Noddy (TV series)

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Noddy
Genre Comedy
Fantasy
Created by Rick Siggelkow
Written by Brian McConnachie (1 episode 1998)
Chris Allen (1 episode, 1998)
Julia Allen (1 episode, 1998)
Enid Blyton (10 episodes, 1998-1999)
Jill Golick (8 episodes, 1998-2000)
Directed by Wayne Moss
Starring Sean McCann
Katie Boland
Max Morrow
Kyle Kassardjian
Jayne Eastwood
Jim Calder
Nikki Pascetta
Gil Filar
Voices of Catherine Disher
Teryl Rothery
Frank Meschkuleit
Matt Ficner
James Rankin
Taborah Johnson
Alyson Court
Noreen Young
Terry Klassen
Peter Siragusa
Andrew Sabiston
Gerry Quigley
Theme music composer Steve Nelson
Composer(s) George Guerrette
Stacey Hersh
Country of origin United States
Canada
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 66
Production
Producer(s) Karl Geurs
Editor(s) Mark Zaslove
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) BBC Worldwide Americas
Catalyst Entertainment Inc.
Enid Blyton Ltd.
Release
Original network PBS (PBS Kids) (United States)
TVOntario (TVOKids) (Canada)
Picture format 4:3
Audio format Stereo
Original release September 28, 1998 (1998-09-28) –
February 16, 2000 (2000-02-16)

Noddy, also named as The Noddy Shop, is an American-Canadian television series based on Enid Blyton's children's book series of the same name with stop-motion sequences from Noddy's Toyland Adventures that aired from September 28, 1998 to February 16, 2000 on PBS. Following its cancellation, reruns were aired until September 13, 2002. The series is produced by WNET and WNYE-TV.

The show starred Sean McCann as Noah Tomten, a former old salt, who now runs an antique shop, the NODDY Shop (this stood for, "Notions, Oddities, Doodads and Delights of Yesterday"). His catchphrases included "What in tarnation?!" and "Great Neptune's Ghost!", usually whenever he was excited about something. It also starred Jayne Eastwood as his scatter-brained sister, Agatha Flugelschmidt, who runs a hat shop next door to the Noddy shop. One of her catchphrases included "Oh, pish-posh!", usually whenever she disagreed with something that someone else said.

The stories in Make Way for Noddy mainly centred on three children- Noah's grandchildren, Kate and Truman, and a friend of Kate's named Daniel Johnson, shortened to D.J., who came to play at the shop, and were collected by their (unseen) parents at the end of the day, implying the episodes were set after school, during school holidays or at weekends. Most episodes had a moral message, which was conveyed with a Noddy story, usually told by Kate using the Noddy dolls in the shop, which the viewer saw as recycled animation from earlier Noddy cartoons. The moral message was also a theme in a song sung by the shop's population of anthropomorphic toys. There was sometimes a second song, usually a re-enactment of a popular folk tale.

Toys

  • Warloworth Q Weasel, usually shortened to "Warlow", was a weasel in a bowler hat who resided in a jack-in-the-box. He was a malicious weasel who was always playing tricks on the other toys, but usually got his comeuppance.
  • Bonita Flamingo - A bright orange toy flamingo who sported a Carmen Miranda-style headdress. She spoke in a strong Spanish accent, sometimes saying things in both Spanish and English.
  • Johnny Crawfish - A rubber lobster who tells a lot of jokes and resides in a fish tank, and sometimes plays rock and roll songs on the piano.
  • Sherman - A clockwork turtle with wheels like a tank, who wore an army helmet.
  • Rusty - A toy clown who was good friends with Sherman, and always rode on his back.
  • Planet Pup - A small robotic dog, supposedly from outer space
  • Lichtenstein - Not technically a toy, Lichtenstein, usually referred to simply as "Stein", was a beer tankard shaped like a Viking's head. He didn't speak much, but could usually be seen singing along with the songs. When he did speak, he had a noticeable German accent, and ended many of his sentences with "Ja".
  • Island Princess - Again, not technically a toy. A wooden carving, rather like a ship's figurehead, in a traditional Hawaiian costume. She sees everything that goes on in the shop.
  • Gertie Gator - A plastic alligator who stood on two legs, wore a purple dress and carried a matching umbrella
  • Granny Duck - A wise plastic duck on wheels
  • The Penguins - Four penguins who never spoke, only sang- along with the Wax Lips, they often provided short interludes introducing the Noddy story, or a turning point in the action of the episode
  • Wax Lips - A box of five fake lips who had no spoken dialogue, but sang in every episode
  • Fred and Cherie - A French pig couple
  • The Crybabies - Two babies, one male, one female- one was dressed in pink, the other in blue- in a cradle. They often cry at any tense situation.
  • Shorty Salt Shaker and Slim Pepper Shaker - Salt and pepper shakers shaped like cactuses

Cast

Episodes[1]

Season 1

  1. "The Magic Key" (September 28, 1998)
  2. "Monkey Business" (September 29, 1998)
  3. "Mixed up Magic" (September 30, 1998)
  4. "Lost and Found" (October 1, 1998)
  5. "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Goblins" (October 2, 1998)
  6. "The Tooth Fairy" (October 5, 1998)
  7. "Stop, Listen and Learn" (October 6, 1998)
  8. "Making up is Easy to Do" (October 7, 1998)
  9. "If at First You Don't Succeed..." (October 8, 1998)
  10. "The Birthday Party" (October 9, 1998)
  11. "Telling Tails" (October 12, 1998)
  12. "It's About Time" (October 13, 1998)
  13. "A Promise is a Promise" (October 14, 1998)
  14. "To the Rescue" (October 15, 1998)
  15. "Chills and Spills" (October 16, 1998)
  16. "The Big Race" (October 19, 1998)
  17. "A Dog's Best Friend" (October 20, 1998)
  18. "Hooray for the Kids" (October 21, 1998)
  19. "The Mystery Box" (October 22, 1998)
  20. "We All Say Boo!" (October 23, 1998)
  21. "Trying Something New" (October 26, 1998)
  22. "The Fish Story" (October 27, 1998)
  23. "The Big Fight" (October 28, 1998)
  24. "Following Directions" (October 29, 1998)
  25. "Mixed Up Masks" (October 30, 1998)
  26. "Truman, Come Home" (November 2, 1998)
  27. "Something's Lost, Something's Found" (November 3, 1998)
  28. "The Magic Show" (November 4, 1998)
  29. "The Big Mess" (November 5, 1998)
  30. "Recipe for Learning" (November 6, 1998)
  31. "Recycle and Reuse it" (November 9, 1998)
  32. "Telling the Whole Truth" (November 10, 1998)
  33. "Secret Valentines" (November 11, 1998)
  34. "Sing Yourself to Sleep" (November 12, 1998)
  35. "Treasure Hunt" (November 13, 1998)
  36. "Jack Frost is Coming to Town" (November 16, 1998)
  37. "The Trouble with Truman" (November 17, 1998)
  38. "Let's Go Fly a Kite" (November 18, 1998)
  39. "Thing Big" (November 19, 1998)
  40. "Noah's Leaving" (November 20, 1998)
  41. "Anything can Happen at Christmas" (December 25, 1998)

Season 2

  1. "Little Swap of Horrors" (September 6, 1999)
  2. "Dance to Your Own Music" (September 7, 1999)
  3. "Ask Permission" (September 8, 1999)
  4. "Take a Stand" (September 9, 1999)
  5. "The Sandman Cometh" (September 10, 1999)
  6. "Noah's Treasure" (September 13, 1999)
  7. "Be True to Who you Are" (September 14, 1999)
  8. "All Play and No work" (September 15, 1999)
  9. "April Fool" (September 16, 1999)
  10. "Lights, Camera, Chaos" (September 17, 1999)
  11. "How Rude" (November 8, 1999)
  12. "Part of the Family" (November 9, 1999)
  13. "Big Bullies" (November 10, 1999)
  14. "Paying Attention to Kate" (November 11, 1999)
  15. "Skunked" (November 12, 1999)
  16. "Thunder and Lightning" (January 11, 2000)
  17. "Going Bananas" (January 12, 2000)
  18. "Slugger" (January 13, 2000)
  19. "Find your Own Song" (January 14, 2000)
  20. "The Big Showdown" (February 8, 2000)
  21. "Growing Lies" (February 9, 2000)
  22. "The Human Touch" (February 10, 2000)
  23. "Be Patient" (February 11, 2000)
  24. "Kate Loves a Parade" (February 15, 2000)
  25. "Closing up Shop" (February 16, 2000)

2002 demonstration

  1. 1 (2002-2003)
  2. 2 (2003-2004)
  3. 3 (2004-2005)
  4. 4 (2005-2006)
  5. 5 (2006-2007)
  6. 6 (2007)

External links

References