Come Outside | |
---|---|
Come Outside Title Card |
|
Genre | Children's Educational |
Created by | BBC |
Directed by | Elizabeth Bennett Peter Rose |
Starring | Lynda Baron Pippin |
Composer(s) | Jonathan Cohen |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 39 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Judy Whitfield Stacey Adams |
Producer(s) | Elizabeth Bennett |
Editor(s) | David Austin Jon Bignold |
Location(s) | Middlesex & Buckinghamshire |
Camera setup | Jeremy Braben |
Running time | 14 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC Two CBBC CBeebies |
Picture format | 576i (4:3 SDTV) (now cropped to 16:9 for broadcast) |
Original run | 23 September 1993 | – 18 March 1997
External links | |
Website |
Come Outside is a BBC educational children's television series that ran from 23 September 1993 to 18 March 1997. The two main characters of the show are Auntie Mabel (played by Lynda Baron of Open All Hours), and her dog Pippin. They go on adventures in Auntie Mabel's aeroplane[1] which is covered in coloured spots. Pippin was a mixed breed dog, possibly part Tibetan Terrier, roughly third generation descended from the famous American acting dog Benji and was owned and trained by Ann Head. The first Pippin has since died in 2008. One of the dogs to play Pippin also starred as the Bakers dog for Bakers Complete pet food commercials and is still pictured on the products.
Contents |
The "adventures" are generally concerned with showing how something is made, or how everyday objects and systems work. Examples are:
As well as adventures, Mabel often tells stories to Pippin. Pippin also often receives treats related to the adventures. The show was originally broadcast in 1993, but is still being shown as of 2011 on CBeebies.
Many of the episodes were filmed in the Middlesex area, for example in the episode "Buses", Auntie Mabel boards a bus bound for Uxbridge, and is later seen exiting the public library at Ruislip Manor. Scenes were also filmed in Woodley, in the precinct and in the veterinary clinic. Auntie Mabel's new house can be seen in a corner of Denham Aerodrome close to Gerrards Cross in Buckinghamshire where one of the planes used in the series, G-RAFG, was based. G-BOCM and G-SFTZ were also used in the series. Some episodes feature a different plane, however it is of the same make (Slingsby Firefly). This plane however had a different propeller with black stripes which made a whirling spiral effect when spinning. All episodes where Aunt Mabel flies in this plane feature a slightly different, more up-beat flying theme tune. Aunt Mabel also wears an orange coat, rather than the usual green anorak she wears when flying in the alternative plane. The episode "bulbs" however has an exception to this, where Mabel wears her green coat and scarf in the different plane.
Although Aunt Mabel's new cottage can be seen in the corner of Denham Aerodrome, it is difficult to say where the other house featuring in the series was located. This house seems to be located somewhere in the countryside, with the back garden looking similar to a paddock/large field, running onto a farm or a set of outbuildings containing livestock. This area is seen in the "carrots" episode, where Pippin goes to see the goats in these outbuildings.
In the episode "Marmalade" Auntie Mabel flies to Seville to see some Orange Groves. However, the budget obviously didn't stretch to flying Lynda Baron to Spain, as she only appears from the front against a Chroma key background. An Auntie Mabel body double was used for shots of her in the orange grove with the locals, the double only ever being seen from behind.
Two different production companies are credited at the end of episodes; Tricorn Productions and Spelthorne Productions. In the "Boxes" episode, Auntie Mabel and Pippin both move house. This episode was created for the transition between the two production companies, as the house used when Tricorn was the producer was not the same as the one owned by Spelthorne Productions. One aspect of the "new" house is the front garden - it is directly adjacent to the field/strip containing Auntie's plane. Although the companies were merging together some fundamental assets changed, for example the acting dog used to portray Pippin was replaced in some scenes with a similar looking dog - later in many scenes Pippin was portrayed by a puppet. Also due to Spelthorne's new director, the scenes of Auntie Mabel at home were now filmed in a film set, rather than Tricorn's use of an actual house. Elements of the set can be clearly seen in some episodes, where the kitchen window displays a blatant backdrop rather than an actual garden. All scenes where Auntie Mabel herself can be clearly seen were done on the ground, the flying was by well-known aerobatics pilot Alan Cassidy and not by Lynda Baron.