Darla Hood, best known as the original Darla in the Our Gang / Little Rascals shorts, never had a well-documented official net worth. However, estimates from celebrity finance sites place her wealth roughly between:
About $5 million (commonly cited estimate)
Some websites speculate up to around $7–16 million, though these numbers are less reliable estimates generated from algorithms rather than verified records.
Why the numbers vary so much
For actors from the 1930s–1940s, accurate net-worth figures are hard to verify because:
Studios paid child actors salaries, not royalties.
The Our Gang cast did not receive residuals from the later TV success of The Little Rascals.
Much of Hood’s later career income came from nightclub singing and TV appearances, which were rarely publicly documented.
What she actually earned
During her career she made money from:
Hal Roach’s Our Gang shorts (1935–1941)
Small film roles such as The Bohemian Girl
Nightclub singing acts in Las Vegas and New York
TV appearances in the 1950s–60s
Records and voice work later in life
So while some sites throw out big numbers, historians generally believe she lived comfortably but was not extremely wealthy, which was typical for former child actors of that era.
When people talk about Our Gang or The Little Rascals, the conversation almost always centers on the kids—Spanky McFarland, Alfalfa Switzer, Darla Hood, Buckwheat Thomas, and the rest of the gang.
But something I’ve noticed while researching these films is that almost no one talks about the adults who appeared in the series. And when you really sit down and watch these shorts from 1922 through the late 1940s, you realize something interesting:
The adults were everywhere — and the series wouldn’t have worked without them.
The Adults Were the World Around the Kids
The genius of Hal Roach when he created Our Gang in 1922 was that he didn’t make the kids live in a fantasy world.
The kids lived in a real world filled with adults.
Teachers, parents, store owners, policemen, judges, and cranky neighbors constantly appeared in the stories. They were often the authority figures, the obstacles, or sometimes the straight-men for the kids’ chaos.
And that contrast is what made the comedy work.
Watching the kids outsmart adults, misunderstand adult situations, or simply cause absolute mayhem around them became one of the defining elements of the series.
Even though the shorts were about children, a handful of adult actors showed up repeatedly and became familiar faces.
One of the most recognizable was Miss Lawrence, played by Rosina Lawrence. She appeared in several late-1930s shorts as a schoolteacher and authority figure trying to keep the gang under control.
Another was Dell Henderson, who frequently appeared as policemen, judges, and grumpy
adults dealing with the gang’s antics.
Adults Often Played the “Straight Man”
In classic comedy, the straight man reacts seriously while the comedian causes the chaos.
In Our Gang, the kids were the comedians.
The adults were the straight men.
A teacher trying to conduct class while the gang creates a disaster.
A police officer trying to solve a problem the kids made worse.
A parent trying to understand the gang’s bizarre logic.
Those reactions from adults made the kids’ antics even funnier.
Something else I’ve noticed while watching dozens of these shorts is that the adults often represented a world the kids didn’t quite understand.
Jobs, romance, money problems, social rules—these were all adult situations the gang would stumble into and misinterpret.
That misunderstanding created some of the most memorable plots in the series.
There were several more adult actors that I will not write about in this post but i will do a deep dive into the lives of the other actors in a later post.
Harry Bernard-Edgar Kennedy-Walter Long-Clarence Wilson just to name a few.
If you spend enough time digging through the history of Our Gang, you’ll eventually stumble onto a question a lot of classic film fans ask:
“Were any of the Little Rascals shorts actually banned?”
While doing research for the blog, I was curious about this myself. The answer is yes — several shorts were pulled from television for decades, though technically most were not permanently banned films. Instead, they were removed from TV syndication because of racial stereotypes that later generations considered offensive.
Let me walk you through the main ones.
The “Banned Eleven” Little Rascals Shorts
In 1968, the distributor King World Productions removed 11 episodes of Our Gang from television packages.
Fans now refer to them as “The Banned Eleven.”
These were all early 1930s shorts from the sound era featuring Allen 'Farina' Hoskins and Matthew 'Stymie' Beard, and they contained exaggerated racial stereotypes.
Here are the titles.
The Banned Eleven
Lazy Days
Moan and Groan, Inc.
The Pickaninny
A Tough Winter
Little Daddy
Birthday Blues
Mama's Little Pirate
Wild Poses
Fish Hooky
The Kid from Borneo
Little Sinner
Many fans remember The Kid from Borneo because of the famous line “Yum Yum, eat ‘em up!”
Why They Were Pulled
When these films were made in the early 1930s, Hollywood often used stereotypes that were unfortunately common in the era.
But by the late 1960s, television distributors felt several of these episodes contained:
racial caricatures
offensive dialogue
exaggerated portrayals of Black characters
So instead of editing them, King World simply removed the shorts entirely from TV packages.
For decades, if you watched The Little Rascals on television, you never saw these eleven episodes.
Were Any Silent Our Gang Films Banned?
Interestingly, the silent-era Our Gang films (1922–1929) were not officially banned, though some became difficult to see simply because many silent films were lost or poorly preserved.
Actors from the earliest era like:
Mickey Daniels
Joe Cobb
Mary Kornman
appeared in films that largely remained available.
Can You Watch the “Banned” Episodes Today?
Yes — and this is where things get interesting for collectors and researchers.
Today the shorts do still exist, and you can sometimes find them:
on archival DVD collections
through film historians
occasionally uploaded online in rare film circles
When they are shown now, they are usually presented with historical context explaining the era they were made in.
That approach has become common for older films rather than hiding them completely.
My Personal Thoughts After Researching This
As someone who spends way too much time digging into Little Rascals history, I think these shorts are an interesting part of film history.
They show:
how comedy was made in the early 1930s
how attitudes changed over time
how even beloved series like Our Gang had moments that didn’t age well.
But they’re also reminders of how groundbreaking the series actually was. For its time, Our Gang was one of the first Hollywood productions where Black and white children appeared together as equals on screen — something very rare in that era.....B.Israel