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Madeline (TV series)

American animated television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Madeline is an animated preschool television series produced by DIC Entertainment, L.P., as part of the Madeline media franchise. It began as a series of six television specials from 1988 to 1991, and then continued as Madeline and The New Adventures of Madeline from 1993 to 2001.[2] The show is narrated by Christopher Plummer.

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Background

In 1960, the Madeline stories were adapted to a one-hour color episode for the NBC series The Shirley Temple Show. Madeline was played by Gina Gillespie, child actor Michel Petit played Pepito, and Imogene Coca portrayed Miss Clavel. The episode, as Madeline's first appearance on television, has been released to DVD.[citation needed]

Cast and characters

Main cast

  • Madeline (voiced by Tracey Lee Smythe in season 1 and Andrea Libman in seasons 2 & 3)[3] is the central protagonist of the show. She is a kind, caring and adventurous redheaded French girl, and the bravest of her group—despite being the shortest. She lives in a girls' boarding school with eleven other girls and their instructor, Miss Clavel, in Paris, France.
  • Miss Clavel (voiced by Louise Vallance)[3][d] is an educator and headmistress that oversees the boarding school in which the girls live. She and her students say grace before every meal. She is seen as a caring and wise maternal figure to the girls, notably rushing Madeline to hospital in the middle of the night for an emergency appendectomy.
  • The Eleven Little Girls are Anne, Chloe, Danielle, Ellie, Janine, Lulu, Monique, Nicole, Nona, Sylvie and Yvette, all resident students at the boarding school with Madeline. In addition to their schooling, the girls join Madeline on many adventures and escapades. During the first few seasons and specials, only Chloe, Danielle and Nicole had significant roles; by the third season, all the girls became more vocal, active, and displayed their own respective personalities.
  • Pepito (voiced by A.J. Bond in season 1, David Morse in season 2, and Michael Heyward/Kyle Labine in season 3)[4] is the young son of the Spanish ambassador to France whose family lives nextdoor to the girls' boarding school. Initially, he is seen as naughty, mean, and spoiled to Madeline and her friends; they soon become best friends.
  • Genevieve (voiced by Louise Vallance)[4][d] is the school's pet dog, once a stray. Madeline has the most affection for her, as Genevieve rescued her from drowning in the river Seine.
  • Lord Cucuface (voiced by French Tickner)[3] is the administrator of a chain of institutions that oversees the girls' school. He maintains a close friendship with Miss Clavel.
  • The Narrator (voiced by Christopher Plummer in the specials, seasons 1 & 2 and Christopher Gaze in season 3[3][4]) is present throughout each episode to describe each scenario, often reading passages from the books.

Additional voices

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Development

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On November 7, 1988, HBO aired an animated television special titled Madeline. The teleplay was an adaption of the first book written by Ludwig Bemelmans. The later series was written by Judy Rothman who would become a writer, story editor, and lyricist for nearly all subsequent Madeline animated projects. The special was produced by DIC Enterprises and Cinar (now part of WildBrain).[5][6] The special featured Christopher Plummer as the narrator,[7] and featured original music and songs by veteran Sesame Street songwriter and composer Joe Raposo[8][9] with lyrics by Rothman. The cast for all six specials is as follows:[4]

  • Marsha Moreau as Madeline
  • Judith Orban as Miss Clavel
  • Julian Bailey as Pepito
  • Anik Matern as Chloe
  • Liz MacRae as Danielle
  • Sonja Ball as Nicole

The special was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (One Hour or Less).[10] In 1990, the special was released onto VHS by Hi-Tops Video. The success of the special led to CINAR and France Animation producing an additional five specials, all adapted by Rothman from the other five original books, for The Family Channel.[5] The cast of the original special and Plummer all returned for the subsequent specials.[7] These specials featured music by Jeffrey Zahn, who replaced Raposo after his death in 1989. The theme song from the original special, "I'm Madeline", was reprised in each of the subsequent specials. The specials were released on video by Golden Book Video and Cinar/Sony Wonder in Canada.

With the success of the specials, The Family Channel commissioned a television series by DIC, which had been involved in the first of the six specials. The first season aired a total of 20 produced episodes from 1993 to 1994.[5] Christopher Plummer reprised his role as the narrator,[7] but most of the voice actors from the specials were replaced. In addition, Jeffrey Zahn was replaced by Andy Street; compared to the previous specials, however, the series featured only one song per episode (a few of them with a reprise/finale) in addition to the opening theme "I'm Madeline".

In 1995, an additional 13 episodes were produced by DIC for ABC under the title The New Adventures of Madeline.[5] A new theme song, called "Hats Off to Madeline", was used as the new opening theme, with the music by Andy Street and lyrics by Judy Rothman;[11] some early airings of those episodes featured "I'm Madeline", but sung by the new voice cast. Most of the voices of the children characters were replaced, with Andrea Libman assuming the title role, while Plummer, Louise Vallance and French Tickner returned from the voice cast.

Shortly after its airing on ABC, both the network and DIC were acquired by The Walt Disney Company. The 39 produced episodes and specials began to air in reruns on the Playhouse Disney block of Disney Channel. In April 1998, DIC launched a direct-to-video division that produced films for Disney and distributed worldwide through Buena Vista Home Entertainment. The first film produced for this division,[12] Madeline: Lost in Paris, was released in August 1999.[13] Most of the cast members from the 1995 iteration returned with Lauren Bacall and Jason Alexander also voicing new roles. DIC afterwards produced 26 new episodes for Playhouse Disney.[14] Christopher Gaze replaced Plummer as the show's narrator due to DIC refusing to work with the AFTRA union. The show won a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Animated Program.

The two Christmas episodes called Madeline at the North Pole and Madeline at Santa showed Lord Cucuface bringing Miss Clavel and the girls to the North Pole when a winter heatwave strikes Paris and is scheduled to last through Christmas this year bring warm, spring like weather to France in December.

Two more films followed ahead: My Fair Madeline, which aired on Nickelodeon in November 2002 as part of the DIC Movie Toons series, and Madeline in Tahiti in 2005.

Madeline has continued to be shown in syndication. In the 2006-2007 season, the series was shown on CBS' KOL Secret Slumber Party Saturday morning block.[5] Qubo also aired reruns of the series from October 6, 2018 to February 22, 2021.[15] The series was also included in the On-Demand section of Sprout from 2015 to 2017, when the channel was rebranded to Universal Kids. As of September 2019, all broadcast and home video rights of Madeline are owned by WildBrain.

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Episodes

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Television specials (1988–1991)

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Season 1 (1993–1994)

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Season 2 (1995)

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Season 3 (2000–2001)

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Films (1999–2007)

Madeline: Lost in Paris (1999)

On August 3, 1999, Buena Vista Home Video through Walt Disney Home Video released the feature-length film Madeline: Lost in Paris, featuring Madeline being drawn into a scam by her supposed "Uncle" Horst and finding the true meaning to the word "family". As with Season 2 and eventually Season 3 of the series, Andrea Libman reprised her role as Madeline.[18][19]

The film was later re-released on DVD on April 3, 2010, by Shout! Factory.

My Fair Madeline (2002)

In 2002, as a part of the DIC Movie Toons series of television films, DIC produced a film, titled My Fair Madeline, where Madeline is falsely accused of misbehavior on a trip to the Louvre and is sent to a London Finishing School, while attempting to foil the plot of two thieves. The voice cast was almost entirely replaced for the film, with Chantal Strand voicing Madeline and Whoopi Goldberg as Miss Clavel.

The film was originally aired on November 17, 2002, on Nickelodeon and was later released onto VHS and DVD by MGM Home Entertainment, followed on with international airings on Disney Channel, Toon Disney and Playhouse Disney.

Madeline in Tahiti (2007)

In 2005, DIC produced another film, titled Madeline in Tahiti, which is the final Madeline production to have been created. The film features Madeline and her friends going on a vacation to Tahiti to stop Miss Clavel from retiring, with Pepito sneaking along, as well as stopping a villainous plot to erupt the Tahiti-nui volcano. Chantal Strand reprised her role as Madeline while other characters were recast or reprised their roles from My Fair Madeline; most notably, Ashleigh Ball voiced both Danielle and Nona.

The film was originally going to be released on DVD in the United States by Walt Disney Home Entertainment[20] in 2006, but this release never saw the light of the day. It was, however, released on DVD in some regions in June 2007 through other distributors,[21] and was eventually released in the United States on iTunes and Amazon Video in 2015 and YouTube in 2019.

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Home media releases

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The 1993 series was originally released by Golden Book Video on all single VHS volumes, and Sony Wonder on both VHS and DVD. The DVD versions contained 2 episodes each, sometimes with the original specials. The 2000 series was released by Lions Gate Home Entertainment and Trimark Home Video in 2001 and 2002 on all VHS and DVD sets. In these DVD sets, the theme song was changed to a different song titled "Our Madeline" to match the Sing-a-Long versions. In 2008, 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment released 2 DVDs titled "Next Stop, America" and "Meet Me in Paris", each containing 3 episodes. In 2010, Shout! Factory released 5 single-disc collections of the series.

In September 2013, Mill Creek Entertainment released 3 single disc collections featuring content from the animated series as well as the original TV specials. "The New Adventures of Madeline - Adventures in Paris" contains 6 episodes from the 2000 series,[22] while "Madeline's Merry Musical Melodies" features various musical interludes from the animated series.[23] "Bonjour Madeline" contains all 6 original TV specials.[24] Later in May 2014, Mill Creek re-released the three single disc collections together in one three-pack set,[25] followed by "Madeline: The Complete Collection" on DVD in Region 1 for the first time in August 2015.[26] This six-disc collection features all six original specials produced by DIC Entertainment and CINAR between 1988 and 1991, as well as all 59 episodes from the "Madeline" TV series (1993, 1995, 2000–2001).

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Sing-a-Longs

In 2001, DIC produced two direct-to-video releases which featured songs and clips from season 3 of the television series akin to Disney's Sing-Along Songs series, which were titled "Sing-a-Long with Madeline and her Friends" and "Sing-a-Long Around the World with Madeline".

They were originally released by Lions Gate Home Entertainment and Trimark Home Video on September 25, 2001, and March 25, 2002, respectively,[27] and later reissued together by Mill Creek Entertainment as "Madeline's Merry Musical Melodies" on September 10, 2013, as well as being available for digital download.

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Notes

  1. Pilot and TV series
  2. Specials 2–6
  3. Specials 2–6
  4. Credited under the name Louise Vallance for the first two seasons; and Stephanie Louise Vallance for the third season.

References

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