Hong Kong Phooey (TV series)


 * This article is about the TV series. For the main title character, see Hong Kong Phooey (character). For other uses, see Hong Kong Phooey.

Hong Kong Phooey is an American animated action-comedy television series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for ABC's Saturday morning children's programming. It ran in 1974, airing 16 episodes that spanned one season.

Working as a police station's janitor, mild-mannered Penry Pooch is really Hong Kong Phooey, who believes himself to be a competent and wise martial artist, when in fact is the complete opposite. His idiocy gets to the point where he has to be saved by his pet cat, Spot, who makes Hong Kong look like a hero.

Big Duke, Blubber and Stick from the final episode titled, "Comedy Cowboys," would later star in their own segments of the CB Bears.

The entire series has also been released on DVD.

Casting
Executive producer Joseph Barbera did not tell the ABC network of Scatman Crothers's name when he was cast as Hong Kong Phooey, as he believed that they would not approve of a black man in the role. The network found out that they enjoyed his performance, simply due to the humor behind it.

Music
The music was composed by Hoyt Curtin, with musical supervision from Paul DeKorte. The sound editor was Joe Sandusky.

Cast

 * Scatman Crothers as Hong Kong Phooey
 * Kathy Gori as Rosemary
 * Joe E. Ross as Sergeant Flint
 * Don Messick as Spot and the Narrator

In popular culture

 * In the Animaniacs segment "Back in Style," Chun-King Fooey is mentioned to have lost ratings by adding the Warner siblings.
 * In the Family Guy episode "I Never Met the Dead Man," Peter can't resist the urge to jump into a children's ball pit at Cheesie Charlie's, shouting out "Hong Kong Phooey!" as he does.
 * The theme song appears on the Billboard for the Hot 100 Cartoon Songs in The Cleveland Show episode "Harder, Better, Faster, Browner." The writers are also mentioned underneath.
 * In The Goldbergs episode "Kara-te," Murray called Barry's karate performance for the talent show a "Hong Kong Phooey act."

Comic Book Men

 * "To the Bat Cave:" Walt says his favorite talking dog is Hong Kong Phooey.
 * "Dukes of Jersey:" Kevin Smith used Hong Kong Phooey as an example of being a fan of something, but wouldn't be so drastic as to get a tattoo of a show he may later have no interest in.
 * "KITT and Caboodle:" Walt mentions how Hong Kong Phooey was created during the kung fu craze of the 1970s.

Legacy
Hong Kong Phooey was memorable enough to be brought back in the Hanna-Barbera crossover series Laff-A-Lympics in 1977, as a member of the Scooby Doobies. Then in 2001 and 2018, he appeared in a web short and DC Comics' Black Lightning/Hong Kong Phooey Special, respectively, with both times redoing him as someone serious and in complete control.

He also guest-starred in the 2017 reboot of Wacky Races.

Warner Bros. Pictures also attempted to make a live-action feature-length film, with Eddie Murphy in the lead. They only achieved producing a test film in 2012.