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<B>Charles Runyon </B>was a television hit as Chucko the Birthday Clown.
Charles Runyon was a television hit as Chucko the Birthday Clown.
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Charles M. Runyon, who as Chucko the Birthday Clown was a popular Los Angeles children’s television-show host in the 1950s and ’60s, died Saturday at an assisted-living facility in Grants Pass, Ore., said his son. He was 86.

On KABC-Channel 7 from 1955 to 1963 and on KTTV-Channel 11 from 1963 to 1964, Runyon’s Chucko the Clown was a familiar — and welcome — sight to thousands of young Southern California viewers.

The jovial and genteel clown’s live, hour-long show included cartoons, special guests and games with his studio audience, which consisted of two children celebrating their birthdays and their young friends.

At the end of the show, the camera would show a large birthday cake, and Chucko would sing: “Here’s a hap, hap, happy birthday from me (that’s me), to you (that’s you).”

During his heyday, Runyon’s Chucko would open the television coverage of the annual Santa Claus Lane Parade by jumping through a bass-drum head.

Chucko also made countless personal appearances at supermarkets and shopping centers.

“He’d pull into, say, the Topanga Plaza or whatever and there’d be thousands of people as far as you could see,” said his son, Randy.

For his personal appearances, Runyon created a circus wagon — a converted delivery truck with a stage on top. “He’d go up through a hole in the roof and do the show from there,” his son recalled, “and then we’d give out the goodies out the back door.”

Randy Runyon said his father loved being a clown.

“It was a combination of enjoying the kids and comedy,” he said. “One of his favorite sayings was, ‘If you can see life through the eyes of a child, they’ll allow you into their world. And through the clown, you can do that.’ ”

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