Difference between revisions of "Hokey in the Pokey"

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|image= [[File:You mumble something, Wolf?.png|300px]]
|image= [[File:You mumble something, Wolf?.png|300px]]
|caption= [[Silky]] and [[Mushy]] confront [[Hokey Wolf|Hokey]].
|caption= [[Silky]] and [[Mushy]] confront [[Hokey Wolf|Hokey]].
|prodno=
|prodno= W-11
|premiere= Week of November 13, 1961
|premiere= Week of November 13, 1961
|run_time= 7:07
|run_time= 7:07

Revision as of 19:28, 18 August 2021

Hokey in the Pokey
File:You mumble something, Wolf?.png
Silky and Mushy confront Hokey.
Production number W-11
Premiere date Week of November 13, 1961
Run time 7:07
Writer(s) Tony Benedict
Director(s) William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
Episode navigation
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Title card
HW 111 title card.png

"Hokey in the Pokey" is the eleventh episode of Hokey Wolf season one, and came as part of The Huckleberry Hound Show. It first aired on November 13, 1961 in first run syndication. It was written by Tony Benedict, and produced and directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, the founders of Hanna-Barbera.

Hokey and Ding-a-Ling get mixed up in a situation when two thieves have stolen a valuable painting and hide in Hokey's cave. Ten months later they try to take the painting from the wolves at gunpoint, until the wolves get themselves turned over to the police by mistake.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Museum Watchman: It was most remarkable the day that picture was stolen. I saw it hanging there like that, then the next time I looked, it was gone just like that. OH NO! NOT AGAIN!

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Museum Watchman Doug Young
Paperboy Daws Butler
Silky Doug Young
Mushy Daws Butler
Hokey Wolf Daws Butler
Ding-a-Ling Doug Young
Museum visitors N/A
Cop Daws Butler


Locations

Objects

Vehicles

  • Silky and Mushy's car

Release

Production

Development

Music

Behind the scenes

  • This episode is one of the rare occasions where the real criminal(s) actually get away with their crimes.

Errors

  • For some reason, every time Silky is in the crooks car, his trench coat is colored brown instead of white, only is his trench coat colored correctly when he's not in the car.
  • If Hokey is shown to read newspapers in previous and later shorts, then wouldn't he find the article on the Moanin' Liza being stolen from the beginning?

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

References