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2006 American TV series or program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ellen's Acres is an American animated television series for preschool-age children,[1] which exclusively premiered weekly on Cartoon Network and in the United Kingdom, the show airs on Cartoonito. Animation Collective produced the series. It originally premiered on September 4, 2006 on Cartoonito in the UK, and later on January 8, 2007 on Cartoon Network in the US, but was later cancelled on February 5, 2007. The series features a very imaginative five-year-old girl named Ellen who has adventures in a hotel her parents own approximately 40 mi (64 km) from Tonopah, Nevada named the Emerald Acres.[2]
Ellen's Acres | |
---|---|
Created by | Larry Schwarz |
Directed by | Stephen Moverley |
Starring | Emily Corrao Marc Thompson Evelyn Lanto Vibe Jones Michael Alston Bailey |
Narrated by | Emily Corrao |
Composer | John Angier |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 52 (26 unaired) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Larry Schwarz Christopher Fauci Micheal Gold Sean Lahey Sergei Aniskov |
Producer | Andi Defur |
Editor | Lauren Krueger |
Running time | 12 minutes (each episode) approx. |
Production companies | Animation Collective Kanonen & Bestreichen |
Original release | |
Network | Cartoon Network |
Release | September 4, 2006 – February 5, 2007 |
Each episode begins with Ellen narrating the adventure she had in her imagination, but she says, "Actually...", and the scene changes to a desert area, and Ellen says, "I had just gotten off the bus from school and was saying goodbye to Mateo, my bus driver." She then says goodbye to the unseen driver who closes the bus doors, honks the horn twice, and drives off.
Ellen then says hello to her friend, a tire, and carries a feather duster, two useful props in her adventures, then takes them to the hotel offices, where her parents ask how school was and Ellen explains the first adventure. Ellen then sees what her parents are up to (finding a fossil, fixing a fan because the air conditioning broke, etc.) which leads into further imaginary adventures based on chores she's been asked to do.
Episode Number (Overall) | Episode Number (Seasonal) | Episode Title | Episode Costume(s) |
---|---|---|---|
27 (14a) | 1 (1a) | Spooky Shadows | Sleepwear |
28 (14b) | 2 (1b) | Freeze Tag | Arctic Explorer |
29 (15a) | 3 (2a) | Dining Out | Waitress |
30 (15b) | 4 (2b) | Car Wash | Mechanic |
31 (16a) | 5 (3a) | Mostly Ghostly | Scientist |
32 (16b) | 6 (3b) | Hide and Seek | Pilot Farmer Spy Scout |
33 (17a) | 7 (4a) | Saltwater Surprise | Viking |
34 (17b) | 8 (4b) | The Secret Ingredient | Baker |
35 (18a) | 9 (5a) | Future Findings | Astronaut |
36 (18b) | 10 (5b) | A Royal Rescue | Princess |
37 (19a) | 11 (6a) | What's that Sound? | Musician |
38 (19b) | 12 (6b) | Order's Up | Chef |
39 (20a) | 13 (7a) | Finders Sneakers | Runner |
40 (20b) | 14 (7b) | The Pharaoh's Formula | Egyptian |
41 (21a) | 15 (8a) | Tasty Trails | Robin Hood |
42 (21b) | 16 (8b) | Mighty Mending | Plumber |
43 (22a) | 17 (9a) | Great Games | Coach |
44 (22b) | 18 (9b) | Toy Troubles | Firewoman |
45 (23a) | 19 (10a) | Chop Chop | Karate |
46 (23b) | 20 (10b) | Best in Barn | Farmer |
47 (24a) | 21 (11a) | Pearl Pursuit | Diver |
48 (24b) | 22 (11b) | Granting Wishes | Fairy |
49 (25a) | 23 (12a) | Chalking it Up | Gymnast |
50 (25b) | 24 (12b) | Toys and Tricks | Magician |
51 (26a) | 25 (13a) | Bunny Blues | Ballerina |
52 (26b) | 26 (13b) | Puzzle Pieces | Human Cannonball |
The series was noted for its educational content.[3] A review describes its style as follows: "The series offers a style influenced by amine, retro graphics and illustrated children's books."[4]
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