Hee Haw

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[[File:200px-Hee_Haw1_4683.jpg|fram] Hee Haw was an American television variety show featuring country music and humor with fictional rural Kornfield Kounty as a backdrop. It aired on CBS from 1969 to 1971 before a 20-year run in local [[Syndicatio]. The show was inspired by [[Rowan and Martin's Laugh-I], the major difference being that Hee Haw was far less topical, and was centered on country music. Initially co-hosted by musicians Buck Owens and Roy Clark, the show was equally well known for its voluptuous, scantily clad women in stereotypical farmer's daughter outfits, male stars Jim and Jon Hager, and its cornpone humor.

The appeal of Hee Haw was not limited to a rural audience. It was successful in all of the major markets, including [[New York Cit], [[Los Angele] and [[Useful Notes/Chicago|Chicag].

Two rural-style comedians, already well known in their native Canada, gained their first major U.S. exposure on Hee Haw — Gordie Tapp and Don Harron (whose KORN Radio character, newscaster Charlie Farquharson, had been a fixture of Canadian television since 1952 and later appeared on The Red Green Show).

Other cast members over the years included: Roy Acuff, Cathy Baker, Billy Jim Baker, [[Playboy|Barbi Bento], Jennifer Bishop, Archie Campbell, John Henry Faulk, Marianne Gordon (Rogers), the Hager Twins (Jim and Jon), Victoria Hallman (as "Miss Honeydew"), Gunilla Hutton (as "[[Hello, Nurse!|Nurse Goodbod]"), [[Cool Old Guy|Leon "Grandpa" Jone], Zella Lehr (the "unicycle girl"), George Lindsey (reprising his "Goober" character from The Andy Griffith Show), Jimmy Little, Irlene Mandrell, the Rev. Grady Nutt, Minnie Pearl, Claude 'Jackie' Phelps, [[Hey, It's That Guy!|Slim Picken], Kenny Price, Ann Randall, Susan Raye, Jimmie Riddle, Lulu Roman, Misty Rowe, Junior Samples, Gailard Sartain, Jeff Smith, Roni Stoneman, Linda Thompson, Lisa Todd, Nancy Traylor and Jonathan Winters, among many others. A lot of the regulars were also regulars in the Grand Ole Opry.

The Buckaroos were the house band on this popular syndicated show and consisted of: Don Rich, Jim Shaw, Jerry Brightman, Jerry Wiggins, Rick Taylor, Doyle Singer (Doyle Curtsinger), Don Lee, Ronnie Jackson, Terry Christoffersen, Doyle Holly and Jesse Rose McQueen (Victoria Hallman).

Tropes used in Hee Haw include:
  • [[A Good Name for a Rock Band|A Good Name For A Country Band]: BR-549
  • Annoying Laugh: Don Harron's "Charlie Farquharson" character had one that was somewhere between a nerd laugh and a donkey's bray.
  • [[The Barbe]: Archie's Barber Shop.
  • [[Big Beautiful Woma]: Lulu Roman, who was a former go-go dancer but had a thyroid condition.
  • [[Bloope]: Flubs and goof-ups were often [[Throw It In|left i], as they were often funnier than the jokes.
  • [[Blowing a Raspberr]: At the end of "Where O Where Are You Tonight?"
  • [[Brainless Beaut]: Many, though some were a lot smarter than they seemed. Others, played this trope straight, though.
  • [[Burma-Shav]: An occasional gag presented a Burma-Shave-style rhyme/joke, one line at a time on a series of signs filmed by a camera moving slowly past them.
  • [[The Came]: Often, [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NFLkqJL-bsc especially in the "Where, Oh Where are You Tonight?" sketche (the cameo star would often have their back turned to the camera until the chorus reveal).
  • [[Catch Phras]: Several.
    • Sa-LUTE!
    • Owens: "I'm a-Pickin'...!" Clark: "...And I'm a-Grinnin'!"
    • Minnie Pearl: HOWWWWWW-DEEEEEEE!
  • [[Cloudcuckoolande]: Several, as much of the humor was based on this. Most notably, Junior Samples.
  • [[Comic Book Adaptatio]
  • [[Frontier Doctor|Country Docto]: Archie Campbell played one.
  • Country Music: The show was built around it and would usually have popular country music guest stars.
  • Deep South: Kornfield Kounty is located somewhere here.
  • Despair Speech: The song "Doom, Despair and Agony On Me" is a parody of this trope.
  • The Ditz: Junior Samples was this in spades.
  • [[Doomy Dooms of Doo]: "Doom, Despair and Agony On Me".
  • Eccentric Townsfolk aplenty.
  • [[Everything's Better with Chicken]: Often, if someone would tell an especially lame joke, someone else on the cast (or offstage) would hit them with a rubber chicken.
    • There was also a regular animated segment, with a chicken mistaking anything and everything for an egg. The chicken would sit on items, such as a ringside bell, a man's bald head, a billiard ball, a football, a golf ball, and even a bomb, with various disastrous results.
  • [[Farmer's Daughte]: Most every girl on the show, especially the [[Ms. Fanservice|Hee Haw Honey].
  • [[Good News, Bad New]: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KP2h1gJcsHU Thi famous Archie Campbell sketch.
  • [[Good Ol' Bo]: Most every guy on the show.
  • [[Gossipy Hen]: The Gossip Girls sketches. (Not to be confused with [[Gossip Girl|the soap oper].)
  • [[Greasy Spoo]: Lulu's Truck Stop.
  • Hello, Nurse!: Nurse Goodbody.
  • [[Heroic Do]: Beauregard the Wonder Dog (earlier, Kingfish the Wonder Dog). Four dogs actually played the dog during the show's run (usually seen in the Moonshiners sketches). Played with in that the bloodhound did nothing but sleep.
  • Hey, It's That Guy!: [[Dr. Strangelove|Major "King" Kon] is having a barbecue!
    • Hey, It's That... Car? The [[Beverly Hillbillie]' [[The Alleged Car|ca] was often used in humorous 5-10 second shorts in-between main segments of the show.
  • Honest John's Dealership: Junior Samples' used car lot, "Samples Sales".
  • Laugh Track
  • [[Lazy Bu]: One frequent segment called The Moonshiners, where a couple of the cast would lazily tell a joke while dozing on the floor near a bunch of moonshine jugs and [[Old Dog|Beauregard th] Wonder Dog (Kingfish the Wonder Dog in earlier shows), with scantily dressed girls in the background.
  • [[Ridiculously Long Phone Number|Ridiculously Short Phone Numbe]: BR-549 for Samples Motors, vendors of [[The Alleged Ca]. Normally, [[Telephone Exchange Name] were only used in large cities where different central offices served different neighbourhoods; rural areas had their own telephonic quirks, such as [[Party Line Telephon]s where every farm on the route was wired to the same physical line.
  • [[Schoolmar]: Minnie Pearl often played one.
  • [[Sdrawkcab Nam]: Archie Campbell's retelling of Cinderella ("Rindercell") and the Three Little Pigs ("[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0Os2IGDXM8&feature=related Pee Little Thrig"). (Actually more like [[Spooneriss, but "telling it backwards" was the joke.)
  • [[Sexy Secretar]: Miss Honeydew.
  • [[Shop Keepe]: Gordie's General Store.
  • [[Shout-Ou]: A cast member would salute an American small town and give its population, followed by the entire cast popping up from a cornfield and yelling "Sa-loote!!!!" Early on, this was met with canned laughter, but this soon changed to applause (in a nod that small-town America was being honored, rather than this be a joke).
  • [[Simple Country Lawye]: Justus O'Peace; "Cletus Biggs of Biggs, Shy & Stir — Kornfield Kounty's most honorable law firm — where our motto is, 'When in doubt, sue!'"
  • [[Southern Bell]: Colonel Daddy's daughter.
  • [[Southern-Fried Geniu]: Archie Campbell, "Samuel B. Sternwheeler".
  • [[Sacred Hospitality|Southern Hospitalit]: "Hey, Grandpa, what's for supper?" gag (Grandpa Jones would then describe a meal in poetic rhyme, often a delicious country-style meal that would be met with cast approval, but sometimes a comically bad entree (met with a "Yuk!").)
    • Also, Slim Pickens' Bar-B-Q.
  • [[Summer Replacement Serie]: Began life as a summer replacement for [[The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hou].
  • [[Sweet Home Alabam]: See Deep South.
  • [[Title Theme Tun]: "HEEEEEEEEEE HAWWWWWWWWW! Hee hee hee haw haw haw! Hee Haw!"

[[Category:Sketch Comed] [[Category:Live-Action TV of the 1960] [[Category:Live-Action TV of the 1970] [[Category:Western Animatio]