Lamb Chop's Play-Along

Lamb Chop's Play-Along! is a Canadian-American half-hour preschool children's television series that was shown on PBS in the United States from January 13, 1992 until September 22, 1995, with re-runs airing until August 29, 1997. It was created and hosted by puppeteer Shari Lewis, and featured her puppet characters Lamb Chop, Charlie Horse, and Hush Puppy. "Lamb Chop's Play-Along!" was followed by the short lived spin-off series, The Charlie Horse Music Pizza.

Lamb Chop's Play-Along!
GenreChildren's television series
Written byLan O'Kun
Bernard Rothman
Directed byMichael Watt
Stan Jacobson
Presented byShari Lewis
StarringShari Lewis
Lamb Chop (puppet)
Charlie Horse
Hush Puppy
Opening theme"It's Lamb Chop's Play-Along!"
Ending theme"The Song That Doesn't End"
Composer(s)Bob Golden
John Rodby
Country of originCanada / United States
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes84 (list of episodes)
Production
Production location(s)Burnaby and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Running time30 minutes
Production company(s)Paragon Entertainment Corporation
WTTW
DistributorNBCUniversal Television Distribution (on behalf of DreamWorks Classics)
Release
Original networkPBS
Original releaseJanuary 13, 1992 (1992-01-13) 
September 22, 1995 (1995-09-22)
Chronology
Related showsThe Charlie Horse Music Pizza

Production

PBS commissioned the show from Shari Lewis in May 1991, and the show premiered in January 1992.[1] This marked Lewis' return to television after about 15 years (following the BBC version of The Shari Lewis Show in 1975). Lamb Chop's Play-Along was shot in Canada, first in Burnaby, British Columbia and then at the CBC Studios in Vancouver, British Columbia.[2]

The series honoured Lewis's father, college professor Abraham Hurwitz - "the official magician of New York City".[3]

Ellensburg Daily Record explains: "each half hour is filled with jokes, games, songs, and tricks".[4]

Philosophy

Shari Lewis said her goal for the audience is "participation, not passive observance". She said: "our goal is, don't just sit there - come play with me".[4] She wanted to "attack the shorter attention span of today's children with a fast-paced show using colorful electronic effects". She said in an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer: "I know that when children watch TV, they go into a stupor. Parents think (their children) are interested, but what they really are is [bored]".[5]

Lewis testified that making smart content for children was not that hard to produce and should be done with increasing frequency. She said that if children are challenged, they will be productive members of society.[6] She said, "I don't care if you tack a prosocial message at the end of the show. You have not done a quality show".[7]

Synopsis

Lamb Chop is an anthropomorphic sheep; other characters are puppets of other farm animals, including Charlie Horse and Hush Puppy.

At the end of each show, Charlie Horse would try to sing The Song That Never Ends, much to the annoyance of Shari.

Cast

  • Shari Lewis - Herself/Lamb Chop/Charlie Horse/Hush Puppy
  • Pat Brymer - head puppeteer
  • Gord Robertson - Buster the Bus, featured puppeteer
  • Norma McKnight - additional puppetry
  • Bonnie Martin - Big Lamb Chop
  • Mark Gamez - Big Charlie Horse
Lamb Chop's Playmates
  • Andrew Francis
  • Brian Ito
  • Amanda McAdam
  • Sabrina Sánchez
  • Kevin Yee
  • Rachel Sandor-Gough
  • Talia Gilboa
  • Bryan Robinson
  • Zack Moses
  • Phillip Boutte
  • Annick Obonsawin
  • John Creery
  • Ramon Choyce
  • Jade Schwartz
  • Emma Pollard

Episodes

84 half-hour episodes produced.

Season 1 (1992)

  1. Air Charlie (4 acts) [January 13, 1992]
  2. Stop Biting Your Nails (4 acts) [January 14, 1992]
  3. Too Sick to Go to the Circus (5 acts) [January 15, 1992]
  4. The Bully (4 acts) [January 16, 1992]
  5. Hiccups (3 acts) [January 17, 1992]
  6. Charlie's Magic Show (2 acts) [January 20, 1992]
  7. Lamb Chop Works Out (4 acts) [January 21, 1992]
  8. The Charlie Horse Newspaper (4 acts) [January 22, 1992]
  9. Robin Hoof (3 acts) [January 23, 1992]
  10. Charlie's Toothache (4 acts) [January 24, 1992]
  11. The Baseball Show (3 acts) [January 27, 1992]
  12. The Planet Yzarc (4 acts) [January 28, 1992]
  13. Maurice (3 acts) [January 29, 1992]
  14. Charlie Horse Western (4 acts) [January 30, 1992]
  15. Runaway (5 acts) [January 31, 1992]
  16. The Lemonade Wars (4 acts) [February 3, 1992]
  17. Have I Got A Girl For You (4 acts) [February 4, 1992]
  18. The Ring (4 acts) [February 5, 1992]
  19. Charlie Horse's Birthday (4 acts) [February 6, 1992]
  20. Grown Up For A Day (4 acts) [February 7, 1992]
  21. Charlie Horse For Class President (4 acts) [February 10, 1992]
  22. Obedience School (4 acts) [February 11, 1992]
  23. The Necklace (4 acts) [February 12, 1992]
  24. The Chicken Show [February 13, 1992]
  25. Lamb Chop's Allowance (4 acts) [February 14, 1992]
  26. Talent-Less (3 acts) [February 17, 1992]
  27. On Thin Ice (3 acts) [February 18, 1992]
  28. Bigger Is Better (2 acts) [February 19, 1992]
  29. The Lamb Chop Show [February 20, 1992]

Season 2 (1993)

  1. So Long Freddy (3 acts) [February 8, 1993]
  2. Shari Makes a Beanstalk [February 9, 1993]
  3. School Daze (3 acts) [February 10, 1993]
  4. The Circus (1 act) [February 11, 1993]
  5. I'm Back! (2 acts) [February 12, 1993]
  6. What's Your Name? (Shari Tells the Story of Tikki Tikki Tembo) [February 15, 1993]
  7. Farnsworth (3 acts) [February 16, 1993]
  8. A Cat By Any Other Name (3 acts) [February 17, 1993]
  9. Born To Dance (3 acts) [February 18, 1993]
  10. Super Angelo (3 acts) [February 19, 1993]
  11. I Write The Songs (1 act) [March 8, 1993]
  12. United We Stand (3 acts) [March 9, 1993]
  13. Lucky Puppy (3 acts) [March 10, 1993]
  14. The Wallet (3 acts) [March 11, 1993]
  15. Twinkle Twinkle (3 acts) [March 12, 1993]
  16. The Return of Zark (3 acts) [March 15, 1993]
  17. Fear of Biking (3 acts) [March 16, 1993]
  18. Segnorita Lamb Chop (3 acts) [March 17, 1993]
  19. Forget It! (3 acts) [March 18, 1993]
  20. Little Red Riding Hood (2 acts) [March 19, 1993]
  21. Chicken Pox (3 acts) [March 22, 1993]
  22. The Guys (3 acts) [March 23, 1993]
  23. Get Up & Dance [March 24, 1993]
  24. Trading Bases (4 acts) [March 25, 1993]
  25. When You Grow Up (3 acts) [March 26, 1993]
  26. Lamb Chop's Cold [March 29, 1993]
  27. Musical Chopsticks (3 acts) [March 30, 1993]
  28. Principal Swanson (3 acts) [March 31, 1993]
  29. Gold Diggers (3 acts) [April 1, 1993]
  30. The Emperor's New Clothes [April 2, 1993]
  31. Peer Pressure (3 acts) [April 5, 1993]
  32. Toulouse La Chop (3 acts) [April 6, 1993]
  33. Anchor Desk (3 acts) [April 7, 1993]
  34. The Dark (3 acts) [April 8, 1993]
  35. Lamb Chop's Lullaby [April 9, 1993]

Season 3 (1994)

  1. Horse of a Different Color (2 acts) [January 31, 1994]
  2. Monopoly (3 acts) [February 1, 1994]
  3. Tattletale! (3 acts) [February 2, 1994]
  4. So Mad (3 acts) [February 3, 1994]
  5. Lamb Chop's Pet (3 acts) [February 4, 1994]
  6. Togetherless (3 acts) [February 7, 1994]
  7. What A Mess (3 acts) [February 8, 1994]
  8. Buster and Butch the Bully [February 9, 1994]
  9. Busted-Up Buster (3 acts) [February 10, 1994]
  10. Lamb Chop Practicing Violin [February 11, 1994]

Season 4 (1995)

  1. Charlie Horse Tells a Lie (3 acts) [September 11, 1995]
  2. Shari's Favorite? (3 acts) [September 12, 1995]
  3. Lamb Chop's Art Embarrasses Charlie Horse (3 acts) [September 13, 1995]
  4. A Yo-Yo for Hush Puppy (3 acts) [September 14, 1995]
  5. Lamb Chop's Glasses (3 acts) [September 15, 1995]
  6. Counting on Your Knuckles (Mother's Hubbard) [September 18, 1995]
  7. Your Mitt or Mine (3 acts) [September 19, 1995]
  8. Fighting Fair (3 acts) [September 20, 1995] (Note: This episode can be seen as a sketch of the importance of Fairness on the Kids for Character with Tom Selleck VHS.)
  9. The Job (3 acts) [September 21, 1995]
  10. Sea Creatures (3 acts) [September 22, 1995]

Segments

Introduced in Season 1

  • At Home with Lamb Chop
  • Comedy Barn
  • Knock! Knock!
  • A Baby Lamb Chop Story
  • Betcha
  • Riddles
  • Funny Little Poem
  • Animals from the San Diego Zoo
  • Tongue Twisters
  • Story Time
  • Sing a Little Sing-Along Song
  • Playtime With Emma
  • More Playtime With Emma

Introduced in Season 2

  • Buster the Bus
  • Alphatoons
  • Something Unusual/Fascinating
  • A Baby Shari Lewis Story
  • A Teddy Bear Tale
  • A Baby Hush Puppy Story
  • Sing A Little Sing-Along Song

Introduced in Season 3

  • Any Kid Can Draw
  • Take a Look at a Book
  • Buster's Brain Busters
  • Magic is the Thing for You
  • You Can Do It

Introduced in Season 4

Production notes

WTTW jointly distributed it with Paragon Entertainment Corporation to PBS stations across the country. The rights to the show are currently owned by Universal Television on behalf of DreamWorks Classics.

Opening and closing

Both the opening and closing songs were written by Broadway composer Norman Martin. Other songs were written by Square One TV songwriter, John Rodby. Two versions of the opening song with different lyrics have been used; one involves bouncing, the other strength. The ending theme song is "The Song That Doesn't End", as sung by the children and puppets while Lewis frantically attempts to stop them. The song eventually fades even before beginning a 6th verse. Finally, at the end of the song, Charlie Horse returns. He then tries to get to sing the song again, but Lewis successfully stops him (by putting her hand over his mouth). She (covering Charlie's mouth) orders him to go away. Resigned, Charlie leaves as she asks. But he slams the door before Lewis could tell him don't. Her only consolation is that she is now at peace and quiet with the singing group gone, though she glares at the viewers at fade-out.

An instrumental version of the show's theme song was used for a most recent show of Mallory Lewis and Lamb Chop.

Critical reception

The show received a rating of 8.0 based on 128 votes, at TV.com,[8] and score of 7.8/10 at IMDb based on 407 ratings.[9] Greensboro News & Record said of this show, "she (Lewis) made the sort of mischief that gave a vicarious thrill to millions of children watching at home".[10]

Awards and nominations

YearAwardRecipientResult
1992Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Performer in a Children's SeriesShari LewisWon
1992Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Achievement in Costume DesignMolly Harris CampbellNominated
1992Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Children's SeriesBernard Rothman, Jon Slan, Richard Borchiver, Shari LewisNominated
1992Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Children's SeriesBernard Rothman, Shari LewisNominated
1993Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Performer in a Children's SeriesShari LewisWon
1993Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Children's SeriesShari Lewis, Ken Steele, Bernard Rothman, Mallory Tarcher, Lan O'Kunx, Aubrey TadmanWon
1993Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Achievement in Lighting DirectionCarl GibsonNominated
1994Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Performer in a Children's SeriesShari LewisWon
1994Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Children's SeriesRichard Borchiver, Shari Lewis, Bernard Rothman, Jon SlanNominated
1994Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Children's SeriesMallory Tarcher, Ken Steele, Steve Edelman, Bernard Rothman, Lan O'Kun,
Shari Lewis, Aubrey Tadman, Tibby Rothman, Jeremy Tarcher, Michael Lyons, Kimberley Wells
Nominated
1995Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Performer in a Children's SeriesShari LewisWon
1995Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Pre-School Children's SeriesShari Lewis, Bernard Rothman, Jon Slan, Richard BorchiverNominated
1995Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Children's SeriesBernard Rothman, Shari Lewis, Mallory Tarcher, Ken Steele, Lan O'Kun, Aubrey TadmanNominated
1996Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Performer in a Children's SeriesShari LewisWon
1996Daytime Emmy Outstanding Pre-School Children's SeriesJon Slan, Richard Borchiver, Shari Lewis, Bernard RothmanNominated
1996Daytime Emmy Outstanding Writing in a Children's SeriesMallory Tarcher, Shari Lewis, Aubrey Tadman, Ken Steele, Tibby Rothman, Lan O'Kun, Bernard RothmanNominated
gollark: Even handling/generating/whatever but not evaluating thunks technically does consume power.
gollark: Yes, but most of them aren't (allegedly) functionally pure.
gollark: You may laugh, but side channel attacks are a real and problematic thing!
gollark: HASKELL PROGRAMMERS DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW: all Haskell programs are impure because they have measurable side effects like power draw, execution time and even electromagnetic radiation emitted from the circuits or whatever.
gollark: Obviously *I* should be moderator.

References

  1. "Daily Union - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  2. Conner, Shawn (2012-08-16). "Game shows, captains' chairs, kids' entertainment new at this year's PNE". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 2019-01-11.
  3. "The Daily Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  4. "Ellensburg Daily Record - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  5. "Philadelphia Inquirer: Search Results". nl.newsbank.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  6. "Daily Times - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  7. "Star-News - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  8. TV.com. "Lamb Chop's Play-Along". TV.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  9. "Lamb Chop's Play-Along". Retrieved 12 July 2018 via www.imdb.com.
  10. "Search The News & Record Archive". nl.newsbank.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
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