the Storyteller
- See also: Storyteller
| The Storyteller | |
|---|---|
Jim Henson's The Storyteller |
|
| Genre | Children's drama |
| Created by | Jim Henson |
| Developed by | Anthony Minghella |
| Presented by | John Hurt |
| Starring | John Hurt Brian Henson |
| Voices of | Brian Henson |
| Narrated by | John Hurt |
| Theme music composer | Rachel Portman |
| Country of origin | |
| Language(s) | English |
| No. of series | 2 |
| No. of episodes | 13 |
| Production | |
| Producer(s) | Duncan Kenworthy |
| Location | Elstree Studios |
| Running time | 22 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Picture format | PAL |
| Audio format | Stereophonic sound |
| First shown in | 1988 |
| Original run | 1988 – 1989 |
| External links | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
The Storyteller is a live-action/puppet television series. It was an American/British co-production which originally aired in 1987 and was created and produced by Jim Henson.
The series retold various European fairy tales, created with a combination of actors and puppets. The framing device had an old storyteller (John Hurt) sitting by a fire telling each tale to his talking dog (a realistic looking puppet, performed and voiced by Brian Henson). The series was scored by Rachel Portman.
Episode list
Series 1
Each half-hour episode was written by Anthony Minghella. Only nine were completed:
- "The Soldier and Death"*
- "Fearnot"
- "The Luck Child"
- "A Story Short"
- "Hans My Hedgehog"
- "The Three Ravens"*
- "Sapsorrow"*
- "The Heartless Giant"*
- "The True Bride"*
* this episode first aired in the US as part of The Jim Henson Hour.
Series 2
Henson later attempted a follow-up, , which had a different story-teller (Michael Gambon), but the same dog. The second series focused on Greek Mythology, and this series took place, rather than by the storyteller's fire, in the Minotaur's Labyrinth, which the new storyteller and his dog wander through. Only four episodes of this series were made:
Episode guide
Series 1
The Soldier and Death
From an early Russian folk tale. A soldier returns from 20 years of war with nothing but three biscuits in his sack. In his way home he encounters a beggar asking for food. Being a kind-hearted soldier he offers him a biscuit and in repay for his generosity, the beggar gives him an extraordinary ruby whistle.
Continuing his way, he finds a second beggar. The beggar plays a drum and the soldier whistles to the rhythm. A terrible dancer, the soldier nonetheless makes a good effort. After enjoying themselves, the soldier gives him his second biscuit, and the beggar gives in return the ability to dance.
Continuing his way, the soldier finds one last beggar who plays marvellous tricks with cards. Watching with great enjoyment, the soldier bursts into applause. The old beggar asks if his tricks are worth a farthing. "More," says the soldier, "but I have nothing but this biscuit." He removes it from his pocket and breaks it in two to share, but as he does he decides it is not fair to give this beggar less than the others, so he hands over the whole biscuit.
The beggar realises the soldier's heart is kind and gives him his deck of cards explaining him that with this deck, he will never ever lose a single hand of poker. Then the beggar gives him an old and ugly sack, explaining that whatever he wanted to be inside the sack, he just needs to say the name out loud and then the order "Get in the sack!".
Soon, using naught but his sack, his whistle, and his cards he must outwit devils, save a kingdom, and try to outwit death.
The Episode stars Bob Peck as the Soldier
Fearnot
From an early German folk tale. The Storyteller recounts the adventures of a boy who goes out into the world to learn what fear is, accompanied by a dishonest but loveable tinker. He faces many dangers without learning to be afraid, only to learn that fear is at home: the fear of losing his sweetheart.
Reece Dinsdale is Fearnot, a young Gabrielle Anwar appears as his sweetheart, and Willie Ross is the Tinker.
The Luck Child
From an early Russian folktale. An evil king sets out to kill a 'luck child', the seventh son of a seventh son, whom it is prophesised will one day be king. The child's luck is a gift, and cannot be undone. The same is true of prophesies. And monsters...
Based on elements from Grimm's The Devil With the Three Golden Hairs and The Griffin.
Steven Mackintosh is the Luck Child, Cathryn Bradshaw is the Princess, Anthony O'Donnell is the Little Man and Robert Eddison is the cursed ferryman.
A Story Short
An adaptation of the stone soup fable, the Storyteller tells of a harsh time when he was forced to walk the land as a beggar. Finding himself in sight of the castle kitchen, he picks up a stone and fools the castle cook into helping him make soup from a stone, by adding it into a cauldron of water and slowly adding other ingredients to improve the flavour. When the cook realises he has been swindled, he asks that the Storyteller be boiled alive. The King, as a compromise, promises to give the Storyteller a gold crown for each story he tells for each day of the year- and to boil him if he fails. The Storyteller does well at first, but on the final day he awakens and can think of no story...
This is the only episode where the Storyteller himself plays a major part in the story he tells. His wife is played by Brenda Blethyn, Bryan Pringle is the Cook, The King is Richard Vernon, and the Beggar is John Kavanagh.
Hans My Hedgehog
From an early German folk tale. A farmer's wife drives her husband mad with her desperate measures to have a baby. She says to him that she wants a child so bad, she would not care how he looked even if he were covered in quills like a hedgehog. That, of course, is what she gets: a baby covered in quills, as soft as feathers. His mother calls him 'Hans My Hedgehog' and she is the only one to love him; his father grows to hate him for shame. So eventually Hans leaves for a place where he can't hurt anyone and where no one can hurt him.
Deep inside the forest, for many years Hans dwells with his animals for companions. One day a king gets lost in Hans' forest and he hears a beautiful song being played on a bagpipe. He follows the music and finds Hans' castle. When Hans helps him to escape the forest, then king promises that he will give to Hans the first thing to greet him at his castle - which the King secretly knows to be his dog. Instead, it turns out to be his beautiful daughter, the princess of sweetness and cherry pie. Hans and the king have made a deal that in exactly one year & one day his prize (the princess) shall be his.
A year and one day later Hans returns to the castle. The Princess of Sweetness and Cherry Pie says she knows what she must do. Hans asks her if she finds him ugly and she replies that he is not nearly as ugly as a broken promise. They are married, to the dismay of the entire kingdom. On their wedding night, the Princess awaits her husband in bed. He comes into the chamber with his bagpipes and takes a seat by the fire and begins to play the same beautiful music that saved the King a year prior. The princess is soothed by the music and dozes off. She wakes and finds a pelt of quills as soft as feathers on the ground before the fire. She sees her husband in the form of a handsome young man freeing the animals of the castle, to live with his friends in his forest castle. He knows she has seen when he finds her slumbering on the discarded quills the following night. He tells her that he is bewitched and only if she can keep his secret for a one more night can he be freed and remain in the form of the handsome man. She agrees.
The next morning at breakfast the Queen inquires why her daughter is so cheerful. The Princess tries to resist but as her mother pries she gives in and tells her that Hans is bewitched. The Queen says that the only way to reverse it is to fling the quills in the fire. That night when Hans sheds his quills, she obeys her mother and burns them. She hears his screams of pain as if he were aflame and he runs from the castle. The Princess has a blacksmith make her three pairs of solid iron shoes and slips away in search of her husband. She wears the shoes to nothing and moves on to the second pair, with still no sign of Hans. When she is donning the third pair of shoes, she finds a river and reclines by it, taking off the shoes and rubbing her sore feet. She caught sight of her reflection and sees that her hair has grown white. She wept bitterly for her hair and her husband, forever lost. The next day she came to a cottage, abandoned, covered in dust and cobwebs. then came the flapping of wings and she saw her husband whom she had so long searched for!
He toasted a glass of wine to no one, "to the beautiful woman who could not keep her promise."
She spoke to him and he became rigid and asked how she had found him. She told him. She told him all of the perils that she had faced and how she had walked the world and worn through three pairs of iron shoes. And then she flung herself into his embrace and with her confession of love and loyalty, he transformed into the handsome man, the spell lifted by her fidelity and affection.
The Princess returned to the kingdom with Hans and soon her hair grew red again and they were remarried. This wedding was joyous and grand with 40 days and 40 nights of feasting and storytelling and music and gaiety. And so the curse was broken and the Princess won back her hedgehog.
Jason Carter is Han's Human form, Terence Harvey is the voice of Hans the Grovelhog, and Abigail Cruttenden is the Princess.
The Three Ravens
Based on the early German folk tale, The Six Swans. After the Queen dies, an evil witch ensnares the King, and turn his three sons into ravens to rid herself of her rivals. The princess escapes and must stay silent for three years, three months, three weeks and three days in order to break the spell. But after she meets a handsome prince, this is suddenly not so easy, for her stepmother has re-married, and to the prince's father...
Joely Richardson is the Princess, Miranda Richardson is the Witch, and Jonathan Pryce is the King.
Sapsorrow
This is a variant on the Donkeyskin tale, with elements of Cinderella. There is a king, his dead wife, and his three daughters. Two are as ugly and as bad as can be, but the third, Sapsorrow, is as kind and as beautiful as her sisters are not. There is a ring belonging to the Dead Queen, and a royal tradition that states that the girl whose finger fits the ring will become Queen as decreed by law. When Princess Sapsorrow slips on her dead mother's ring for safekeeping, the King finds out and must marry her according to the law. The princess goes into hiding, becoming a creature of fur and feathers, helped by her forest friend, a creature called the Scraggletag. She lives thus for years, working in the kitchen of a handsome, but arrogant, prince.
Alison Doody is Sapsorrow, Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders are her evil sisters, and James Wilby is the Priest.
The Heartless Giant
From an early German folk tale. A heartless giant, who once terrorised the land before being captured and imprisoned, is befriended by the young prince Leo who, one night, sets him free. His older brothers go after the giant to capture him, but do not return, so Leo sets off to find the giant himself. Once found, Leo decides to find the giant's heart, but this is no easy task - it sits in an egg in a duck in a well in a church in a lake in a mountain far away. No easy task indeed.
This is a variation upon the Norwegian tale The Giant Who Had No Heart in His Body.
Elliot Spiers is Prince Leo, Peter Marinker is the Voice of the Wolf, and Frederic Warder is the Giant.
The True Bride
Based on an early German folk tale, The True Bride. A Troll had a daughter, but she left straight off. So the Troll took another to replace her to wait on him hand and foot. Her name is Anja and she has no father and she has no mother, so the Troll is her other. Setting her impossible tasks, then beating her with his "contradiction stick" when she invariably fails, she wishes one day. Her wish is heard by the Thought Lion, a wondrous beast all in white, who completes her impossible tasks for her. When she finds her true love, he disappears one day, so Anja sets out to find him...in the hands of the Troll's evil daughter, the Trollop...
Jane Horrocks is Anja, Sean Bean is her True Love, Michael Kilgarriff is the Lion's voice, Alun Armstrong is the voice of the Troll, and Sandra Voe is voice of the Trollop
Media
The stories have been made available through a variety of media.
VHS
In the UK, all 9 episodes of series 1 were made available in 1989 on a set of 4 VHS tapes released by Channel 5.
In 1999 four of the stories were re-released by Columbia Tri-Star across two VHS tapes in both the UK and the US. These were "A Story Short", "The Luck Child", "The Soldier and Death" and "Sapsorrow".
DVD
Both series 1 and 2 are available in region 1 & 2 DVD format. They offer no extra features other than the original episodes in their original stereo format.
A more recent, Jim Henson's the Storyteller - The Definitive Collection, was released on DVD in the US in May 2006.
Books
Two versions of the book have been published; the text is the same but the pictures differ. The text, written as a series of short stories by Anthony Minghella, is adapted slightly to fit better the medium of "short story". One (ISBN 0-517-10761-9, Boxtree) features a photograph of the Storyteller on the cover; the illustrations within (by Stephen Morley) are the silhouettes as seen in the program, and photographic stills of the episodes alongside the text. The other version (ISBN 0-679-45311-3, Random House) has full colour hand illustrations by Darcy May, depicting the stories alongside the text.
Actors
The first series featured many actors who were or went on to become famous. These include
- Gabrielle Anwar as Fearnot 's love
- Sean Bean as the True Bride 's love
- Alison Doody as Sapsorrow
- Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders as Sapsorrow 's evil sisters
- Jane Horrocks as Anya (The True Bride)
- Jonathan Pryce as the king in The Three Ravens
- Joely Richardson as the daughter in The Three Ravens
- Miranda Richardson as the witch in The Three Ravens
- Mark Williams as Fearnot 's brother
Awards
Series 1 was nominated for and won several awards.[1]
| Year | Result | Award | Category/Recipient(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1987 | Won | Emmy Award | Outstanding Children's Program Jim Henson (executive producer) Mark Shivas (producer) For episode Hans My Hedgehog. |
| 1988 | Nominated | Emmy Award | Outstanding Children's Program Jim Henson (executive producer) Duncan Kenworthy (producer) For episode A Story Short. |
| 1988 | Nominated | Emmy Award | Outstanding Children's Program Jim Henson (executive producer) Duncan Kenworthy (producer) For episode The Luckchild. |
| 1989 | Won | BAFTA TV Award | Best Children's Programme (Entertainment/Drama) Duncan Kenworthy |
| 1989 | Won | BAFTA TV Award | Best Costume Design Ann Hollowood |
| 1989 | Nominated | BAFTA TV Award | Best Make Up Sally Sutton |
Trivia
| Trivia sections are discouraged under
Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Series 1 was filmed at Elstree Studios in England.
- The three "sun, moon and stars" dresses scene used as part of the Sapsorrow tale is actually from the original Brothers Grimm version of The True Bride.
- The number 3 appears as significant in every episode, in keeping with tradition in old Indo-European based folktales.
References
- ^ IMDB Awards. The Storyteller. IMDB. Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
External links
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