Jay Jay the Jet Plane

Jay Jay the Jet Plane
Also known as Jay Jay (for short)
Genre Children's television series
Created by David Michel
Deborah Michel
Written by John Semper
Eleanor Burian-Mohr
Voices of Mary Kay Bergman (1998-1999)
Gina Ribisi
Chuck Morgan
Marie Danielle
Donna Cherry (1999-2005)
Debi Derryberry (1999-2005)
Eve Whittle
Michael Donovan
Narrated by Chuck Morgan
Michael Donovan
Brian Cant (UK)
Theme music composer Parachute Express
Composer(s) Stephen Michael Schwartz
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 60 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) David Michel
Bruce D. Johnson
William T. Baumann
Chris Walker
Producer(s) David Michel
Location(s) Tarrytown Airport in Tarrytown
Production company(s) PorchLight Entertainment
Modern Cartoons
Wonderwings.com Entertainment
Knightscove Family Films
Distributor Tommy Nelson (1998-2002)
Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment (2002-05)
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment (2005)
Release
Original network

TLC (USA; November 2, 1998– June 1, 2001)
PBS Kids (USA; June 11, 2001–November 25, 2005)
Milkshake! (UK 1999-2005)

Sprout (September 26, 2005–July 3, 2009)
Picture format SDTV 480i
Original release Home Video series: December 13, 1994 (1994-12-13) - October 29, 1996 (1996-10-29)
Television series: November 2, 1998 (1998-11-02) – November 25, 2005 (2005-11-25)
Chronology
Related shows Thomas and Friends
Theodore Tugboat
External links
Production
website
[[http://www.jayjay.com] www<wbr/>.jayjay<wbr/>.com]]

Jay Jay the Jet Plane was an American children's television series based at the fictional Tarrytown Airport. It had 73 episodes. The series was centered on a group of aircraft who lived in the fictional city of Tarrytown. The episodes were commonly distributed in 25-minute-long (as without commercials) pairs, with one header sequence and one end credits for each pair. Each episode contained one or more songs.

The theme song and the majority of the other songs were written by well-known children's singer/songwriter Stephen Michael Schwartz and sung by his popular musical group, Parachute Express. Created by David and Deborah Michel, the series was intended to be educational and to teach life and moral lessons to children (and sometimes also to parents).

History

In 1994, a short live-action series was produced at AMS Production Company in Dallas, Texas, with real model plane characters and animated crafted human characters; they did not talk but had the same personalities as in the later series. This original series was narrated similarly to the first eleven seasons of Thomas and Friends or Theodore Tugboat.[1] It contained three videos: Jay Jay's First Flight, Old Oscar Leads the Parade and Tracy's Handy Hideout. These three episodes were known as the "pilot series".

On November 2, 1998, the CGI/live-action series premiered on The Learning Channel. Debi Derryberry took on the role of Jay Jay after Bergman's death in 1999 with no new characters voiced by her. The Learning Channel removed the series on March 14, 2000. On June 11, 2001, all episodes began broadcasting on PBS Kids and Sprout; the end credits have changed and additional episodes were created in 2001-2005, and retired from the PBS Kids and Sprout websites in 2010. Home video editions were released by Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment through 2003 as part of their "Columbia TriStar Family Fun" collection. Additional distribution was added with Tommy Nelson, the children's division of book publisher Thomas Nelson, although the series is not overtly "Christian". Voice actress Mary Kay Bergman provided the original voice of Jay Jay, Herky, Savannah, and Revvin Evan. After her death, Debi Derryberry and Donna Cherry replaced her.

In 2005, new episodes were produced featuring additional characters, including the red Latina plane Lina. Each episode begins featuring a "Jay Jay's Mysteries" segment in which Jay Jay and Lina explore such things that may be mysteries to the intended age group, such as how planes fly and how the five senses are used. The mysteries segment is followed by a story that comes from the original episodes of the series so in effect the new series repackages previously broadcast content.

Characters

The planes and ground vehicles were CGI characters, while the humans were live action actors.

Relationship words for the airplane characters refer to being in loco parentis for purposes of upbringing and education, not to biological parenthood. The story says that (some of) the airplane characters were made in factories.

Some of the stories described characters as doing actions off-screen that would need foldaway arms (e.g. Big Jake digging holes), but those arms were never seen on screen.

Young plane characters

Older plane characters

Ground vehicles

Humans

Animals

Places

Tarrytown and its airport were never seen in moving-camera shots, and therefore were likely real miniature sets which were photographed and those photographs were used as backgrounds in the CGI images. The airport runway may be a CGI ground plane texture mapped with a photograph of real full-size or miniature tarmac. Sometimes, the planes taxi on the town streets.

Episodes

Production

The series was produced by Modern Cartoons in Oxnard, California, United States. Unlike Thomas the Tank Engine, this series used a variety of animation techniques:

The complex mathematical and CGI issues were solved by Frank Ford Little, PhD.

A number of proprietary software systems were used:

Jay Jay's Mysteries

10 new episodes

New characters

Broadcasting

United States

The series was broadcast over many of the 379 member stations of PBS Kids in the United States.

Translations

In foreign versions of the show, the human characters are often replaced with different actors. For example, in the Korean version of the show, a Korean actor takes the role of Brenda. Unusually, the Irish version of Jay Jay the Jet Plane mostly uses non-native speaker actors from Belfast (although some minor parts are played by native-speaking actors from the Gaeltacht).

Europe

Asia

References

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