-
In 1991 he received the Distinguished Service Award from The American Medical Association.
-
His memoirs, entitled Good Morning, Captain, were published in 1995.
-
Keeshan had high standards for his programming. In a time when advertisers wielded heavy influence, Keeshan stood fast against any ads which he felt were inappropriate for children.
-
It is an urban legend that actor Lee Marvin fought alongside Bob Keeshan in Iwo Jima.
-
The 1970's saw many changes to Keeshan's Captain Kangaroo. The programming became much more fast-paced to reflect the shorter attention spans of children.
-
He was married forty years to Anne Jeanne Laurie, until her death in 1990.
-
Bob Keeshan turned down an offer to become Captain Kangaroo again on a revised version of the show in 1995.
-
Keeshan has two daughters, Laurie and Mave, and a son named Michael.
-
Britton Keeshan, Bob's grandson, posed atop Mt. Everest with photos of his famous grandfather, whom he credited as the source of his inspiration.
-
His grandson, Britton Keeshan, became the youngest person ever to scale The Seven Summits in May 2004.
-
Bob Keeshan appeared as Captain Kangaroo for a Schwinn bicycle advertisement.
-
Keeshan served in the United States Marine Corps.
-
He was made Honorary Fellow at The American Academy of Pediatrics.
-
Keeshan won the Emmy Award five times.
-
In 1980 Keeshan was awarded "TV Father of the Year."
-
Unlike most other children's programming, Keeshan did not include children as part of his regular cast.
-
He believed that the easiest and fastest way children learned was to make education delightful.
-
Keeshan's approach to television embodied a rejection of pressures towards the increased commercialization of children's programming as well as a toning-down of the high volume, slapstick style associated with earlier kid show hosts.
-
Much of the slapstick humor and pie-in-the-face antics of The Howdy Doody Show Keeshan actually loathed.
-
Bob Keeshan was a sharp critic of much of contemporary children's television programming.
-
Upon his retirement, Keeshan became an active lobbyist on behalf of children's issues and worked in favor of tighter controls over the tobacco industry.
-
Keeshan did not use studio audiences when filming, as he did not want anything to come between him and the children in his television audience.
-
He exerted pressure on one station for which he worked to remove from airplay cartoons he felt were too violent or perpetuated racial stereotyping.
-
In 1996, Keeshan published a children's book entitled Hurry, Murry, Hurry.
-
Bob Keeshan was a news commentator for Up to the Minute on CBS News in 1981 and 1982.
-
He played an Alpine toymaker on Tinker's Workshop, an early morning program, which served as the prototype for his character of Captain Kangaroo.
-
Keeshan personally supervised which commercials could air on his program Captain Kangaroo, and promoted products which he saw as facilitating creative play, while avoiding those he felt were purely exploitative.
-
Keeshan was fired from his role as Clarabell the Clown by fellow cast member Buffalo Bob Smith, and replaced by a Clarabell who was more musically inclined.
-
Keeshan founded Corporate Family Solutions In 1987, with former Tennessee Republican Governor Lamar Alexander. The company provided day-care programs to businesses.
-
Keeshan worked for a brief time in the early 1950s for his father-in-law, who was an undertaker.
-
Bob Keeshan was inducted into the Clown Hall of Fame in 1990 for his portrayal of Clarabell the Clown.
-
Bob Keeshan was a strong opponent of video game violence, and even took part in congressional hearings against it.