| Patof | |
|---|---|
| Le cirque du Capitaine Patofville Patof raconte Patof voyage character |
|
![]() Patof The King of Clowns |
|
| First appearance | January 1972 |
| Portrayed by | Jacques Desrosiers |
| Aliases | Gregor Patof |
| Occupation | Clown |
| Nationality | Russian |
Patof is a character in the highly successful Canadian children's television series Patofville. He was portrayed by actor-comedian Jacques Desrosiers.
|
Contents
|
In January 1972, the clown Patof makes his appearance in the serie Le Cirque du Capitaine on the Quebec French station CFTM-TV Channel 10. Until 1978, he will host successively the series Patofville, Patof raconte and Patof voyage.[1]
Patof had for habit to tell jokes and stories to the children by using multiple puns. He often ended his numbers by exclaiming: "On m'applaudit!!!" (we applaud me!!!).
He had a successful recording career during the seventies. Songs like Patof Blou (1972), Patof le roi des clowns (1972), Patofville (1973), L'éléphant Tic-Tac (1973), La plus belle poupée du monde (1973), Bienvenue dans ma bottine (1974), Gros minou (1975) and Bonjour Patof (1975) are among his greatest hits.
Patof participated in the Shriners Circus in 1973 and 1974 at the Montreal Forum. During his first passage, he recorded an English single called "The King of Clowns" especially for his little English speaking friends.[1]
Some of the adventures of Patof were informed on record and comic strips: Patof en Russie, Patof chez les esquimaux, Patof chez les coupeurs de têtes, Patof dans la baleine, Patof chez les petits hommes verts, Patof chez les cowboys, Patof raconte, Patof découvre un ovni, Patof en Chine and Patof chez les dinosaures.
His name is Patof, Gregor Patof. He was born in Bobruisk in the vast steppe of Belarus. Patof's father was a clown and his mother, a clown's wife. They both worked for the Great Moscow circus. Little Patof lost his father at the age of 6 and his mother few years after, reportedly died of laughter after seeing a bearded woman.[2]
Now an orphan without his father and mother, he stayed for a moment in the circus. But in this environment, everything reminded him his parent and that is why he made the decision to go away to be able to forget. However, he did not wish to change climate and that is why he chooses to come to Montreal in Canada, a city as cold as Moscow.[2]
He was lucky to meet "Capitaine Bonhomme" who, always ready to help, supplies him a little of work of clown on the television. He rapidly became the youngsters' idol. With his many personal appearances – without pay – in hospitals, orphanages and parochial centers, etc. he easily and rapidly became an idol for all young Quebecers and even for youngsters living outside our boundaries.[3]
Besides being a clown, Patof is also the mayor of Patofville, a young and fancy city filled with surprises for young and old alike. With his many friends and co-citizens Boulik, Polpon, Itof, he makes sure Quebec keeps its reputation of being a unique Province as far as Joie de Vivre is concerned.
Gregor Patof is a Russian clown and the central character of Patofville, of whom he is also the mayor. He appears for the first time in the television series "Le cirque du capitaine". His costume is constituted by red pants and a tweed fitted coat with collar and matched cuffs. He wears enormous red shoes, named also "tatanes". In Patofville, he lives in an big yellow bootee.
At the same time as his functions of mayor, he is also the director of the Patof Circus.
Mister Polpon is the Police and Fireman Chief of Patofville. He's a key character in the series, because he is the best friend and confidant of Patof. He lives in a huge teapot, which is also a prison.
General Itof is a Russian spy who has for mission to return Patof in Moscow. Inventor, imitator and a practical joker, he is also a master in the art of disguise. He wears cossack's traditional costume as well as a surprising mustache, which seems to transforms according to its humors. In Patofville, he lives in a huge pumpkin.
Boulik (Boulik Scavanovitch of its real name) is the faithful dog of Patof. He is a speaking dog stemming from the famous Toutousavanski race. He becomes crazy when he sees a cat...
| Year | Album | Label | Qc Chart[4] | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1972 | Patof en Russie | Campus | N°5 | |
| 1972 | Patof chez les esquimaux | Campus | — | |
| 1972 | Patof chez les coupeurs de têtes | Campus | — | |
| 1972 | Patof dans la baleine | Campus | Top 50 | |
| 1972 | Patof chez les petits hommes verts | Campus | Top 50 | |
| 1972 | Patof chez les cowboys | Campus | Top 50 | |
| 1973 | Patof chante 10 chansons pour tous les enfants du monde | Campus | Top 50 | |
| 1973 | Patofville – Patof chante pour toi | Campus | Top 50 | |
| 1974 | Bienvenue dans ma bottine | Campus | Top 50 | |
| 1974 | Itof et la ville souterraine | Campus | — | Itof Album |
| 1974 | Polpon – Opération bonbon | Campus | — | Polpon Album |
| 1974 | Amikwan – Koi koi ayaho | Campus | Top 50 | Amikwan Album |
| 1974 | L'histoire de Boulik | Campus | — | Boulik Album |
| 1975 | Bricolons avec Madeleine | Campus | — | Madeleine Album |
| 1975 | Patof Rock | Campus | — | |
| 1975 | Itof – Dans ma citrouille | Campus | — | Itof Album |
| 1975 | Gilbert Chénier – Polpon | Campus | — | Polpon Album |
| 1975 | Noël Noël Noël avec Patof | Campus | — | |
| 1976 | Gare... à Patof | Campus | — | |
| 1976 | Tut-Tut / Fafouin | Campus | — | Tut-Tut & Fafouin Album |
| 1976 | Super Patof | Campus | — | |
| 1980 | Nestor et Patof – Pour tous | Girafe | Top 50 | With Nestor |
| Year | Single | Label | Qc Chart[4] | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1972 | Patof Blou (child's version) – Patof Blou (political version) |
Campus | N°1 — |
|
| 1972 | Patof le roi des clowns – Ballade pour un clown (Dis Patof?) |
Campus | N°2 — |
|
| 1973 | Oh! Les enfants – On m'applaudit |
Campus | N°14 — |
|
| 1973 | The King of Clowns – Dear Patof |
Polydor | — — |
|
| 1973 | Patofville – L'éléphant Tic-Tac |
Campus | N°15 — |
|
| 1973 | L'éléphant Tic-Tac – L'éléphant Tic-Tac |
Campus | — — |
Promo |
| 1973 | Bonjour les enfants – La plus belle poupée du monde |
Campus | N°15 — |
|
| 1974 | Bienvenue dans ma bottine – Goodbye, au revoir, dasvidanie! |
Campus | N°31 — |
|
| 1974 | Le roi des espions – Je suis bon malgré tout |
Campus | — — |
Itof Single |
| 1974 | Policier bonbon – Prudence |
Campus | — — |
Polpon Single |
| 1974 | Une vie de chien – Je n'aime pas les chats |
Campus | — — |
Boulik Single |
| 1975 | Gros minou – Bonjour Patof |
Campus | — — |
|
| 1976 | Patof Blou – Gros minou – Patofville – Bonjour Patof |
Campus | — — — — |
Previously released material, Promo |
| 1976 | Faut pas me chercher (Patof & Monsieur Tranquille) – Mon ami Pierrot |
Jades | — — |
|
| 1980 | T'es pas sérieux – On fait le tour de la terre |
Girafe | — — |
With Nestor |
| Year | Album | Label | Qc Chart[4] | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1974 | Patof le roi des clowns | Pantin | Top 50 | |
| 1975 | 22 grands succès de Patof | Trans-World | — | |
| 1976 | Patofville – Patof et ses amis | TeeVee | — | |
| 1977 | 20 grands succès de Patof, Fafouin, Itof | Télé-Métropole Inc. | — |
| Year | Album | Collaborator | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Nestor – Les grands succès | Claude Blanchard | Featuring the B-side of the album Nestor et Patof – Pour tous (Disques Mérite, Compilation) |
At Meritas chart, which was the most reliable chart list in Quebec at the beginning of the 70s, Patof Blou reached #1 during two weeks on September 16, 1972[5][6] and Patof le roi des clowns reached #7 on December 30, 1972. Jacques Desrosiers received two golden records[7] for these two singles.
Title / Date / Best rank / Weeks on chart
Title / Date / Best rank / Weeks on Top 30
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)