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The Electric Company | |
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![]() The series title card | |
Created by | Paul Dooley Joan Ganz Cooney Lloyd Morrisett |
Directed by | Robert Schwarz Henry Behar John Tracy |
Starring | Morgan Freeman Judy Graubart Skip Hinnant Rita Moreno Jim Boyd Lee Chamberlin (1971–1973) Bill Cosby (1971–1973) Luis Ávalos (1972–1977) Hattie Winston (1973–1977) Danny Seagren (1974–1977) The Short Circus June Angela Irene Cara (1971–1972) Douglas Grant (1971–1973) Stephen Gustafson (1971–1975) Melanie Henderson (1971–1975) Denise Nickerson (1972–1973) Bayn Johnson (1973–1975) Gregg Burge (1973–1975) Janina Mathews (1975–1977) Réjane Magloire (1975–1977) Rodney Lewis (1975–1977) Todd Graff (1975–1977) The Adventures of Letterman (1972–1977) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 780 |
Production | |
Running time | 28 minutes |
Production company | Children's Television Workshop |
Original release | |
Network | PBS |
Release | October 25, 1971 (1971-10-25) – April 15, 1977 (1977-4-15) |
The Electric Company is an American educationalchildren's television series produced by theChildren's Television Workshop (CTW, now known as Sesame Workshop). It was co-created byPaul Dooley,Joan Ganz Cooney, andLloyd Morrisett. The series aired onPBS for 780 episodes over the course of its six seasons from October 25, 1971, to April 15, 1977. The program continued in reruns until October 4, 1985.The Electric Company later reran onNoggin, a channel co-founded by the CTW, from 1999 to 2003. Noggin also produced a compilation special for the show.
The Workshop produced the show atReeves Teletape Studios inManhattan.The Electric Company employedsketch comedy and various other devices to provide an entertaining program to helpelementary school children develop their grammar and reading skills.[1] Since it was intended for children who had graduated from CTW's flagship program,Sesame Street, the humor was more mature than what was seen there.[citation needed]
The show was directed byRobert Schwarz (1971 and 1977), Henry Behar (1972–1975), and John Tracy (1975–1976), and written by Dooley,Christopher Cerf (1971–1973), Jeremy Stevens (1972–1974) and John Boni/Amy Ephron (1972–1973).
In many areas, a preview special,Here Comes The Electric Company, was seen insyndication through sponsorJohnson Wax on many local commercial stations during the week before its 1971 debut.[2]
The original cast includedMorgan Freeman,Rita Moreno,Bill Cosby,Judy Graubart,Lee Chamberlin andSkip Hinnant. Most of the cast had done stage, repertory, and improvisational work, with Cosby and Moreno already well-established performers on film and television.Ken Roberts (1971–1973), best known as asoap opera announcer (Love of Life;The Secret Storm), was the narrator of some segments during season one, most notably the parody of the genre that had given him prominence,Love of Chair.
Jim Boyd, who was strictly an off-cameravoice actor and puppeteer during the first season, began appearing on-camera in the second season, mostly in the role of J. Arthur Crank.Luis Ávalos also joined the cast at that time.
Cosby was a regular in season one, and occasionally appeared in new segments during season two, but left afterward. Segments that Cosby had taped for the first two seasons were repeatedly used for the remainder of the series run. Similarly, Chamberlin was a regular for the first two seasons, and her segments were also repeatedly used throughout the show’s run. As a result, they were billed as cast members throughout the whole series run.
Added to the cast at the beginning of season three (1973–1974) wasHattie Winston, actress and singer who later appeared on the sitcomBecker. Beginning in season four (1974–1975), Danny Seagren, a puppeteer who had worked onSesame Street and also as a professional dancer, appeared in the role ofSpider-Man;Marvel Comics publishedSpidey Super Stories that tied into Seagren's appearances as Spider-Man in character, who never spoke aloud or unmasked himself.
The adult cast also had recurring roles asSpider-Man (Danny Seagren) (seasons 4–6 (1974–1977)), J.J. (Skip Hinnant), Carmela (Rita Moreno), Brenda (Lee Chamberlin) (seasons 1–2 (1971–1973)), Mark (Morgan Freeman), Hank (Bill Cosby) (seasons 1–2 (1971–1973)), Roberto (Luis Ávalos) (seasons 2–6 (1972–1977)), Winnie (Judy Graubart), Andy (Jim Boyd), and Sylvia (Hattie Winston) (seasons 3–6 (1973–1977)).
Another regular part of the show was theShort Circus (a pun onshort circuit), a five-member singing band whose songs also facilitated reading comprehension.June Angela was the only Short Circus member to remain with the show during its entire six-year run. Others lasted anywhere from one to four years.Irene Cara appeared during the first season (1971–1972) and would go on to become a pop-music star. Cara was replaced in the second season (1972–1973) byDenise Nickerson, who previously appeared on theABC daytime seriesDark Shadows and was best known for her appearance as Violet Beauregarde in the 1971 filmWilly Wonka & the Chocolate Factory.
The other three original members of the Short Circus were singer and guitarist Melanie Henderson; drummer and singer Stephen Gustafson; and singer, tambourinist, and guitarist Douglas Grant. For seasons three (1973–1974) and four (1974–1975), Grant and Nickerson were replaced bytap dancerGregg Burge and Broadway actressBayn Johnson.
Except for June Angela, an entirely new Short Circus was cast for the show’s fifth and sixth season (1975–1977). The new hires wereTodd Graff, singer Rodney Lewis,Réjane Magloire, and singer Janina Matthews.
In the first season (1971–1972), a number of unbilled children were also used on-camera with the show's cast, as onSesame Street, but this concept was quickly dropped.
Because of the frequent reuse of segments, a practice derived fromSesame Street, actors continued to appear after their departures from the cast.
The Electric Company also featured celebrity guest appearances, including the following:
With the exception ofTom Lehrer, all the individuals listed below wereChildren's Television Workshop in-house composers.
The original soundtrack album, released onWarner Bros. Records, won aGrammy Award for the show's cast.
The series was notable for its extensive, innovative use of earlycomputer-generated imagery, especiallyScanimate, a then-state-of-the-art analog video-synthesizer system. They were often used for presenting words with particular sounds. Sometimes a cast member would be seen alongside or interacting in another way with a word animation.
Comedian, actor and writerPaul Dooley created the series and served as head writer. A total of 780 episodes were produced in the show's six-season run, 130 per season. As withSesame Street, each episode ofThe Electric Company was numbered on-screen instead of using traditional episode titles. Seasons One through Four were numbered 1–520 (1971–1975). Season five was numbered 1A–130A (1975–1976), while season six was numbered 1B–130B (1976–1977). The last two seasons were designated as such because they were designed as year-long curricula for schools.
Starting with season three, a show's number would be presented in the sketch-of-the-day teaser segment, a parody of soap-opera teasers, which would highlight a particular sketch that would be shown during that episode. The voice of a cast member would say a variant of, "Today onThe Electric Company, the so-and so says, '(bleep)'," and the action would freeze as the graphic of the word of the day (or a card with the word of the day printed on it) became visible to viewers. Theredacted words were replaced by a series ofMinimoog[citation needed] sounds that roughly mimicked themodulation of the word or phrase in question so children could guess them. The still action would linger on the screen for several seconds, then fade to black, where the show number would become visible in aScanimate animation in a random color. The music for this segment was a repetitive, funky instrumental groove featuring acall-and-response between horns and a scratchywah-wah electric guitar.
The next-show teaser, which was introduced in season two without music, worked in the same way, and usually used a different take of the music heard during the sketch-of-the-day teaser, except that the voice said "Tune in next time, when...," and there was no show number shown.
In season one, however, after the title sequence, the sound of a striking match would be heard, and a fade-up from black would reveal a hand holding a lit match and "Show #x" handwritten on a piece of paper that was placed in such a way so that it could blend with the surrounding objects in-frame. Instead of the next-show teaser, Ken Roberts's voice could be heard, saying, "And now, the last word," and the trademark light bulb would be shut off by a hand doing whatever the last word was. In season two, after the opening sequence the words "The Electric Company" would disappear from the logo, and the show number would appear in its place through the use of aScanimate animation and an electronic whooshing sound.
Notably, some episodes in seasons three through five had serious technical errors with either their sketch-of-the-day teaser segments or their next-show teaser segments, which was probably because of the failure of thelinearanalog video-editing equipment. Episodes that have these errors in their sketch-of-the-day teasers include 297, 390, 1A, 8A, and 15A—sometimes the music started too late, ended too early, or played too long; sometimes the errors are negligible, with the teaser music only playing a fraction of a second longer than usual.
For season six, because the teaser music was changed to a shorter, self-contained composition, these errors do not occur, with the exception of the teaser of 33B shown at the end of 32B (available on iTunes), where the teaser was accidentallycut by a fraction of a second.
The Electric Company was canceled in 1977 at the height of its popularity. Unlike its counterpartSesame Street, which licensed itsMuppet characters for merchandising,The Electric Company never had a stand-alone brand or character that could have helped to generate additional profits. The only significant items the show licensed were comic books and aMilton Bradley board game of the Fargo North, Decoder character. Licensing rights were also granted to Mattel Electronics for two educational-based video games for theIntellivision console in 1979.[4] These games featured both the show's title logo on the game's packaging and label and the first several notes of the theme song played on the title screen of the games.
Also, the PBS stations and statewide networks that aired the show often complained of the Children's Television Workshop "soaking up so much money in public television", said veteran television producer Samuel Gibbon, who worked on the show. "The stations demanded that one of the programs—eitherSesame Street orThe Electric Company—be put into reruns to save money. By that time,Sesame Street was a cash fountain for the Workshop. The show was almost supporting itself by then with all the productions, books, records, and games. There was no way, it was felt, that they could reduce the number of original shows ofSesame Street. But the thought was that if we produce two final seasons ofThe Electric Company that were designed to be repeated, that would give the show four more years of life."[5] Most PBS programs at the time were produced entirely by local stations, instead of being the work of independent producers like CTW. The final episode ofThe Electric Company featured a short musical and dance number featuring the final cast members (with the exception of Bill Cosby, Lee Chamberlin, both of whom had long since left the show and Rita Moreno, who did not take part in this episode) including the then-current members of the Short Circus. The lyrics of the song summed up the closure of the series:
We're glad you came to call. We really had a ball. The show is done; we hate to run; we're sorry, but that's all.
After the last original episode on April 15, 1977,The Electric Company continued on PBS in reruns until early October 1985.
The earlier shows did not resurface until February 2, 1999, when theNoggin network, which was partly owned by Sesame Workshop and PBS at the time, rebroadcast the show as a result of its co-ownership of the network. Noggin created a two-hour compilation special to re-introduce the series to a new generation. The special was aired onTV Land as a way to promote Noggin.[6]
Noggin ran 65 select episodes until mid-2003, when they were pulled from the program lineup because Sesame Workshop sold its half of the network toViacom, which already owned the other half. The shows were cut subtly to fit Noggin's shorter running time and free up time for various interstitial segments produced for the network. These deletions included the episode numbers, theScanimate word animations, the segments of up to 15 seconds, and the teasers of the next episodes (in seasons 2–6).
During the same period as the Noggin rebroadcasts, numerous fans of the program producedQuickTime andMP3 clips from the Noggin rebroadcasts, old over-the-air recordings, and, in some cases, frommaster recordings. These were hosted online at various places and received heavy attention from theblogosphere (e.g.,Boing Boing)[7] until acease-and-desist letter took down themost prominent of these sites in 2004.
The series was not seen since it was pulled from Noggin's schedule until Sesame Workshop, under license toShout! Factory, released a DVD boxed set on February 7, 2006, calledThe Best of the Electric Company that included 20 uncut episodes[citation needed] from throughout the show's run, including the first and last episodes, plus outtakes and introductions and commentary by Rita Moreno and June Angela.
Due to the overwhelming—and somewhat unexpected—popularity of the initial DVD release, a second boxed set was released on November 14, 2006 (The Best of the Electric Company: Volume 2). This second volume contained 20 episodes from seasons one through five plus a 30-minute documentary on the effects of in-school viewings ofThe Electric Company from 1975. Cast members Luis Ávalos, Jim Boyd, Judy Graubart, Skip Hinnant, and Hattie Winston provided commentary and reflected on their years on the show. However, the original content of nine episodes presented in this set were altered. In some cases, material that was originally broadcast in a particular episode was removed completely while material from other episodes was included. For example, 60A originally contained the Spider-Man episode "Spidey Meets the Prankster" and used a scene from that sketch as the opening teaser, which was removed completely (due toMarvel Entertainment licensing) after the opening credits, leaving only the episode number. Also removed following theLetterman sketch in this episode was the clip of the Short Circus singing "Stop!" and a Road Runner–Wile E. Coyote cartoon (due toWarner Bros. licensing). These altered episodes also contain special effects used to segue from one sketch to another that were not used in the show's original run. The other altered episodes are 197, 227, 322, 375, 35A, 57A, 77A, and 105A.[citation needed]
It is believed that these changes were probably made to avoid repeats of segments that were on the first DVD set, but it is more likely that it was due to ownership rights—the segments that were used to cover up the material not under Sesame Workshop's control (Spider-Man, Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, etc.) were longer than the excised segments, so the episodes were cut further to get them down to their required 28-minute length.
An hour-long television show calledThe Electric Company's Greatest Hits & Bits[8] was broadcast on many PBS stations in late 2006. It included interviews with cast members, voice talent, and creator-producerJoan Ganz Cooney. The special was produced by Authorized Pictures and distributed byAmerican Public Television, and was designed to be seen during pledge drives. It was released on DVD on March 6, 2007.
In early 2007,Apple Inc., through itsiTunes service, started selling 15 previously unavailable episodes ofThe Electric Company. "Volume 1" contained Episodes 5, 13, 23, 128, 179, 249, 261, 289, 297, 374, 416, 475, 91A, 8B, and 32B.
In late 2007, another collection of 15 episodes dubbed "Volume 2" became available from iTunes. The new additions were Episodes 2, 36, 40, 75, 142, 154, 165, 172, 189, 218, 245, 290, 337, and 350. Repeated fromVolume 1 was Episode 8B, erroneously labeled as 658, even though itis correct if the A–B designations were disregarded (1A–130A are 521–650, 1B–130B are 651–780).
It is unclear if these episodes were altered from the versions originally shown on television. Shout! Factory representatives indicated that it had no plans for another DVD set, implying that episodes distributed via iTunes would not be available in another format.
In Australia,The Electric Company aired onABC in the mid-1970s[9][10] and in 1979–80 on theTen Network.[11] It aired onSBS in 1984–89.[12][13]