1953–1969: Origins Gumby was created by
Art Clokey in the early 1950s after he finished film school at the
University of Southern California (USC).
Gumbasia was created in the "kinesthetic" style taught by Clokey's USC professor
Slavko Vorkapić, described as "massaging of the eye cells". Much of Gumby's look and feel was inspired by this technique of camera movements and editing. In 1955, Clokey showed
Gumbasia to film producer Sam Engel, who encouraged him to develop his technique by animating figures into children's stories. On January 29, 1955, Clokey produced and filmed the first pilot episode starring Gumby, titled "Adventures of Gumby: A Sample", which never aired. The name "Gumby" was derived from the muddy clay found at Clokey's grandparents' farm that his family named "gumbo". Gumby's appearance was inspired by a suggestion from Clokey's wife Ruth (née Parkander) that Gumby be based on
the Gingerbread Man. Clokey saw the color green as both racially neutral and a symbol of life. Gumby's legs and feet were made wide to pragmatically ensure that the figure would stand erect during stop-motion filming. Gumby's slanted head was based on the hairstyle of Clokey's father, Charles Farrington, in an old photograph. The pilot episode was seen by
NBC executive Thomas Warren Sarnoff, who asked Clokey to make another one. The second episode, "Gumby on the Moon", became a hit when featured on
Howdy Doody, so Sarnoff ordered a series in 1955 titled
The Gumby Show. In 1955 and 1956, 25 11-minute episodes aired on NBC. In early episodes, Gumby's voice was provided by Ruth Eggleston, wife of the show's art director Al Eggleston, until 1957, when
Dallas McKennon assumed the role. Al Eggleston also invented Pokey, the little orange pony who was Gumby's best friend and was introduced during the earliest episodes. Because of its variety format,
The Gumby Show features Clokey's animations plus interviews and games. During this time, the show had two successive hosts,
Robert Nicholson and
Pinky Lee. In 1959,
The Gumby Show entered syndication, and more episodes were produced in the 1960s. Production started in Hollywood and in 1960 moved to a larger studio in
Glendora, California, where it remained until production ended in 1969. During this time, Gumby was primarily voiced by
Norma MacMillan and occasionally by
Ginny Tyler. The cartoon shorts introduced new characters, including a blue mermaid named Goo and a yellow dinosaur named Prickle.
1982–1989: Revival Beginning in 1982, Gumby was parodied by
Eddie Murphy on
Saturday Night Live. The sketches depict Gumby as an irascible, cigar-chomping celebrity who is highly demanding of the production executives. Whenever they refuse his demands, Gumby asserts his star status by saying "I'm
Gumby, dammit!" in an exaggerated Jewish accent. According to Clokey's son Joseph, his father and he "thought Eddie was a genius in the way he played that character". In 1987, the original
Gumby shorts were released on home video. In 1988, Gumby appeared in
The Puppetoon Movie. This renewed interest led to a new
Gumby Adventures series of 99 seven-minute episodes, produced for television syndication in association with
Lorimar-Telepictures in 1988.
Dallas McKennon voices Gumby in the new adventures, in which Gumby and his pals travels beyond their toyland setting as a musical band.
Gumby Adventures includes new characters, such as Gumby's little sister Minga, a mastodon named Denali and a chicken named Tilly. In the film, the villainous Blockheads replace Gumby and his band with robots and kidnap their dog, Lowbelly. It contains homages to science-fiction films such as
Star Wars,
The Terminator and
2001: A Space Odyssey. In 1998, the
Gumby episode "Robot Rumpus" was featured on
Mystery Science Theater 3000. On March 16, 2007, YouTube announced that all
Gumby episodes would appear in their full-length form on its site, digitally remastered and with their original soundtracks. This deal also extended to other video sites, including
AOL. In March 2007,
KQED-TV broadcast an hour-long documentary titled
Gumby Dharma in its
Truly CA series. It details Clokey's life and work, and has new animation of Gumby and Pokey. For these sequences, animator Stephen A. Buckley voiced Gumby and Clokey voiced Pokey. In 2012,
MeTV began airing
Gumby in its weekend morning animation block until the end of the year. In 2014, the
VOD service
Kabillion broadcast
Gumby. In 2017, a comic series was published that seemingly takes place after the movie. The series was canceled after three issues.
2022–present: Fox ownership In February 2022,
Fox Entertainment, the TV production division of the
Murdoch family's
Fox Corporation, announced it had acquired the
Gumby intellectual property from the estate of Art's son, Joseph Clokey, encompassing all rights including "film, TV and streaming, consumer products, licensing, publishing, and all other categories", with plans to launch new series across linear and digital platforms, while adding to the classic
Gumby material available on its free streaming platform
Tubi. Before Fox took ownership of the series, Gumby made a cameo in
the 17th season of
The Simpsons in the episode "
The Girl Who Slept Too Little". In June 2024, two
Gumby series were announced to be in the works: a 2D children's animated series titled
Gumby Kids and an
adult animated series. Both series were to be produced by
Bento Box Entertainment. On April 18, 2026, Gumby, voiced by Jim Mackenzie, paid tribute to
Eddie Murphy during his honor of the
AFI Life Achievement Award. ==Cast==