Max, the 2000-Year-Old Mouse

Max, the 2000-Year-Old Mouse was a Canadian animated television series produced by the late Steve Krantz, which originally aired in Canada in 1967 and became popular in several parts of the world, most notably the United States, where it was syndicated on both local and PBS stations between 1970 and 1979, and also the United Kingdom, where it was repeated numerous times on the ITV network between its original transmission in 1969 and its last showing to date in 1992.

The series was an educational show, aimed at children, in which still pictures and limited animations told the stories about important figures and key events in Western history. 104 episodes were made in total, each running at five and a half minutes in length.

The episodes were filmed quickly and cheaply, and the premise of the show was simple. An episode typically begins in a room in a museum, with artifacts on display while the unseen and unnamed narrator (Bernard Cowan) introduces the era and historical person(s) to be featured. The title character, Max, a pink mouse who lived in the museum (voiced by Paul Soles), essentially served as comic relief and also helped with the narration, while repeatedly claiming to have been a witness of and/or participant in the historical events. Footage of Max, set in the past or present, typically shows him as comically clumsy with the contemporary tools and weapons. Key figures whose biographies were explored in the series included Paul Revere, Buffalo Bill, Davey Crockett, Daniel Boone, Chief Crazy Horse and Johnny Appleseed, among many others, with Max dubiously claiming to have helped all of them over the course of his very long life.

The show's theme music was also later used by Siskel and Ebert's movie review series for PBS, Sneak Previews.

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