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Animals, Animals, Animals

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1976 American TV series or program
Animals, Animals, Animals
GenreEducational
Created byLester Cooper[1]
Presented byHal Linden
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons6
Production
Executive producerLester Cooper[1]
ProducersPeter Weinberg,Al Brodax
Original release
NetworkABC[2]
ReleaseSeptember 12, 1976 (1976-09-12) –
November 8, 1981 (1981-11-08)[2]

Animals, Animals, Animals is a 1976–1981educational television series onABC about animals.[3] The program, produced byABC News with animated segments produced byAl Brodax,[4] was hosted byHal Linden.[2] The show aired in most markets at Sunday mornings at 11:30 am Eastern Time.[5]

Show format

[edit]

The show often began with Linden giving a monologue about an animal that was going to be that day's subject. In-between songs, animated segments, and interviews from experts about said animal was more exposition from Linden.[5] The show looked at the presentation of animals in mythology, art and literature, as well as biology and zoology.[6]

Information about animals was provided byRoger Caras and, songs about animals were performed byLynn Kellogg,[1] who also performed the opening theme song. Zoo personnel and animal researchers frequently appeared on the show. During segments about animals, voiceover was provided byEstelle Parsons andMason Adams.

Show history and production

[edit]

The show first aired on September 12, 1976, replacingMake a Wish on ABC's Sunday morning schedule.[1] Animated segments were provided by Al Lowenheim, Arland Barron, Jeff Melquist, Jim Comstock, Ray Pointer, and Stacey Mann of Lions' Den Studio and David Labelle of David Labelle Animation Studios.

Five years later, in 1981,Animals, Animals, Animals was replaced byThis Week with David Brinkley; this marked the end of ABC's scheduling of children's programming on Sunday mornings, a practice which began withDiscovery (the predecessor toMake a Wish) in the 1960s.

Series creator Lester Cooper convinced Hal Linden to host the show after explaining to him they wanted to do aSherwood Schwartz-like educational series.[1] Originally Linden was only going to do narration but Linden requested to also be involved in live action portions of the show.[1] "I've been chewed by a camel, crawled over by a tarantula, butted by a bull, clawed by an eagle, wrestled by an alligator, and peed upon by virtually every creature on Earth" joked Linden.[1] Linden decided to do the show because he thought it was the rare children's television show that wasn't an "insult" to children.[1] Taping an episode was sometimes taxing due to the on-location aspect of filming, which host Linden was prepared for due to the long taping sessions his sitcomBarney Miller would often require.[1] Linden also lamented over how the show was often the "first to go" on days when baseball was airing on ABC due to its 11:30 am timeslot in most markets.[1]

Cooper worked to try and make a show educational as well as appealing to children.[1] "We approach each creature that we examine from his place in history, in mythology, in literature, in art, in music," Cooper recalled in a 1976 interview with theLos Angeles Times.[1]

Reception

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The series won Emmys for four consecutive years and the Peabody Award.[1][7] It won the 1978 Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Informational Series. The show also won the Action for Children's Television ACT Prize for excellence in children's programming.[1]

In a negative review fromThe New York Times, Carol Rinzler wrote that she thought Hal Linden's demeanor was "depressed" while presenting the show and said that despite the songs and animation, the expositions that bookended those segments hurt the show. Rinzler concluded that the show was "boring, boring, boring", mocking the title of the show.[5]Los Angeles Times columnist Cecil Smith was a lot more positive about the show, calling Lynn Kellogg's songs "charming".[1] Smith also, in a contrast from Rinzler, called Linden "the soul of the show, giving it an easy charm, a wry wit, and, at times, a naivete that matches his youngest viewer. He has a nice way of gathering in the elements of the show."[1]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghijklmnopMemories Abound from Jack Benny Repeats by Cecil Smith,Los Angeles Times. August 6, 1977
  2. ^abcWatching Wildlife By Cynthia Chris. Page 230
  3. ^Hyatt, Wesley (1997).The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television. Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 25.ISBN 978-0823083152. Retrieved22 March 2020.
  4. ^Kids' TV: The First Twenty-Five Years By Stuart Fischer
  5. ^abcRinzler, Carol (26 September 1976)."For Kids: A Few Bright Spots in the Customary Sludge".The New York Times.
  6. ^Woolery, George W. (1985).Children's Television: The First Thirty-Five Years, 1946-1981, Part II: Live, Film, and Tape Series. The Scarecrow Press. pp. 46–47.ISBN 0-8108-1651-2.
  7. ^"Linden's life is a cabaret".

External links

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Entertainment Children's Series
(1974–1984)
Children's Instructional Programming
(1976–1979)
Informational Children's Series
(1976–1979)
Children's Informational/Instructional Series
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(1985–2016)
Pre-School Children's Series
(1995–2021)
Children's or Family Viewing Series
(2017–2020)
Preschool, Children's or Family Viewing Program
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Education or Informational Series
(2018–2021)
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