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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Were Alfalfa and Spanky Really Friends Off Screen?

 

If you grew up watching the old Our Gang shorts like I did, you probably wondered at some point if those kids were really friends once the cameras stopped rolling.

Especially Alfalfa and Spanky.

On screen, they acted like brothers half the time — fighting one minute, scheming the next, and somehow always ending up together in trouble. But here’s something a lot of people may not know:

Yes… Carl “Alfalfa” Switzer and George “Spanky” McFarland actually were friends outside of the shorts.

Now like most childhood friendships, it wasn’t perfect all the time. These boys were working actors under pressure in Hollywood during the 1930s. Long filming hours, studio demands, school work, and suddenly being recognized everywhere they went had to be a strange life for kids.

But many cast members from Our Gang later talked about how close the group really was during those years.

Spanky was known as one of the more outgoing kids on the set, while Alfalfa had a reputation for being more mischievous and energetic — which honestly explains why their chemistry on camera felt so real.

What made the friendship special was that it continued even after the famous shorts slowed down.

As adults, both men often appeared together at nostalgia events and reunions connected to The Little Rascals. In interviews later in life, Spanky spoke warmly about many of the cast members, including Alfalfa. There always seemed to be a bond there rooted in surviving a unique childhood together.

Sadly, Alfalfa’s story ended tragically.

Carl Switzer died in 1959 at only 31 years old after a dispute over money reportedly turned violent. It shocked many fans because to generations of viewers, Alfalfa would always remain that goofy kid with the cowlick and off-key singing voice.

Spanky lived much longer and became one of the most recognizable surviving members of the gang. He attended fan conventions, gave interviews, and helped keep the memory of the series alive for newer generations.

What I think makes these old shorts timeless is this:

The friendships felt real because in many ways… they were.

When you watch Alfalfa throw his arm around Spanky or the gang laughing together in those clubhouse scenes, you’re seeing kids who genuinely spent years growing up together during one of America’s hardest decades.

That’s probably why these shorts still feel warm nearly 100 years later.

They remind us of simpler friendships.
Bike rides.
Clubhouses.
Trouble.
Laughter.
And neighborhood kids who stuck together.

Looking at that old picture of me standing there between Alfalfa and Spanky with my arms around both of them almost makes me feel like I stepped through a time machine for a moment.

Like I was part of the gang too.

Just three friends smiling for a photograph somewhere back in the 1930s before the cameras rolled again.

And maybe that’s the real magic of these old photos and films.

For just a little while… they let us travel back to a kinder, simpler America that still lives in our memories.

— B.Israel

 Here is a Spanky/Alfalfa Clip.........



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