Bod (TV series)

Bod
Created by Joanne Cole
Michael Cole
Starring John Le Mesurier
Derek Griffiths
Maggie Henderson
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 13
Production
Running time 15 minutes
Release
Original network BBC1
Original release 10 October (1975-10-10) – 27 December 1975 (1975-12-27)
External links
Website

Bod is a BBC1 children's television programme first shown in 1975, with thirteen episodes, based on four original Bod books by Joanne and Michael Cole. It is a cel animated cartoon series narrated by John Le Mesurier and Maggie Henderson with music by Derek Griffiths and produced by David Yates. The four books were published in 1965 in the United Kingdom and later in the United States and France. They are: Bod's Apple, Bod's Present, Bod's Dream and Bod and the Cherry Tree. The French version of Bod's Apple is called La Pomme de Gus.

Before the animated series was commissioned, the four books had been read on another BBC children's programme: Playschool. In 1974, thirteen five-minute episodes were created for transmission on the BBC as part of the Watch with Mother series, and were also sold to Australia's ABC channel. Soon thereafter, it was shown in New Zealand, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Poland and Israel. In the United States, Bod aired on Nickelodeon as a segment on the Pinwheel program.

The character of Bod is a boy who lives in a town with Aunt Flo, PC Copper, Frank the Postman and Farmer Barleymow. Each of the characters has their own theme music performed by Griffiths which is heard when they appear. Regular features are animal identification and Bod Snap.

There is also another set of characters who appear in each episode called Alberto Frog and his Amazing Animal Band with artwork by Joanne Cole. This section featured short extracts from famous pieces of classical music as part of the story, and always ended with Alberto choosing a different flavour of milkshake as his reward for solving a problem, and was narrated by Maggie Henderson.

Bod has appeared in Channel 4's 100 Greatest Kids' TV shows and 100 Greatest Cartoons.

At the time of broadcast, the show raised a few eyebrows in the North West of Scotland: Bod is a Scottish Gaelic word that means 'penis'.[1]

Episode titles

  1. Bod's Dream* - 10/10/75
  2. Bod In The Park - 19/10/75
  3. Bod And The Rain - 29/10/75
  4. Bod And Breakfast* - 02/11/75
  5. Bod And The Apple - 11/11/75
  6. Bod On The Beach - 19/11/75
  7. Bod And The Dog* - 25/11/75
  8. Bod And The Cake - 01/12/75
  9. Bod And The Kite - 07/12/75
  10. Bod And The Birds* -15/12/75
  11. Bod And The Grasshopper - 19/12/75
  12. Bod's Present* - 22/12/75
  13. Bod And The Cherry Tree - 27/12/75

All thirteen Bod episodes are available on DVD.

The Alberto Frog segments were produced separately by the BBC and were originally shown alongside the Bod episodes; only five of these thirteen segments are known to survive, following a decision in the early 1990s to wipe a large amount of videotaped 1970s children's programmes [2] . The five surviving segments are marked above with an asterisk and are present on the Bod DVD. Another was recovered from an old VHS tape and is available on YouTube.[3]

Tie-ins and Taoism

As well as books for each of the televised episodes, there have been two other tie-in books based on Bod, by Alison and Lo Cole, the children of creators Joanne and Michael Cole. Bod's Way: The Meaning of Life was being worked on by Michael Cole before he died in 2001, and was completed by Alison.

The books reveal the Taoist beliefs of Bod's original creators.[4]

References in other media

Bod is a fictional deity in the BBC Radio 4 science fiction comedy Nebulous, and the Bod theme music is heard in one episode.

References

  1. https://glosbe.com/gd/en/bod
  2. TJ Worthington (November 2006), OF FINGER MICE AND MR MEN - THE STORY OF WATCH WITH MOTHER: Andy is Waving Goodbye, retrieved 1 April 2009
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34J8eZnXgAg
  4. Steph Condron (27 September 2002), "Here comes Bod (again)", Metro, London, archived from the original on 10 October 2008, retrieved 1 April 2009

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.