Pingu

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Pingu is a Swiss animated children's television series created by Otmar Gutman, about a family of penguins who live at the South Pole. The main character is their son, Pingu.

Pingu logo
Pingu logo

Contents

[edit] Background

Although the programme is set in Antarctica, the penguin families and businesses live and work in igloos, which are found only in the Arctic as the traditional dwellings of the native Inuit people.

One reason for Pingu's international success is its lack of dialogue per se. All dialogue is in a honking "penguin language" (called Penguinese), and was initially performed without script by Carlo Bonomi (in a similar way to La Linea, which was also dubbed by Bonomi).

[edit] History

104 five-minute episodes were originally made, from 1986 onwards. The episodes were written by Silvio Mazzola, and directed and animated by Otmar Gutmann using clay animation, at Trickfilmstudio in Switzerland.[1]

In 1989, David Hasselhoff released (in Switzerland only) the single "Pingu Dance"[2], a rap song based on the Pingu shorts and featuring samples of Penguinese. A portion of this song is used as the theme to Pingu in the airings in North America.

A special 20-minute episode ("Pingu at the Wedding Party") was also produced, in 1997, which introduced a family of green penguins and a killer vacuum cleaner.

In 2001, HIT Entertainment bought the UK rights to the series (including the original 105 episodes) for £15.9 million[3] and produced a further 52 episodes, created at Hot Animation and first broadcast in 2004. These feature new voice actors Marcello Magni and David Sant, as Bonomi, who was based in Italy and could speak no English, was considered too impractical. Magni and Sant, Italian and Spanish actors based in London, both have a mime and clowning background and were already aware of the clown language of "Grammelot" on which the penguin language was based.

Pingu first aired in the United States on Cartoon Network's Sunday morning omnibus program Small World, which featured various cartoon shorts produced internationally, from 1996 until that show's discontinuation in 2001. The show would come back to America in 2005, when episodes began to air on PBS Kids Sprout, as it does to the present day.

In 2006, Pingu was featured in a music video for Eskimo Disco's first single, 7-11[1]. Also in 2006, pop icon Madonna told Swedish talk-show host Kristian Luuk that she considered Pingu to be a bad influence on children, apparently because her own daughter Lourdes was so enamored of Pingu that she would not stop watching the show.[4]

Although unsuccessful by international standards, the show garnered success in Malaysia comparable with the internationally acclaimed Spongebob Squarepants.[citation needed] It is also very popular in Japan, and currently airs as part of NHK's children's program Nyanchu's World.

[edit] Episode lists

Notes

  • Derivation of episode titles
No official episode title appears on screen, so the lists were initially created from the titles used on various official DVD releases. The main episode titles for Series 1 to 4 were taken from the official Japanese DVD releases, and the alternative titles from the official European DVD releases. Episode titles for Series 5 and 6 were taken from the European DVD releases.
Changes have subsequently been made to these titles to bring them more into line with English usage and practice (e.g. to correct spelling and grammar) and to relate them to the titles used on UK DVDs produced by HIT Entertainment. Alternative titles have also been appropriately added, amended, etc. Title data has also been supplemented with information from other sources, such as the titles used by the BBC for television broadcasts and on video tapes.
  • BBC broadcasts
In the UK, the BBC appear never to have broadcast any of the normal 5 minute episodes from the latter half of series 3 (3.13 – 3.26) or from series 4 (4.1 – 4.26).[5] Of the episodes that have been broadcast, all have been broadcast since 4 September 2006 inclusive except for episodes
• 1.1 (“Hello Pingu”, last broadcast 2 May 2003),
• 1.14 (“Pingu Runs Away”, last broadcast 18 February 2005)
• 1.26 (“Pingu’s Dream”, last broadcast 15 May 2003)

[edit] Commercial VHS and DVD releases

[edit] Characters

These are some of the characters appearing in "Pingu".

  • Pingu is the main character of the series. His age is 5. He is considered mischievous and a runaway in the episode "Pingu Runs Away". He commonly uses the "megaphone-like beak" gesture and "NUG, NUG!"[6] sound to indicate anger, happiness, frustration or to get attention (even though at the end of most series 5-6 episodes he says it at the end). Pingu can also change himself into any shape at will, such as a ball. Pingu is also very accident-prone, much to his parents annoyance.
  • Pinga is Pingu's little sister. She first appeared in the episode "Pinga is Born". In all of the series 1 and early 2 episodes she appears to be about 18 months old. Allthough she is seen attending kindergarten in one episode, Pingu gets jealous when she has to stay home while he has to go to school.
  • Mother and Father. Pingu's father is a postman, who smokes a pipe. He has a motorised sledge to deliver the post. Pingu's mother spends most of her time at home in the igloo. Mother and Father share a lot of the work in the home e.g. knitting, cooking and ironing. Mother sometimes gets help from Pingu & Pinga, but in the episode "Pingu Refuses to help", the kids decide not to help her again. They helped her again in "Pingu's Pancakes"
  • Grandpa is Pingu's grandfather. He's an expert accordionist.
  • Robby the seal is Pingu's best friend. His name is a pun; 'Robbe' is German for 'seal'.
  • Pingi is Pingu's girlfriend.
  • Pingo is a friend of Pingu. He has a long beak, basically flat at the bottom but slightly rounded on the top, which is slightly shorter than that of Pingg. He usually tries to get Pingu to do wild and silly things.
  • Pingg is a friend of Pingu. He's rather shorter than Pingo, and his beak is slightly longer and more pointed than that of Pingo.
  • Pongi is a friend of Pingu. He wears glasses.
  • Punki is another of Pingu's friends. He has tufts on the top of his head and wears stripey trousers.
  • Bajoo is also one of Pingu's friends. He is actually an abominable snowman who only appeared on the last Pingu episode Pingu and the Abominable Snowman. He also appeared in the music video.
  • The Schoolmaster is Pingu's teacher. He lives in a nearby school and rings the bell meaning that is time for school to begin or end.

[edit] Audio

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Frequently Asked Questions about Pingu. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
  2. ^ | www.david-hasselhoff.com |
  3. ^ "Pingu sold for £16m", Business, BBC News, 2001-10-29. Retrieved on 2007-07-21. 
  4. ^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20061219/ai_n17080941 (Reference from article by Ed Caesar, in the London Independent, 19 Dec 2006. Retrieved via findarticles.com on 10 Feb 2008.)
  5. ^ BBC Programme Catalogue - (infax beta). Retrieved on 2007-07-26.
  6. ^ Welcome to the official Pingu web site!

[edit] External links