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Postman Pat | |
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Genre | Animated television series Slice of life Stop motion |
Created by | John Cunliffe[1] |
Developed by | Ivor Wood |
Directed by | Ivor Wood[1] Kitty Taylor Derek Mogford Chris Taylor |
Voices of |
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Narrated by | Ken Barrie Peter Sallis[2] |
Opening theme | "Postman Pat" by Bryan Daly |
Ending theme | "Postman Pat (Can You Guess What's In His Bag?)" by Simon Woodgate (2004–2007) |
Composers |
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Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 8 |
No. of episodes | 184(list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | forChildren's BBC:forEntertainment Rights:
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Producers |
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Editor | Martin Bohan |
Running time |
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Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | BBC One |
Release | 16 September 1981 (1981-9-16) – 27 September 1982 (1982-9-27) |
Network | Children's BBC onBBC One |
Release | 3 April (1997-4-3) – 8 September 1997 (1997-9-8) |
Network | CBeebies |
Release | 7 September 2004 (2004-9-7) – 19 December 2008 (2008-12-19) |
Release | 11 February (2013-2-11) – 20 December 2013 (2013-12-20) |
Release | 22 November 2016 (2016-11-22) – 29 March 2017 (2017-3-29) |
Postman Pat is a Britishstop motionanimated children's television series first produced by Woodland Animations. The series follows the adventures of Pat Clifton, apostman who works for theRoyal Mail postal service in the fictional village of Greendale (inspired by the real valley ofLongsleddale nearKendal).[3]
Postman Pat's first 13-episode series was screened onBBC One in 1981.[4]John Cunliffe wrote the original treatment and scripts for the series, which was directed by animatorIvor Wood, who also worked onThe Magic Roundabout,The Wombles,Paddington, andThe Herbs. Following the success of the first series, four TV specials and a second series of thirteen episodes were produced during the 1990s. In this series, Pat had a family shown on screen for the first time (though his wife had been mentioned in a number of episodes[5]).
A new version of the series was produced byCosgrove Hall Films from 2004 to 2008 and expanded on many aspects of the original series.
The show ended on 29 March 2017, after eight series, twelve specials and five runs. The Special Delivery Service spin-off is still being rerun onCBeebies on weekends, and the previous Cosgrove Hall series from the 2000s was being rerun onITVBe's children's block littleBe from September 2023 to May 2024. The original two Ivor Wood series are available to watch onBritBox,Prime Video and on DVD.
Each episode follows the adventures of Patrick Clifton, a friendly country postman, and hisblack and white cat Jess, as he delivers the post through the valley of Greendale. Although he initially concentrates on delivering his letters, he nearly always becomes distracted by a concern of one of the villagers and is always keen to help resolve their problems. Notable villagers include thepostmistress, Mrs. Goggins; farmer couple Alf and Dorothy Thompson; the Reverend Timms; PC Selby, the police constable; Jeff Pringle, the school teacher; Peter Fogg, a farm hand; George Lancaster, a chicken farmer; Sam Waldron, a grocer with a mobile shop; Miss Hubbard, an upper-class woman; Julia Pottage, who runs Greendale Farm, and Ted Glen, the localhandyman and inventor.
Postman Pat is set in the fictional village of Greendale and the nearby town of Pencaster, on the border betweenCumbria andNorth Yorkshire.
Greendale has a different character in the variousPostman Pat series. In the original series (1 and 2), it was a small village with narrow, winding roads. The gentle pace of life allowed Pat plenty of time to enjoy the countryside as he passed through, or even stop on quiet days to have a picnic.
In the more recent series from 2003 onwards, Greendale became a big, busy village situated in the heart of the Cumbrian countryside. Running through the centre of the village is the High Street, home to Mrs Goggins's Post Office and shop, an unofficial meeting place for residents. Located on the edge of the village is the railway station, home to the Greendale Rocket. Nisha Bains runs a popular café there with Sara while her husband Ajay runs a regular schedule on the Greendale Rocket to the nearby town of Pencaster.
In the second series of the show, which aired in 1996, the village at the centre of the series was briefly referred to as Garner Bridge, while Greendale was the name of the valley in which Garner Bridge was situated. In the episodePostman Pat and the Suit of Armour, Greendale Post Office is referred to as "Garner Bridge Post Office".
Pencaster is a large, bustling, modern town located within easy commuting distance for the villagers of Greendale. Situated on the waterfront, Pencaster is a hive of activity, boasting a market square in the centre surrounded by shops, houses, a large railway station, state-of-the-art buildings, and a boat jetty. It bears some resemblance toLancaster, the county town ofLancashire, which likewise is a short commute fromLongsleddale, the area used as the inspiration for Greendale.[citation needed]
Ingledale is another large, busy town situated in the heart of the North Yorkshire countryside, only seen once in a special in 1991.
Cunliffe, interviewed about the series, has said that he chose the character of a postman since he needed a character who could visit the countryside and interact with many different people.[6][7][8]
The inspiration for the post office itself comes from one located on the street in Kendal where Cunliffe lived when he was writing the original treatment. The post office, at 10 Greenside, closed in 2003.[9]
Cunliffe did not retain rights to the character and was critical of some of the tie-in media later released. He wrote the stories to the seriesRosie and Jim, which he also presented, as a show which he could have more creative control over.[8]
While Cunliffe visited post offices for inspiration, he has said that the character and village was not based on any one place or person. He commented in 2015 that "I got maybe half a dozen people last year saying they were the inspiration."[10]
In Series 1,Ken Barrie voiced all the characters and narrated the series. In Series 2,Carole Boyd joined to voice all the female characters and child characters except Granny Dryden, who was still voiced by Barrie. In Series 3,Kulvinder Ghir, Janet James, andArchie Panjabi joined to voice the new characters and the child characters, while Boyd continued to voice the adult females, Charlie and Sarah, Melissa Sinden andJimmy Hibbert also joined to perform the animal characters' vocal effects andAngela Griffin joined in Series 5 to voice a new character (Amy Wrigglsworth). In Series 6,Lewis MacLeod replaced Barrie as Pat. In Series 7, Barrie left the series completely, and MacLeod, Bradley Clarkson, and Dan Milne took over the rest of Barrie's characters. Joe Trill joined in Series 8 to voice a new character.
In the spin-off series,Postman Pat: Special Delivery Service, Postman Pat has been promoted to Head of the SDS and is now called upon to deliver anything. Each episode follows Postman Pat on a Special Delivery mission, from rescuing a runaway cow to delivering a giant ice cube. In his new role, Postman Pat commutes to the nearby town of Pencaster where he collects his special deliveries from the Pencaster Mail Centre. Postman Pat now has a newer fleet of vehicles, including a bigger van, gyrocopter, 4x4 Jeep and motorbike, complete with sidecar for Jess.[11] He has a new boss, Ben, who tends to give him instructions (whereas he was his own master before the "promotion"). Pat also seems to make more mistakes in his work since moving to SDS, largely because the new format is always based on one delivery, which has to go wrong somehow (thus often because of Pat's errors).
The series features an expanded and diverse cast, a fleet of new vehicles, a world full ofgadgets and the new town of Pencaster.Postman Pat: Special Delivery Service first screened on BBC Two on 29 September 2008. The new series was commissioned by the BBC and produced by Entertainment Rights andCosgrove Hall Films.
A new series aired in 2016.[12]
Series | Episodes | Originally released | ||
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First released | Last released | |||
1 | 13 | 16 September 1981 (1981-09-16) | 27 September 1982 (1982-09-27) | |
2 | 13 | 3 April 1997 (1997-04-03) | 8 September 1997 (1997-09-08) | |
3 | 26 | 7 September 2004 (2004-9-7) | 14 October 2004 (2004-10-14) | |
4 | 26 | 27 February 2006 (2006-2-27) | 10 May 2006 (2006-5-10) | |
5 | 28 | 16 April 2007 (2007-4-16) | 24 December 2007 (2007-12-24) | |
6 | 26 | 29 September 2008 (2008-9-29) | 19 December 2008 (2008-12-19) | |
7 | 26 | 11 February 2013 (2013-02-11) | 20 December 2013 (2013-12-20) | |
8 | 26 | 22 November 2016 (2016-11-22) | 29 March 2017 (2017-3-29) | |
Specials | 12 | 15 October 1990 (1990-10-15) | 2 October 2006 (2006-10-2) |
Postman Pat: The Movie, a British-American direct-to-video computer-animated comedy children's feature film version of the British stop-motion animated children's television show, was theatrically released on 23 May 2014 in the United Kingdom. The film was distributed and produced byLionsgate andIcon Productions and animated byRubicon Group Holding. The story revolves around Pat entering a talent show audition which leads to robots taking over his postal service whilst he is away. The film starsStephen Mangan as the voice of Pat and also featuresJim Broadbent,Rupert Grint,David Tennant,Ronan Keating (as Pat's singing voice),Susan Duerden, Sandra Teles,TJ Ramini andPeter Woodward.
ACGI spin-off to the series was made calledGuess with Jess which follows Pat's cat Jess, now with the ability to talk, and his adventures with the farm animals. The series debuted on 9 November 2009 and ended in 2013.
Music for the original 1981 series was by Bryan Daly,[13] who wrote a number of songs including the well-known theme tune. For the 2003 series, pop writer Simon Woodgate scored the show and wrote new songs, including a new closing theme "Postman Pat (Can You Guess What's In His Bag?)". The theme tune "Postman Pat & His Black and White Cat" was sung byKen Barrie for the original series in the 1980s and 1990s. An extended version of the tune was released as a single in the UK where it reached number 44 in the charts in July 1982.[14] An album, titledPostman Pat: Songs and Music From the TV Series, was released by Post Music in 1982.
The theme tune and songs forPostman Pat Special Delivery Service (including "Special Delivery Service, What's It Going to Be Today?"), was recorded by Simon Woodgate at Echobass Studios.
In 2013, DreamWorks Classics releasedPostman Pat SDS series 2. The new 26-episode series retained Bryan Daly's original theme tune and Simon Woodgate's closing song, however new character themes and incidental music was composed by Sandy Nuttgens.
The theme song has undergone several adaptations; from 1994 to 2006, the theme tune had additional instruments such as synthesised strings and a tambourine. A similar edit had already been made to the 1993 album version, which was an edit of the original 1982 album version.
As of 2009, over twelve million books, including storybooks, integrated learning books, colouring books, and multi-character magazines, have been sold worldwide.[15]
Longleat Safari Park had an outdoor reproduction of Greendale village, including the Post Office, the Cliftons' house and the Greendale station. It also had a miniature model of Greendale.[16] It was installed during the 1990s, was relocated during 2008 in preparation for a new animal area and was revamped a third time for 2013. The attraction was closed at the end of 2015 and was permanently removed in 2016.
VHS and Betamax releases of Series 1 were originally released by Longman Video in the early-1980s, beforeBBC Worldwide secured them, and later released the four TV specials and Series 2 on VHS. For Series 1, the original opening titles which featured Pat driving in the original version of his van with a generic crown logo (which was used until Pat's Thirsty Day) was replaced with an edited version of the shot for shot remake of the original intro (which had Pat driving the Royal Mail Van) as used when the show aired in countries like France and Australia. The edits made to the intro on the DVD involved some shots being replaced by scenes from "Pat's Difficult Day", "Pat Takes A Message", and "Pat's Foggy Day". This edited intro was also used when CBeebies and BritBox reran the show.
After the sale of Woodland Animations toEntertainment Rights, the company began releasing VHS and DVDs of the revival series through their video labelEntertainment Rights and distributorUniversal Pictures Home Entertainment. Right released only one classic series volume on VHS and DVD -Postman Pat in a Muddle in April 2004, which contained three Series 2 episodes.
While no further classic series releases were seen in the UK until 2011, Universal and Classic Media issued all four specials from 1991 to 1994 on the DVDHappy Birthday Postman Pat. On 3 February 2014, the first and second series were made available in their entirety for the first time in the UK, However, the titles are both season 2 with the season 3 theme which came under scrutiny from classic fans and also credits Carole Boyd as doing voices in series 1, despite it being only Ken Barrie at the time.[17][18]
DVD releases of classic Postman Pat were limited in availability in various regions, although the revival series is more common.
In 2004, the entire original series was released on DVD in Spain, featuring both English and Spanish audio options.[19]
In Scotland, the series was shown not only in English but also sometimes broadcast asPàdraig Post, inScottish Gaelic, onBBC Alba.
"Slower-paced" and "faster-paced" episodes of Postman Pat were used in a 2021 research study on the effects of fast-paced television on children's cognitive and problem-solving abilities. The results of the study suggested that faster-paced television did not negatively impact children's attention spans, problem-solving, or comprehension.[20]
In 2006, Postman Pat was nominated for "Best Pre-school Animation" at theBAFTA Children's Awards.[21]
The first episode, Postman Pat's Finding Day, was broadcast on 16 September 1981
First introduced on BBC1 on September 16, 1981,...