- Release Date: 1991
- Genre: Action
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| Fireman Sam | |
|---|---|
| Format | Children's |
| Created by | Dave Gingell Dave Jones |
| Written by | Nia Ceidiog |
| Narrated by | John Alderton |
| Country of origin | |
| Production | |
| Producer(s) | Ian Frampton John Walker |
| Running time | 10 minutes (one episode 20 minute Christmas special) |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | |
| Original run | |
Fireman Sam (Welsh: Sam Tân) was a Welsh stop-motion animation children's television series about a fireman called Sam, his fellow firefighters, and other townspeople in the Welsh town of Pontypandy (a portmanteau of two real towns, Pontypridd and Tonypandy, which are situated approximately 5 miles apart in the South Wales valleys). The original idea for the show came from two ex-firemen from Kent. They took their idea to S4C who saw the potential in the series and commissioned it.
Fireman Sam first appeared in his native Welsh language on S4C in 1985 and later in English throughout the United Kingdom on BBC1 in 1987. The series finished in 1994 but remains popular well over a decade after the last episode was aired. The series was also shown dubbed in Gaelic in Scotland, where it was known as Sam Smalaidh. The series has been sold to over 40 countries, from Australia to Norway and is used across the UK to promote fire safety.
Contents |
The series originally comprised 32 ten-minute episodes and a 20-minute Christmas special. The narration and character voices were done by John Alderton.
Sam is the protagonist in the show, and interacts with both colleagues at the fire station and local townspeople.
In the original television series produced by Bumper Films between 1985 and 1994 the firefighters had yellow and black clothes, whereas in the new television series produced by HIT Entertainment in 2003 and 2005 they were yellow and blue.
Sam lives in a two-story house with several windows, a red door and the small bell at outside. It contains seldom seen rooms:
Dilys Price runs the local grocery and general store, with its stocks of canned goods, outdoor displays of fruits and vegetables, and various treats and snacks. The shop contains seldon seen rooms:
Bella's restaurant contains a large pizza oven, which is the source of at least one fire due to inadequate chimney sweeping (a birds' nest falls into the oven from the chimney and catches fire on the day the oven is installed). Bella's restaurant serves mostly Italian food, along with pastries and desserts.
Bronwyn and Charlies fish and chip shop cafe, which is the source of at least one fire due to sarah placing her wet coat over an electric fire (2008 season).
Sam, Trevor (only in the classic series), Penny, station officer Steele, and Elvis (who also does the cooking at Pontypandy Firestation) work in the fire station. It contains the following rooms:
The home of neptune, on the quayside. (2008 season)
The entire classic series was released on DVD in April 2007. Prior to that, only two other DVDs were available: Action Stations, containing what are believed to be some of the better episodes, and Snow Business, containing the Christmas special (which was noticeably absent in the classic series boxset) and two other episodes: "Safe with Sam", which emphasizes fire safety and which has not been shown by the BBC since November 1990, and "Rich and Famous". A further DVD of original episodes was available from the newspaper The Sunday Mirror in 2006, but only contained two episodes. The majority of the 2005 season has been released in several DVD's.
Most of the original episodes have been made available on VHS previously (in the United Kingdom by BBC Video and in the United States and Canada by Family Home Entertainment), but apart from a VHS version of Action Stations, these are all now out of print. Here is a list of the UK releases.
| VHS Title | Release Date | Episodes |
|---|---|---|
| Fireman Sam - The Hero Next Door (BBCV 4101) | 1987 | Kite, Flat Tyre, Trevor's Training, Norman's Tricky Day |
| Fireman Sam 2 - Lost Cat (BBCV 4137) | 1987 | Lost Cat, Telly Trouble, Camping, Barn Fire |
| Fireman Sam 3 - Sam's Day Off (BBCV 4197) | 1988 | Sam's Day Off, Treasure Hunt, Thief in Pontypandy, Chemistry Set |
| Fireman Sam 4 - Snow Business (BBCV 4268) | 1989 | Snow Business, The Great Inventor, The Wishing Well |
| Fireman Sam 5 - Norman's Pitfall (BBCV 4428) | 1990 | Norman's Pitfall, Dilys's Forgetful Day, Lost Ring, Spot of Bother |
| Fireman Sam 6 - All In A Good Cause (BBCV 4470) | 1991 | All In A Good Cause, Brass Band, Lost in the Fog, Bentley the Robot |
| The New Adventures of Fireman Sam (BBCV 5404) | 1994 | Deep Trouble for Sam, Quarry Rescue, Rich and Famous, Home from Rome |
| The New Adventures of Fireman Sam - Disaster for Dinner (BBCV 5625) | 1995 | Disaster for Dinner, Steele Under Par, Trevor's Bus Boot Sale, What Goes Up |
| Fireman Sam - 2 On 1 | 1996 | Contains the episodes from "The Hero Next Door" and "Lost Cat", as shown above: Kite, Flat Tyre, Trevor's Training, Norman's Tricky Day, Lost Cat, Telly Trouble, Camping, Barn Fire |
| Fireman Sam - Fireman Sam's Bumper Video | 1997 | All In A Good Cause, Norman's Pitfall, The Great Inventor, What Goes Up, Deep Trouble for Sam, Thief in Pontypandy, Rich and Famous |
| Fireman Sam - 2 On 1 - Tales From Pontypandy | 1998 | Contains the episodes from "Sam's Day Off" and "Snow Business", as shown above: Sam's Day Off, Chemistry Set, Thief in Pontypandy, Treasure Hunt, Snow Business, The Great Inventor, The Wishing Well |
| Fireman Sam's Big Video | 1999 | Quarry Rescue, Home from Rome, Steele Under Par, Trevor's Bus Boot Sale, Brass Band, Lost Ring |
| Fireman Sam's Bumper Video | 2000 | Telly Trouble, Dily's Forgetful Day, Disaster for Dinner, Deep Trouble for Sam, Lost in the Fog, Bentley the Robot, Trevor's Training |
Between 2003 and 2005, a new "Fireman Sam" series was produced by Siriol Productions (now known as Calon TV), comprising twenty-six episodes, each ten minutes in length. These episodes used more modern techniques of stop-motion animation. The new series features all the original characters, but also adds some new faces, such as Tom Thomas, the Australian pilot of rescue helicopter Wallaby One.
Unlike the original series, in which all of the characters were voiced by one person, the new series employed three principal voice artists; however, original voice-actor John Alderton was not one of them. In the new series, the voice of Sam and other male characters was provided by comedian John Sparkes. The other voice artists were Joanna Ruiz and Sarah Hadland.
In 2008, a new computer-generated series was produced.
Pontypandy is now a seaside town instead of a village set deep in the hills as in the early series. Another change in this series is that the twins' parents appear for the first time; their new-age mother, Bronwyn, and fisherman father Charlie, Sam's brother, who run a cafe/fish-and-chip shop - The Whole Fish Cafe.
Many characters also had aspects of their personalities made more apparent. Norman Price is far more mischievous and inconsiderate than in the 2004 series, where his pranks were often planned out and his accidents were due to badly planned ideas rather than outrageous schemes. Other examples are Elvis's decrease in general competetance and Station Officer Steele's strictness.
Other changes include the removal of Bella, although her cafe can still be seen opposite Dilys' shop. It seems the fish and chip shop and Bronwyn and Charlie have replaced them. Penny also now has another string to her bow, as she is a trained lifeguard and the driver of Neptune (the town's lifeboat). Also Dusty has been removed. A feature length movie, titled The Great Fire of Pontypandy is set to come out in 2009.
The series had a theme tune composed by Ben Heneghan and Ian Lawson. The lyrics were written by Robin Lyons, and sung by Maldwyn Pope. A full-length version was also released on BBC Records.
The verse of the song alternates between notes a fifth apart - the intention being to suggest the sound of a fire engine siren.
The same composers wrote a new arrangement of the theme tune for the 2005 remake, although this time in straight quavers rather than the 'swung' twelve-eight of the original theme. Robin Lyons also updated the lyrics. This version was sung by Cameron Stewart, singer and lead guitarist with the Cardiff-based band Session.[1]
Ben Heneghan and Ian Lawson also wrote a number of other Fireman Sam-related songs that were released on a cassette by BBC Records. These songs were later used in the touring stage show.
Series 1 (W: 1985-1988) (1987-1988)
Specials (W: 1988) (1988)
Series 2 (W: 1990) (1990)
Series 3 (W: 1994) (1994)
Series 4 (W: 2003-2004) (2005)
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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