, Andy Samuel,
Allen "Farina" Hoskins,
Mickey Daniels and
Joe Cobb in a 1923 still from one of the earliest
Our Gang comedies
1922–1925: early years According to Roach, he devised the idea for
Our Gang in 1921 after auditioning a child actress whom he believed to be overly rehearsed and wearing excessive makeup. Through his window, Roach saw some children arguing over sticks of wood in a lumberyard and thought that a series of film shorts about children being themselves might be a success.
Our Gang also had its roots in a canceled Roach short-subject series revolving around the adventures of a black boy called "Sunshine Sammy", played by
Ernie Morrison. the series ended after just one entry,
The Pickaninny (1921), was produced. The series was officially called both
Our Gang and ''Hal Roach's Rascals
until 1932, when Our Gang'' became the sole title of the series. The first cast was recruited primarily of children recommended to Roach by studio employees, with the exception of Morrison, who was already under contract to Roach. The others included Roach photographer Gene Kornman's daughter
Mary Kornman, their friends' son
Mickey Daniels, and family friends
Allen Hoskins,
Jack Davis,
Jackie Condon, and
Joe Cobb. Most early shorts were filmed outdoors and on location and featured a menagerie of animal characters, such as Dinah the Mule. Robert McGowan and
Tom McNamara served in tandem as the series' directors during this early period. Roach's distributor
Pathé released
One Terrible Day, the fourth short produced for the series, as the first short on September 10, 1922; the pilot film
Our Gang was not released until November 5. The series performed well at the box office, and by the end of the decade, the
Our Gang children were pictured in numerous product endorsements. The featured
Our Gang stars were Morrison as Sunshine Sammy, Daniels, Kornman, and Hoskins as little Farina, who eventually became the most popular member of the 1920s gang and the most popular black child star of the 1920s. A reviewer wrote of the Farina character, depicted as female although played by a male child, in
Photoplay: "The honors go to a very young lady of color, billed as 'Little Farina.' Scarcely two years old, she goes through each set like a wee, sombre shadow." Daniels and Kornman were very popular and were often paired in
Our Gang and a later teen version of the series titled
The Boy Friends, which Roach produced from 1930 to 1932. Other early
Our Gang children were
Eugene Jackson as Pineapple,
Scooter Lowry,
Andy Samuel,
Johnny Downs,
Winston and Weston Doty, and
Jay R. Smith.
1926–1929: new faces and new distributors After Ernie, Mickey and Mary left the series in the mid-1920s, the
Our Gang series entered a transitional period. The stress of directing child actors forced McGowan to take doctor-mandated sabbaticals for exhaustion, New faces included
Bobby Hutchins as Wheezer,
Harry Spear,
Jean Darling and
Mary Ann Jackson, while Farina served as the series' anchor. Also at this time, the
Our Gang cast acquired an American Pit Bull Terrier with a ring around one eye, originally named Pansy but soon known as
Pete the Pup, the most famous
Our Gang pet. In 1927, Roach ended his distribution arrangement with the Pathé company. He agreed to release future products through the newly formed
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, which released its first
Our Gang comedy,
Yale vs. Harvard, now a
lost film, in September 1927. The move to MGM offered Roach larger budgets and the chance for his films to be packaged with MGM features for the
Loews Theatres chain. Some shorts around this time, particularly
Spook Spoofing (1928), contained extended scenes of the gang tormenting and teasing Farina, scenes that raised claims of racism that many other shorts did not warrant. These shorts marked the departure of
Jackie Condon, who had been with the group from the beginning of the series. in the 1930 short ''
School's Out''
1928–1931: entering the sound era Starting in 1928,
Our Gang comedies were distributed with
phonographic discs that contained synchronized music and sound-effect tracks. In the spring of 1929, the Roach studios were converted for sound recording, and
Our Gang's sound debut occurred in April 1929 with the 25-minute film
Small Talk. It took a year for McGowan and the cast to fully adjust to sound films, a period in which they lost Joe Cobb, Jean Darling and Harry Spear and added
Norman Chaney,
Dorothy DeBorba,
Matthew "Stymie" Beard,
Donald Haines and
Jackie Cooper. Cooper proved to be the personality whom the series had been missing since Daniels left and was featured prominently in three 1930/1931
Our Gang films: ''
Teacher's Pet, School's Out, and Love Business''. These three shorts explored Cooper's crush on new schoolteacher Miss Crabtree, played by
June Marlowe. Cooper soon won the lead role in
Paramount's feature film
Skippy, and Roach sold Cooper's contract to MGM in 1931. Other
Our Gang members appearing in the early sound shorts included
Buddy McDonald,
Clifton Young, and
Shirley Jean Rickert. Many also appeared in a group
cameo appearance in the all-star comedy short
The Stolen Jools (1931). Beginning with the short
When the Wind Blows, in 1930 background music scores were added to the soundtracks of most of the
Our Gang films. Initially, the music consisted of orchestral versions of popular tunes.
Marvin Hatley had served as the music director of Hal Roach Studios since 1929, and
RCA employee
Leroy Shield joined the company as a part-time musical director in mid-1930. Hatley and Shield's
jazz-influenced scores, first featured in
Pups Is Pups in 1930, became recognizable trademarks of
Our Gang,
Laurel and Hardy, and other Roach films. Another 1930 short, ''
Teacher's Pet, marked the first use of the Our Gang''
theme song,
"Good Old Days". Originally composed by Shield for use in Laurel and Hardy's first feature,
Pardon Us, Shield and Hatley's scores were included in the films regularly through 1934, when they became less frequent. In 1930, Roach began production on
The Boy Friends, a short-subject series that was essentially a teenage version of
Our Gang. Featuring
Our Gang alumni Daniels and Kornman among its cast,
The Boy Friends was produced for two years, with 15 installments in total. in their makeshift
fire engine in the 1934 short ''
Hi'-Neighbor!''
1931–1933: transition Cooper left
Our Gang in early 1931 just before another wave of cast changes, as Farina Hoskins, Chubby Chaney, and Mary Ann Jackson all departed several months later.
Our Gang entered another transitional period, similar to that of the mid-1920s. Matthew Beard, Wheezer Hutchins, and Dorothy DeBorba carried the series during this period, aided by
Sherwood Bailey and
Kendall McComas, who would play Breezy Brisbane. Unlike the mid-1920s period, McGowan sustained the quality of the series with the help of the several regular cast members and the Roach writing staff. Many of these shorts include early appearances of
Jerry Tucker and
Wally Albright, who later became series regulars. New Roach discovery
George McFarland joined the gang as Spanky late in 1931 at the age of three and remained an
Our Gang actor for 11 years, except for a brief break in Summer 1938. At first appearing as the tag-along toddler of the group, and later finding an accomplice in
Scotty Beckett in 1934, Spanky quickly became
Our Gangs greatest child star. He won parts in a number of outside features, appeared in many
Our Gang product endorsements and spinoff merchandise items, and popularized the expressions "Okey-dokey!" and "Okey-doke!" Veteran child actor
Dickie Moore joined in the middle of 1932 and remained with the series for one year. Other members in these years included Mary Ann Jackson's brother Dickie Jackson,
John "Uh-huh" Collum, and
Tommy Bond. Upon Moore's departure in mid 1933, long-term
Our Gang members such as Wheezer (who had been with
Our Gang since the late Pathé silents period) and Dorothy left the series as well.
1933–1936: new directions McGowan, exhausted from the stress of working with the child actors, had as early as 1931 tried to resign as producer/director of
Our Gang.
Hi-Neighbor!, released in March 1934, ended the hiatus and was the first series entry directed by Meins, a veteran of the formerly competing
Buster Brown short-subject series.
Gordon Douglas served as Meins's assistant director, and Fred Newmeyer alternated directorial duties with Meins for a handful of shorts. Meins's
Our Gang shorts were less improvisational than were McGowan's and featured a heavier reliance on dialogue. McGowan returned two years later to direct his final
Our Gang film
Divot Diggers, released in 1936. Retaining McFarland, Beard, Bond, and Tucker, the revised series added
Scotty Beckett,
Wally Albright, and
Billie Thomas, who soon began playing the character of Stymie's sister "Buckwheat", although Thomas was male. Semiregular actors such as
Jackie Lynn Taylor,
Marianne Edwards, and
Leonard Kibrick as the neighborhood bully, joined the series. Bond and Albright left in the middle of 1934; Taylor and Edwards would depart by 1935. Early in 1935, new cast members
Carl Switzer and his brother
Harold joined
Our Gang after impressing Roach with an impromptu musical performance at the studio
commissary. While Harold would eventually be relegated to the role of a background player, Carl, nicknamed "Alfalfa", eventually replaced Beckett as Spanky's sidekick. Beard as Stymie left the cast soon after, and the Buckwheat character morphed subtly into a male. That same year,
Darla Hood, Patsy May, and
Eugene Lee as Porky joined the gang. Beckett departed for a career in features but returned in 1939 for two shorts,
Cousin Wilbur and
Dog Daze.
The final Roach years Our Gang was very successful during the 1920s and the early 1930s. However, by 1934, many theater owners were increasingly dropping two-reel (20-minute) comedies such as
Our Gang and the
Laurel & Hardy series and running
double-feature programs instead. The Laurel and Hardy series, formerly film shorts, became features exclusively in mid-1935. By 1936, Hal Roach began debating plans to discontinue
Our Gang until
Louis B. Mayer, head of Roach's distributor MGM, persuaded Roach to keep the popular series in production. Roach agreed, producing shorter, one-reel
Our Gang comedies (10 minutes in length instead of 20). The first one-reel
Our Gang short,
Bored of Education (1936), marked the
Our Gang directorial debut of former assistant director Gordon Douglas and won the
Academy Award for Best Short Subject (One Reel) in 1937. As part of the arrangement with MGM to continue
Our Gang, Roach received clearance to produce an
Our Gang feature film,
General Spanky, hoping that he might move the series to features as was done with Laurel and Hardy. No further
Our Gang features were produced. ,
Darla Hood, and
Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer in the "Club Spanky" dream sequence from the 1937 short
Our Gang Follies of 1938. After years of gradual cast changes, the troupe standardized in 1936 with the move to one-reel shorts. The 1936–1939 incarnation of the cast is perhaps the best-known of the series, featuring Spanky, Alfalfa, Darla, Buckwheat, and Porky, with recurring characters such as neighborhood bullies Butch and Woim and the bookworm Waldo. Bond, an intermittent member of the gang since 1932, returned as Butch beginning with the 1937 short
Glove Taps.
Sidney Kibrick, the younger brother of Leonard Kibrick, played Butch's crony Woim.
Glove Taps also featured the first appearance of
Darwood Kaye as the bespectacled, foppish Waldo. In later shorts, both Butch and Waldo were portrayed as Alfalfa's rivals in his pursuit of Darla's affections. Other popular elements in these mid-to-late-1930s shorts include the "He-Man Woman Haters Club" from
Hearts Are Thumps and
Mail and Female (both 1937), the Laurel and Hardy-style interaction between Alfalfa and Spanky, and the comic tag-along team of Porky and Buckwheat. Roach produced the final two-reel
Our Gang short, a high-budget musical special entitled
Our Gang Follies of 1938, in 1937 as a
parody of MGM's
Broadway Melody of 1938. Alfalfa, who aspires to be an
opera singer, falls asleep and dreams that his old pal Spanky has become the rich owner of a swanky
Broadway nightclub where Darla and Buckwheat perform, making "hundreds and thousands of dollars". As the profit margins continued to decline because of double features, Roach found it increasingly difficult to afford to continue producing
Our Gang. The lack of consistent success with Roach's concurrent program of feature output and an ultimately unsuccessful partnership with producer
Vittorio Mussolini, son of Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini, also caused disagreements with the management at MGM and with its parent company,
Loews Inc.. As a result, Loews elected to end MGM's partnership with Roach. However, MGM did not want
Our Gang discontinued and agreed to acquire the property from Roach and assume production. On May 31, 1938, Roach sold the
Our Gang unit to MGM, including the rights to the name and the contracts for the actors and writers, for $25,000 (equal to $ today). After delivering the Laurel and Hardy feature
Block-Heads in August 1938, Roach signed a new distribution deal with
United Artists and left the short-subjects business. The final Roach-produced short in the
Our Gang series,
Hide and Shriek, was his final short-subject production, released by MGM on June 18, 1938.
The MGM era The Little Ranger was the first
Our Gang short to be produced at MGM. Gordon Douglas was loaned from Hal Roach Studios to direct
The Little Ranger and another early MGM short, ''Aladdin's Lantern
, while MGM assigned George Sidney, a young director from its own shorts department, as the permanent series director. Our Gang
would be used by MGM as a training ground for future feature directors: Sidney, Edward Cahn and Cy Endfield all worked on Our Gang'' before advancing to feature films. Herbert Glazer remained a
second-unit director outside of his work on the series. Nearly all of the 52 MGM-produced
Our Gang films were written by former Roach director Hal Law and former junior director Robert A. McGowan, nephew of former senior
Our Gang director Robert F. McGowan, who was credited for these shorts as Robert McGowan (although he is also known as Anthony Mack), causing confusion for audiences and critics. The last few Roach comedies and the first few MGM comedies featured Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer as the lead character, as George "Spanky" McFarland had departed from the series when his contract expired in March 1938. Casting his replacement was delayed until after the move to MGM, which opted to rehire McFarland to continue with the series. In 1939, Mickey Gubitosi (later known by the stage name of
Robert Blake) replaced Eugene "Porky" Lee, who had matured too quickly. Tommy Bond, Darwood Kaye, and Carl Switzer all left the series in 1940, and
Billy "Froggy" Laughlin (with his
Popeye-style trick voice) and
Janet Burston were added to the cast. By the end of 1941, Darla Hood had departed from the series, and George McFarland followed her within a year. Billie Thomas remained in the cast as Buckwheat until the end of the series as the sole holdover from the Roach era. The MGM
Our Gang films were not received as favorably as were the Roach-produced shorts, largely because of MGM's inexperience with
Our Gang's style of
slapstick comedy and its insistence on retaining Alfalfa, Spanky, and Buckwheat in the series as they became teenagers. The children's performances were criticized as stilted and stiff, their dialogue recited instead of spoken naturally. Adult situations often drove the action, with each film often incorporating a moral, a civics lesson, or, as the United States prepared for and then entered
World War II, a patriotic theme. MGM discontinued
Our Gang. The final three
Our Gang shorts were all directed by Cy Endfield in late 1943 and released the following spring.
Tale of a Dog was released as part of the
MGM Miniatures series on April 15, 1944. The other two shorts, released to close out the regular
Our Gang series, were
Radio Bugs, released on April 1, 1944, and the final
Our Gang comedy,
Dancing Romeo, released on April 29, 1944. Since 1937,
Our Gang had been featured as a licensed
comic strip in the British
comic The Dandy, illustrated by
Dudley D. Watkins. Starting in 1942, MGM licensed
Our Gang to American publisher
Dell Comics for the publication of
Our Gang Comics, featuring the gang alongside MGM cartoon characters such as
Barney Bear and
Tom and Jerry. The strips in
The Dandy ended three years after the demise of the
Our Gang shorts in 1947.
Our Gang Comics outlasted the series by five years, changing its name to
Tom and Jerry Comics in 1949. In 2006,
Fantagraphics Books issued a series of volumes reprinting the
Our Gang stories, most of them written and drawn by
Pogo creator
Walt Kelly. ==Later years and
The Little Rascals revival==