Brent Musburger
George Ostrom
Gene Peterson
Fred Pfeiffer
Jerry Puffer
Dave Rye
Dan Snyder
Stan Stephens
Art Taft
Stan Whitman
Dave Wilson
Joe Sample
Bill Whitsitt