Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
The Hundred Acre Wood is the place that young
Christopher Robin would frequent to visit his closest friends. Although, they
weren’t your typical friends--being that many of them were stuffed. And
animals. Chief amongst them was the slow-witted and friendly Winnie the Pooh; a
bear whose primary love was all things honey. With him came Piglet, a small
neat-freak pig who found a reason to be afraid of anything (particularly
Heffalumps, creatures that resembled elephants); Tigger, an energetic tiger
that loved to bounce and go on adventures; Kanga, a kangaroo always in the
company of her little joey, Roo; Eeyore, a constantly depressed, hard-luck
donkey that always lost his pinned-on tail; Rabbit, a real rabbit obsessed with
order and keeping crows out of his garden; and Owl, a real owl whose species
made him the de-facto wisest of the group (even if he really wasn’t).
The original toys, sans Roo who had long since been lost.
This group of friends came from the imagination of
author A.A. Milne,
who was inspired by his son, Christopher
Robin, and his toys, as well as the animals that lived in
the forest around his country home in Ashdown Forest,
Sussex, England. Christopher Robin had become enamored with a bear at the London
Zoo named Winnipeg; a
transplant from Canada that was rescued by Lieutenant Harry
Coleburn and donated to the zoo after WWI.
Coleburn named the bear after his adopted home of Winnipeg.
The young Milne spent a lot of time with Winnie, going so far as to hang out
inside the cage. Eventually, his favorite stuffed bear, Edward, was renamed
“Winnie the Pooh” after the bear and a swan the Milnes once encountered.
The original books.
Pooh made his literary debut in the poem “Teddy Bear”,
published in the February 13, 1924 edition of Punch. However,
he would go unnamed until a story commissioned by the London newspaper The
Evening Newswas
published on December 24, 1925. In 1926, Milne and Pooh made the leap to book
form in Winnie
the Pooh. Published
by Methuen
& Co., Ltd. with illustrations
by E.H. Shepard, Winnie
the Pooh adapted previously published stories with new content and
introduced most of his supporting cast--also based on the rest of Milne’s son’s
stuffed animals--as well as the characterization of Christopher Robin. Tigger
wouldn’t be introduced until the 1928 sequel, The
House at Pooh Corner.
Winnie the Pooh board game produced by Slesinger.
As the original stories and books were very popular, Stephen Slesinger purchased the North American rights to produce merchandise
and media based on the characters in 1930. Slesinger managed to turn Pooh and
his friends into a $50 million-a-year industry, overseeing the production of
toys, records, animation and films under his banner, Telecomics Presents.
Slesinger gave Pooh his distinctive red t-shirt in a drawing he did for the
cover of the 1932
RCA Victor picture record. It was also the first
time the characters appeared in color. Talk about a televised animated
adaptation began in 1957, with Jay Ward being suggested by NBC to produce the pilot. An option for 39 episodes were on the
table, and some songs and dialogue were recorded, but ultimately The World
of Winnie the Pooh was abandoned.
Walt Disney and his daughters.
Counted amongst Pooh’s fans were Diane and Sharon
Mae Disney, the daughters of Walt Disney.
Disney actively pursued the rights to the characters and eventually acquired
certain ones from Slesinger and Milne’s respective widows, Shirley and
Daphne, in 1961. Disney planned to adapt the characters into a full-length
animated musical feature, but upon realizing that worldwide audiences may not
be as familiar with the source material as the British, he decided to split the
feature up into a series of theatrical shorts in order to better introduce the
characters.
Promotional artwork for The Honey Tree.
The first and only short made during Disney’s lifetime, Winnie the Pooh
and the Honey Tree, adapted the first three chapters of Winnie the Pooh. It
starred Sterling
Holloway as Pooh, Junius Matthews as Rabbit, Hal Smith as Owl, Ralph Wright as Eeyore, Barbara Luddy as Kanga, Clint Howard as Roo, and Bruce Reitherman as Christopher Robin. Although promotional art featured
Piglet and Tigger (resembling the Shepard design), neither appeared in the
short. Rather, Disney contemplated replacing Piglet entirely and introduced a
new character: Gopher (Howard
Morris). Gopher, based on the beaver from Lady and the Tramp, constantly dug holes and
tunnels around the Wood and often spoke with a whistle when he made an “s”
sound. Honey Tree was released on February 4, 1966 and was
shown alongside The Ugly Dachshund. The short proved popular, and
began the path that would lead to Pooh and his friends becoming a billion-dollar
industry for Disney as a company.
The second short, Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day,debuted
on December 20, 1968 alongside The
Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit. The short introduced Piglet (John Fiedler) and Tigger (Paul
Winchell), as well as replaced Reitherman with Jon Walmsley as Christopher Robin. A third short, Winnie the Pooh
and Tigger Too, was released in 1974 before Pooh and friends received
their first full-length movie, The Many
Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. The film, released on March 11, 1977, combined the three shorts
with new material to bridge them and a new sequence based on the final chapter
of Pooh Corner to fill out the running time. An
8-minute educational film, Winnie the Pooh
Discovers the Seasons, was also made in 1981 with one last short, Winnie the Pooh
and a Day for Eeyore, released in 1983.
1983 saw the launch of The Disney Channel, and amongst the channel’s initial line-up was the series Welcome
to Pooh Corner. The show featured actors in animatronic suits, created
in part by Ken
Forsse who would go on to create Teddy Ruxpin, acting against bluescreen sets as a narrator read from a book in
the opening and closing scenes. The show ran for three years, ending in 1986
after 120 episodes. Pooh’s absence from The Disney Channel was short-lived as
the recently-formed Walt
Disney Television Animation returned him to
animation with his second series: The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.
Character size comparison model sheet by Ron Campbell.
WDTVA’s Vice President Gary Krisel proposed the show during a Disney retreat to examine company
assets and future projects. He felt that the character would not only be
perfect for Saturday mornings, but felt that the licensing agreement Disney
held with department store chain Sears would be a great promotional tool. Mark Zaslove was hired to write the series bible and pitch for the series;
both of which were well-received by Disney and promptly green-lit. Rather than
shop the series around, Disney offered it directly to ABC. ABC’s
Saturday morning line-up had, by that point, fallen into last place in the
ratings and they desperately wanted something from Disney to help correct that;
having missed out on Wuzzles and Adventures
of the Gummi Bears two years prior. ABC
commissioned 25 episodes of Pooh rather than the standard 13 to 17,
marking the first time a major Disney character would
be seen on Saturday mornings.
Gopher trying to figure out how to do his schtick without dynamite.
The series was developed by Karl Geurs; a self-described Pooh fan. Development took several months as
Disney wanted the series to embody the same high standards as their films;
hoping to set a new standard on television. Story ideas were pitched to
Zaslove, story editor for the first season, when then sent the best ones to ABC
executives for approval before entering outline and scripts. The process took
about four weeks per episode. While writing, the crew made sure to consult
Milne’s works repeatedly to ensure they maintained the characters’ personalities
and achieved a balance of action and adventure with moments of whimsy. Further,
a consulting company was retained to help advise the crew on how the characters
should speak, look and act to better appeal to their target demographic.
Additionally, the production had to conform to broadcast standards and keep out
dangerous imitable behavior (Zaslove was
told that Gopher, who frequently used dynamite for
excavation, couldn’t have any gunpowder but could have a thermonuclear
device—since apparently the latter was harder for kids to acquire than the
former?).
The gang of the Hundred Acre Wood.
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh debuted on January 17, 1988; however, it wasn’t on ABC. An
internal debate was going on about whether Disney’s shows should be aired on
The Disney Channel, which was viewed as the most important thing by some
executives, over being outsourced to other networks. An argument was made that
restricting where their programs were seen risked losing a generation of TV
viewers who didn’t have cable. A compromise was reached between Disney Channel
President John
F. Cooke and Krisel that the network would pay the
animation division a certain price for first run rights. As a result, the
series ran for 13 episodes on the network until it shifted over to ABC for the remainder of its 4-season run.
Jim Cummings took over the role of Pooh and eventually Tigger, too.
Producers wanted to get as many of the surviving original cast as
they could. Winchell, Fiedler and Smith all returned to voice their respective
characters; however, Holloway’s voice had become unrecognizable as Pooh. Pooh ended
up being taken over by Jim Cummings, Rabbit by Ken Sansom, Eeyore by Peter
Cullen, Kanga by Patricia Parris, Roo by Nicholas Melody, Gopher by Michael
Gough and Christopher Robin by Timothy Hoskins. The series used a similar
animation style as the original Disney productions and followed the continuing
adventures of Pooh and his friends in the Hundred Acre Wood; as well as the
nearby town and settings created by pure imagination. The series did get a bit
of an Americanization as the setting was moved from England to modern America
and Christopher Robin was depicted with no trace of an accent. Additionally,
the storybook theme and narrator seen in other Pooh productions wasn’t
utilized.
Heff Heffalump and Stan Woozle.
New characters not seen in the earlier shorts included Stan Woozle
(Sansom) and Heff Heffalump (Chuck
McCann), two recurring villains who always
sought to steal from the main characters; Kessie (Laura Mooney), a little bluebird Rabbit rescued and adopted as his daughter;
and Christopher Robin’s mother (Parris), whose face was never shown. Frank Welker would provide the voices for a variety of animal characters
in several episodes, including bees and rats.
ABC aggressively advertised the series during
prime-time; partially to fill airtime that the 1988
Writers Guild of America strike had caused
gaps in, and partially to remind adults about their own childhood love of the
characters that they could now share with their kids. The series was also one
of the headliners of ABC’s Saturday Morning Preview Special aired the Friday
night before its network debut, along with The New Adventures of Beany and
Cecil and A
Pup Named Scooby-Doo. Sears and Honey
Nut Cheerios partnered to host a nationwide
premiere party, with breakfast being served
to more than 40,000 children in over 300 stores and the first episode shown on
in-store video displays. The event doubled as a fundraiser to benefit homeless
shelters. Sears’
Christmas catalog that year dedicated 8 pages
to the show, while Honey Nut Cheerios featured a Pooh
premium and an opportunity to get a free plush
from Sears.
Title card for the Gummi Bears/Winnie the Pooh Hour.
New Adventures was shown in an
hour-long block during the first season.For the second season, it
was shortened to a half-hour and paired up with Disney’s
Adventures of the Gummi Bearswhen it moved from NBC to form the Gummi Bears-Winnie
the Pooh Hour. For the third season, Gummi Bears was moved to the
syndicated Disney
Afternoon programming block and New
Adventures finished its run on its own.The third season also saw
the departure of Winchell, who had been recording separately from the rest of
the cast to reduce stress, as
advised by his cardiologist. He was replaced by
Cummings, who had been understudying him and filled in for him periodically
during the first two seasons. During its original run, New
Adventures won the Emmy
Award for Outstanding Animation Program in
both 1989 and 1990 (where it tied with Beetlejuice).
The show ended on October 26, 1991 but was quickly followed
in December by the special Winnie the Pooh and Christmas Too. Winchell
returned to voice Tigger and Edan Gross assumed the role of Christopher Robin.
The special was introduced with a skit featuring Disney head Michael Eisner and the Disneyland walk-around Pooh characters, and was accompanied by
the Donald Duck shorts The Hockey Champan Bearly Asleep. The special was
later edited into part of the 2002 direct-to-video feature A Very Merry Pooh Yearwith Christopher
Robin’s lines re-dubbed by William Green and Rabbit’s fur recolored into the
traditional yellow, as opposed to the greenish hue it had on the show.
Additional specials included 1996’s Boo to
You Too! Winnie the Pooh, 1998’s A
Winnie the Pooh Thanksgiving, and 1999’s Winnie
the Pooh: A Valentine for You.
Gopher getting ready to blow stuff up.
Even though the network didn’t order any further episodes
after the 4th season’s conclusion, New Adventures continued
to air on ABC until 1993 when executives felt the show could make more money in
syndicated reruns than through a network deal. The series returned to The
Disney Channel on October 3, 1994 and remained there until September 1, 2006.
It also returned to ABC in 1995 as a replacement for The
New Adventures of Madeline and stayed—with a
half-season break in 1996—until September 7, 2002; getting renewed popularity
as part of the Disney’s
One Saturday Morning programming block. The
show was also seen on Playhouse Disney, Toon Disney and Disney Junior, and on international versions of The Disney Afternoon programming block. After leaving Toon Disney on October
19, 2007, New Adventures hasn’t been seen on American television since,
although it did continue on in other countries.
Various episodes were released on six compilation DVDs, four of them under the Growing
Up with Winnie the Poohbanner, between 2002 and 2010. “Magic Earmuffs” and “The Wishing
Bear” were included on the 10th anniversary re-release of Seasons of Giving. In addition to five of the
North American releases, eight DVDs were released in the United Kingdom under The
Magical World of Winnie the Poohbanner featuring four episodes each. In
2019, it became one of the launch titles for the streaming service Disney+.
EPISODE GUIDE:
Season 1:
“Pooh
Oughta Be in Pictures” (1/17/88) – After seeing a scary movie, the gang tries
to convince Piglet that the monsters in it aren’t real.
“Friend,
in Deed / Donkey for a Day” (1/24/88) – Pooh and his friends try to get honey
from a beehive in order to pay back Rabbit for all the honey Pooh’s taken from
him. / Piglet convinces the other to spend the day cheering up Eeyore.
“There’s
No Camp Like Home / Balloonatics” (1/31/88) – Campfire scary stories leads
Piglet to come face-to-face with is greatest fear: Heffalumps. / The gang
panics when the balloon he borrowed from Christopher Robin gets deflated by
Rabbit.
“Find
Her, Keep Her” (2/7/88) – Rabbit tries to raise the little bird he rescued.
“The
Piglet Who Would Be King” (2/14/88) – When Pooh gives Piglet a gift, Piglet
heads out to find the Land of Milk and Honey to get some honey in
reciprocation.
“Cleanliness
is Next to Impossible” (2/21/88) – Helping Christopher Robin clean his room
leads the gang to encounter the evil Crud and Smudge/.
“The Great Honey Pot Robbery” (2/28/88) – A
Heffalump and a Woozle have stolen all the honey in the Hundred-Acre Wood.
“Stripes
/ Monkey See, Monkey Do Better” (3/6/88) – Rabbit forces Tigger to take a bath,
resulting in his stripes being washed off. / The gang becomes upset when
Christopher Robin’s new toy declares himself the best toy ever.
“Babysitter
Blues” (3/13/88) – Christopher Robin and the gang get into mischief while being
watched by a babysitter.
“How
Much is That Rabbit in the Window?” (3/20/88) – Rabbit runs away and ends up
picked up by a junk dealer who tries to sell him.
“Nothing
But the Tooth / Gone With the Wind” (3/27/88) – When pack rats steal Pooh’s
sweet tooth, he believes he can no longer enjoy honey. / Piglet becomes afraid
of going outside since he’s light enough to be blown about by the wind.
“Paw
and Order” (4/3/88) – The gang puts on a play that takes place in the Wild
West.
“Honey
for a Bunny / Trap as Trap Can” (4/10/88) – A bookend Rabbit throws away finds
its way into everyone’s possession. / Pooh and Piglet help a young heffalump
learn how to trap.
“The
Masked Offender / Things That Go Piglet in the Night” (11/12/88) – Tigger
becomes a superhero to help people, but ends up causing problems. / The gang
believes they’re being haunted by a ghost.
“Luck
Amok / Magic Earmuffs” (12/3/88) – Rabbit believes he has bad luck when Tigger
breaks his mirror. / Christopher Robin gives Piglet “magic” earmuffs to help
him gain confidence in ice skating.
“The
Wishing Bear” (12/10/88) – When a wishing star blinks out after Pooh makes a
wish, he tries to ensure the others’ wishes all come true.
“King
of the Beasties / The Rats Who Came to Dinner” (1/7/89) – Tigger believes his
great uncle is a lion and declares himself “King of the Beasties.” / A flood
brings on an onslaught of pack rats.
“My
Hero / Owl Feathers” (1/14/89) – Tigger becomes Piglet’s servant after he saves
his life. / A trail of feathers leads the gang to believe Owl has gone bald.
“A
Very, Very Large Animal / Fish Out of Water” (1/21/89) – Piglet moves away when
he feels he’s too small. / Gopher becomes Rabbit’s roommate and drives him
crazy.
“Lights
Out / Tigger’s Shoes” (2/4/89) – Rabbit borrows Gopher’s flashlight without
asking and he looks for it in a panic. / To keep Tigger busy, Rabbit gives him
weighted shoes and challenges him to jump the highest rock.
“The
‘New’ Eeyore / Tigger, Private Ear” (2/25/89) – Eeyore dresses like Tigger to
be more popular. / Tigger causes crimes so that he can solve them like a
detective.
“Party
Poohper / The Old Switcheroo” (3/4/89) – Pooh is enlisted to keep Rabbit’s
parents busy while he plans a surprise party. / Too avoid a bath, Roo has
Piglet take his place.
Season 2:
“Me
and My Shadow / To Catch a Hiccup” (9/9/89) – Piglet brings home a new shadow
friend. / The gang helps Piglet try to cure his hiccups.
“Rabbit
Marks the Spot / Good-bye, Mr. Pooh” (9/16/89) – Rabbit creates a treasure map
to keep the gang out of his garden as they play pirate. / Tigger spreads a
rumor that Pooh is leaving and the gang throws him a going away party.
“Bubble
Trouble / Ground Piglet Day” (9/23/89) – Pooh ends up trapped in a bubble. /
Rabbit makes Piglet a groundhog for Groundhog Day.
“All’s
Well that Ends Wishing Well” (9/30/89) – Tigger is disappointed with his first
birthday, and Pooh tries to cheer him up by getting him the moon from the
wishing well.
“Un-Valentine’s
Day” (10/7/89) – Rabbit makes Valentine’s Day illegal.
“No
Rabbit’s a Fortress / The Monster Frankenpooh” (10/14/89) – Rabbit builds a
fortress to protect his garden. / On a dark and stormy night, Tigger spins a
yarn about mad scientist Piglet and his monster.
“Where
Oh Where Has My Piglet Gone? / Up, Up and Awry” (10/21/89) – Pooh believes he
misplaced Piglet and searches for him. / The gang arrests Pooh for breaking the
law of gravity when he tries to fly.
“Eeyore’s
Tail Tale / Three Little Piglets” (10/28/89) – Eeyore abandons his tail but
soon wants it back. / Pooh relates the story of the three little pigs.
“Prize
Piglet / Fast Friends” (11/18/89) – The gang holds a race for a trophy. /
Piglet gets stuck in the tree house while Gopher tries to help Pooh become more
punctual.
“Pooh
Moon / Caws and Effect” (12/2/89) – Tigger tells the gang a story about the
“Grabme-Gotcha.” / The crows trick Rabbit into leaving dim-witted Pooh to watch
over his garden while he and the others hunt for them.
Season 3:
“Oh,
Bottle / Owl in the Family” (8/18/90) – The pack rats steal the treasure map in
a bottle Christopher Robin created for their game. / Pooh and Piglet organize a
family reunion for Owl.
“Sham
Pooh / Rock-a-Bye Pooh Bear” (8/25/90) – Pooh losing his appetite causes
everyone to believe everyone else is an imposter. / Piglet has a nightmare
about losing his friends in a storm.
“What’s
the Score, Pooh? / Tigger’s Houseguest” (9/1/90) – Gopher will only rejoin
their game if the others help him work. / Tigger befriends a termite that has
been destroying things in the Wood.
“Rabbit
Takes a Holiday / Eeyi Eeyi Eeyore” (9/8/90) – All his chores done, Rabbit
takes a vacation and leaves the others to watch over his place. / Trying to
make Eeyore feel good about a seed he planted leads Rabbit to believe he’s the
better gardener and give Eeyore his property.
“Pooh
Skies” (10/6/90) – A fallen eggshell leaves the gang to believe the sky is
falling.
“April
Pooh / To Bee or Not to Bee” (10/13/90) – Christopher Robin sets the gang to
search for the April Fool. /
“A
Knight to Remember” (10/20/90) – On a stormy night, Piglet imagines he’s a
brave knight.
“Tigger
is the Mother of Invention / The Bug Stops Here” (10/27/90) – Tigger’s
inventions cause troubles for his friends. / The gang checks out Christopher
Robin’s science project and end up losing the bug that is part of it.
“Easy
Come, Easy Gopher / Invasion of the Pooh Snatcher” (11/3/90) – Rabbit becomes
annoyed when his house ends up part of Gopher’s ultimate tunnel. / Piglet asks
Pooh to help defend his house against Jagulars, which leads Tigger to believe
Pooh has been snatched by one.
“Tigger
Got Your Tongue? / A Bird in the Hand” (11/10/90) – The gang tries to help find
who stole Tigger’s voice. / An adult Kessie returns for a visit, but Rabbit has
a hard time seeing her as anything but a baby.
Season 4:
“Sorry,
Wrong Slusher” (9/7/91) – Strange things follow the gang and Christopher Robin
watching a slusher film.
“Grown,
But Not Forgotten” (9/14/91) – The gang becomes worried that Christopher Robin
will grow up and forget all about them.
“A
Pooh Day Afternoon” (9/21/91) – The gang looks after a dog.
“The
Good, the Bad and the Tigger” (9/28/91) – Losing control of Christopher Robin’s
toy train has Tigger and Pooh put on trial as train robbers.
“Home
Is Where the Home Is” (10/5/91) – The gang takes turns putting up Christopher
Robin after he runs away from home because he accidentally broke a statue.
“Shovel,
Shovel, Toil and Trouble / The Wise Have It” (10/12/91) – A large shovel puts
Gopher on an uncontrollable home improvement kick. / The number of candles on
Pooh’s birthday cake makes the gang believe he’s old and, therefore, wise.
“Cloud,
Cloud Go Away / To Dream the Impossible Scheme” (10/19/91) – Tigger befriends a
very sad cloud. / A visit from his Grandpappy inspires Gopher to finish his
Grandpappy’s dream of an above-ground underground city.
“Piglet’s
Poohetry / Owl’s Well That Ends Well” (10/26/91) – Tigger disrupts Piglet’s
poetry. / Rabbit finds Owl’s singing horrible, but is torn when it keeps the
crows out of his garden.
Specials:
“Winnie
the Pooh and Christmas Too” (12/14/91) – Christopher Robin sends off a letter
to Santa with the gang’s desires, but soon they become greedy and keep asking
for more.
“Boo
To You! Winnie the Pooh” (10/25/96) – Pooh, Tigger and Eeyore search for Piglet
after he runs off in fright, but their own fears begin to get the best of them.
“A
Wnnie the Pooh Thanksgiving” (11/22/98) – The gang learns about the true
meaning of Thanksgiving.
“A
Valentine For You” (2/13/99) – When Owl explains to the gang that Christopher
Robin is smitten by a girl, the gang decides to find another smitten to cure
him.
“A
Very Merry Pooh Year” (11/12/02) – It’s time for the holidays and the usual
chaos abounds in the Wood, along with Pooh forgetting where he hid Piglet’s
present.
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