Wayside (TV series)

Wayside

Wayside title card
Directed by

Ian Haslirss
(art director)
John Derevlany
(story editor)


Storyboard Artist(s):

Ted Corter
Nick Cross
Warren Leonnarn
Melder Mecdooca
Steve Steraneis
Voices of Mark Rendall
Denise Oliver
Martin Villafana
Lisa Ng
Kathleen Laskey
Kedar Brown
Sergio Di Zio
Jayne Eastwood
Theme music composer James Robertson
Opening theme "Fly by the Wayside" by Skye Sweetnam
Ending theme "Fly by the Wayside" (instrumental)
Country of origin Canada
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 26 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Scott Dyer
Doug Murphy
Lin Oliver
Producer(s)

Jillian Ruby
(line producer)


Supervising Producer(s):

Jocelyn Hamilton
Patricia R. Burns
Lan Lamon
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Teletoon Original Production
Nickelodeon Production
Nelvana
Broadcast
Original channel Teletoon
Nickelodeon
Picture format 720i (EDTV)
Original run March 16, 2007 – July 9, 2008
External links
Website

Wayside (also known as Wayside School) is a Canadian animated television series developed by John Derevlany for Teletoon and Nickelodeon. The series centers on Todd, a transfer student who attends Wayside, an offbeat 30-story elementary school. It is loosely based on the Wayside School books by Louis Sachar, although several elements differ between the two works.

Derevlany conceived the series in 2003, as an hour-long television special pilot titled Wayside: The Movie that aired in 2005. Teletoon greenlit twenty-six episodes of Wayside in 2006, which aired throughout 2007 and 2008; it also aired briefly on Nickelodeon during this time. The show ceased production in 2008, but it now airs on YTV in reruns.

Wayside received generally favorable reviews from critics, and was also nominated for a "Best TV Series for Children" at the 2008 Cartoons on the Bay award ceremony. Despite favorable critical reception, the series has also received negative criticism, including unfavorable comparisons for its differences from the Wayside School books. Many tie-in media have been released, including a DVD release of the pilot episode under the title Wayside: The Movie, released in 2007, and a DVD of the first season, released on August 17, 2008.

Synopsis

Wayside takes place in the fictional Wayside School, an unusual Escher-esque 30-story elementary school. The school had been accidentally built "sideways", with one classroom in each of the 30 stories instead of 30 classrooms on one floor.[1] Like in the books, there are actually 29 floors in the school; the imaginary 19th floor is inhabited by the imaginary Miss Zarves. The series revolves around a new student at the school, named Todd, and his adventures adapting to life as a student at the top floor of Wayside School.

At Wayside, every floor appears to have lockers, stairs, classrooms, doors, and light fixtures. The first floor contains the principal's office; the second floor contains a bathroom and several rows of lockers, while the fifth, sixth, and seventh consist of the classroom for pottery,[2] the school campgrounds,[3] and the school library, respectively. The twelfth floor contains the faculty lounge and pool,[1] while the three floors above that contain the gym,[1] the social studies classroom[1] and gondola canal,[4] and the cafeteria and kitchen.[1]

On the (technically nonexistent) nineteenth floor, there are no doors, but a chute blocked by wooden boards. In the episode "Dana Checks Out," in the hall and stairwell of what is considered the nineteenth floor, there are lockers in the background. On the two tallest floors, Ms. Mush teaches honors class in an auditorium on the twenty-ninth floor,[5] while Mrs. Jewls teaches her students on the thirtieth.[1] Every floor also appears to be a different color. To add to the school's Escher-esque style, all of the features of the floors—doors, lockers, stairs, etc.—are placed in very unusual ways, as seen in the Escher artwork, Relativity. All of the floors' features are either right-side up, upside-down, sideways, or suspended high above the floor, as seen with several lockers.

Characters

Wayside primarily centers on Todd (Michael Cera (Pilot); Mark Rendall (Series), a transfer student who attends Mrs. Jewls's class on the thirtieth floor and struggles to adapt and conform to Wayside's offbeat academic structure and always gets sent home early on the kindergarten bus for doing nothing wrong.[1] Supporting characters include his friends:

Dana (Lisa Ng), a Type A overachiever who obsessively maintains Wayside's rules and acts as Myron's campaign manager and best friend. Her real name is Yodana (as revealed in the episode, "Oh Brother"). Her catchphrase is "ENOUGH WITH THE FUN!".

Myron (Martin Villafana), a vain and self-centered student who wishes to become class president. He is Dana's best friend (as revealed in the episode, "He Is It").

Maurecia (Denise Oliver), a tomboy who wears roller skates and has an enormous crush on Todd. Her name is pronounced "Maur-ee-see-uh" and has bluish-purple hair while in the pilot movie, her name is pronounced "Mau-ree-shuh" and has reddish-pink hair instead of bluish-purple. She often punches him as a way to show her feelings towards him and Todd sometimes has feelings for her. In the pilot, she is shown to have blue eyes.

Recurring members of the school faculty include:

Mrs. Jewls (Kathy Najimy in the pilot; Kathleen Laskey in the series), Todd's offbeat yet endearing teacher. She is always mean to Todd by punishing him and putting his name on the Discipline List in almost every episode, despite that Todd has not done anything wrong in her class.

Principal Kidswatter (Kedar Brown), the uptight, self-centered and insecure school principal who often makes up apparently arbitrary rules on a whim, without thinking about the consequences of these rules. He does not care for the students, although that slightly changed in the episode "Kidswatter Opus", where he teaches Mrs. Jewels' class when it was her day off, and was even crying at the end and admits he was going to miss them, just as the kids were going to miss him, because they were all making sad faces when Maurecia was saying, "Thanks for everything, Principal Kidswatter." His first name is Louis(as revealed in the episode, "Louis Gets Some Class").

Louis (Sergio Di Zio), the relaxed and friendly caretaker and supervisor at Wayside.

Miss Mush (Jayne Eastwood), the Eastern European head chef of the school cafeteria and nurse who is best known for her friendly personality and horrible cooking skills, although she thinks is an excellent cook.

Recurring students in Mrs. Jewls' class include:

Shari (Lisa Ng), a female student who wears a smoky purple overcoat and frequently sleeps in class until the third season which she becomes one of the main characters. In the episode "Cabbage My Boy", a video shows that she is awake after school, doing extreme activities(including karate, skateboarding, skydiving, and mountain climbing) with her family, which might be a clue that she takes naps in school to get more energy. She has a little brother, and a baby sister. Her family owns a Monster Truck that they normally use to take Shari to school. She also seems to be quite wealthy and quite intelligent, as her family was able to afford a monster truck, and she was able to make a movie under the production known as, "A Shari Production", and she was able to recognize Myron in the Normy costume in "Myron vs. Normy. She might look like she's sad most of the time(because her face is asleep), but she seems to be quite happy with her life. Also, her whole family(besides her sister) wear a hood, and it might be the school that makes her sleepy. She bears some resemblance to Raven from Teen Titans Go.

Stephen (Terry McGurrin), a student who wears a Halloween elf costume. His whole family wears holiday related clothes (his mother dressed as the Easter Bunny, his sister as a pilgrim, and his father as Santa Claus). He technically becomes one of the main characters starting in Season 2.

Jenny (Denise Oliver), an Evel Knievel-esque stunt performer who often rides a bike in the shape and sound of a motorcycle throughout the school. She is often known for her fabulous blonde hair. She often calls her friends by the nick names she gives them (for example, she gave Maurecia the name Sister Mo and Dana the name Sister D). In "Daring Love" it's hinted she might be in love with Myron. She was the first one in the series to have told any stories about a kid named Nick, whom of which is Louis revealed in Myth of Nick. Along with Shari, she will become one of the main characters in the third season.

The Three Erics, consisting of Eric Fry, Eric Bacon, and Eric Ovens (Terry McGurrin (Ovens), Peter Oldring (Bacon), and Dwayne Hill (Fry)), three similarly-attired students in Mrs. Jewls' class who perform many casual tasks collectively. Bacon is the largest Eric, Fry is the African American Eric, and Ovens is the smallest Eric.

Rondi, an obese girl who is almost always happy.

John (Peter Oldring), a student who is usually upside-down and walks on his hands.

Joe (Terry McGurrin), a student who is known for his large orange-colored afro. His whole family has the same colored afro. He seems to have a fondness for nature life in "Joe in Fro".

Leslie (Lisa Ng), a female student who uses her two pigtails to perform everyday tasks;

Bebe Gunn (Denise Oliver), a female student best known for her advanced art skills. She doesn't normally talk, instead she draws, but she does talk in "Music Lessons".

An unnamed female student who wears a purple-pink dress and has lemon-lime hair. There is no evidence that her name is Deedee.

Several members of the school faculty also play minor roles, including:

Mrs. Gorf (Julie Lemieux), a replacement for Mrs. Jewls who had the ability to transform her students into apples before being transformed into one herself by Maurecia.

Le Chef (Peter Oldring), the former French chef in the teacher's lounge who was to be appointed cafeteria chef in place of Ms. Mush but was later evicted from the school due to his obnoxious demeanor. Mr. Blunderbuss (Dwayne Hill), the adventurous fourteenth-floor teacher who often goes on hunting safaris throughout worldwide jungles.

Miss Zarves, the teacher for the nonexistent nineteenth floor.

Other recurring characters include:

Sammy, Ms. Mush's petrified companion zombie rat.

Poobinsky, an octopus that Ms. Mush attempts to cook for lunch but is always unsuccessful in doing so.

Stewy, another octopus who is an exchange student for Ms. Mush.

Fluffy, Maurecia's short-tempered pet porcupine who often envies Todd.

Reception

Critical reception

DVD Talk described Wayside as "a clever, often hilarious little show that demands a larger audience", praising the series' scripts and dialogue as "delight[ed] in mixing absurd humor with fond grade school memories."[6]

DVD Verdict stated "The most satisfying part of Wayside is how the show feels perfectly balanced—it has enough wacky antics and bizarre events to satisfy young audiences, enough logical fallacies and defiant attitudes to amuse middle-aged kids, and enough clever and sardonic wit to please adults fortunate enough to find themselves in front of a television set while the show is playing," concluding that Wayside was "the perfect cartoon adventure for families of all ages."[7]

Blogcritics reviewer negatively compared the animated series to the books which inspired it, stating that "the series 'doesn't have the magic that the books had,' and noting that while the books provided 'wacky, silly, with odd, funny, almost-realistic-but-not-quite characters', viewers get no such character development from the animation, and expanded that while the show is shared from an adult perspective, it is not meant to be enjoyed by parents and kids" watching it together, being "geared towards younger kids".[8]

Boston Globe offered that while viewers familiar with the character development in the book series will see that the animated series "understandably, dispenses with the nuance in favor of kid-friendly slapstick and goofy conceptual jokes", the children and parents who have not previously encountered the books "won't know what they're missing."[9]

Awards and nominations

In 2008, Wayside received a nomination for "Best TV Series for Children" at the 2008 Cartoons on the Bay award ceremony.[6]

Broadcast history

US

UK and Ireland

Canada

Australia and New Zealand

Latin America

Merchandise

DVD box set for season 1.
Season DVD release date
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
1 March 30, 2006 (Wayside: The Movie)
August 29, 2007 (Season 1) [10]
TBA TBA
2 TBA TBA TBA

In 2007, the pilot episode of Wayside was released and branded as Wayside: The Movie. The first season excluding the pilot was released on August 29, 2008 under the title Wayside School: Season 1.[10]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Derevlany, John & Oliver, Lin (concept); Durante, Ricardo (2005-11-15). "Pilot". Wayside. Season 01. Episode 00. Teletoon.
  2. Derevlany, John; Durante, Ricardo (2007-04-21). "Myron vs. Normy". Wayside. Season 01. Episode 6A. Teletoon.
  3. Derevlany, John; Durante, Ricardo (2007-05-19). "Mrs. Gorf". Wayside. Season 01. Episode 10B. Teletoon.
  4. Derevlany, John; Durante, Ricardo (2007-05-19). "French Fried". Wayside. Season 01. Episode 11B. Teletoon.
  5. Derevlany, John; Durante, Ricardo (2007-03-31). "Honors Class". Wayside. Season 01. Episode 3A. Teletoon.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Cornelius, David (2008-08-30). "Wayside School — Season One". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  7. Arsenau, Adam (2008-08-10). "Wayside School: Season One". DVD Verdict. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  8. Wax, Alyse (July 18, 2007). "TV Review: Wayside on Nickelodeon". Blogcritics. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  9. Weiss, Joanna (June 25, 2007). "'Wayside' skips the nuance, but not the fun". Boston Globe. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Wayside — Season 1". TV Shows on DVD.com. Retrieved 2010-08-13.

External links