Hot Potato
Nobody knows when the first proto-Hot-Potato game was played
(possibly by 18th-century Irish kids with real scalding potatoes -
we're just guessing), but by the 1950s, manufactured Hot Potato
games were already on store shelves.
This was a game that even the very young could understand: A
group of kids stood in a circle, somebody played some music or
whistled a tune, and the potato got passed around as quickly as
possible. Whoever ended up with the potato when the music stopped
was kicked out, and the potato elimination match continued.
To encourage parents to shell out cash for a game they could
actually play for free (well, for the cost of a single potato),
inventive toy manufacturers dreamed up ways to make their own
versions of Hot Potato unique and irresistible.
Remco's late 50's
version used small plastic pans for each player, covered up so
that the loser-to-be wouldn't be revealed until the proper time.
The majority of Hot Potato sets, however, went the more
traditional route. The potato itself was passed around the group,
but here's the kicker: this was no ordinary potato . . .
In the 1960's, there was "Spudsie", a cute little
fellow who had to be wound up before every game. When the wound-up
power wound down, Spudsie gave off a 'DING', metaphorically
torching the hands of one unlucky player. The 1980's brought
battery-powered 'Chip O' Grattin', along with a slight play
alteration. Getting stuck with the potato meant drawing a card
with a letter on it. Once a player spelled "H-O-T", he
or she was out of luck and out of the game.
The most recent Hot Potato is a battery-powered talker who
shouts out a jubilant "Yahoo!" when his timer's up
(sure, he's happy - he's not the one left holding a volcanic
spud).
Hot Potato remains a must-play at preschool parties, teaching
kids hand-eye coordination, catching skills, and the valuable
lesson that hot things should quickly be given to somebody else.
|