Ludwig (cartoon)

Ludwig is a surreal 1977 British-made children's cartoon animation about a magical egg-shaped gemstone who lived in a forest.[1] 25 five-minute episodes were made.[2]

The programme was produced by father and son team, Mirek and Peter Lang. Peter went on to animate Pigeon Street. The Langs wrote the stories with Jane Tann and Susan Kodicek. The scripts were edited by Michael Cole. Peter did the artwork. The music was arranged and played by Paul Reade. Jon Glover provided the voice of the birdwatcher. The Langs shared the animation.

The character's name came from Ludwig van Beethoven, whose music is played in the background. The series consisted of 25 five-minute episodes, in each of which something would happen to the animals of the forest and Ludwig would come to the rescue. His "body" facets would open up and out would pop arms, legs, gadgets or even a helicopter rotor blade when he needed to get somewhere fast. He was constantly watched by a human birdwatcher (voiced by Jon Glover) who had a deerstalker and large binoculars. This character was both the viewer's point of view and narrator, as no other character talked. At the end of every episode Ludwig played the final movement of Beethoven's first symphony through the credits.

The title music and opening theme of Ludwig is just 16 seconds long, and features a small section of Beethoven's symphony No.1. It ends with the programme's narrator Jon Glover saying 'Ah, Ludwig' in an interested, well spoken manner.

In the USA, Ludwig was one of the cartoons featured in Captain Kangaroo.

In 2011 Charlie Brooker showed a short spoof of Ludwig, called Orlov, in the first part of his series How TV Ruined Your Life.

List of episodes

  1. Arrival – Ludwig’s here to stay
  2. Hiccups
  3. Hooter[3]
  4. Glue
  5. Kites
  6. Tennis
  7. Sculptor
  8. Skating
  9. Umbrellas
  10. Swing
  11. Bubbles
  12. Clock
  13. Ball
  14. Coin
  15. Yo-Yo
  16. Investigation - Research
  17. Christmas
  18. Home Sweet Home – Architect
  19. Balloons
  20. High Jump
  21. Magician
  22. Artist
  23. Party
  24. Nuts
  25. TV - Western.
gollark: Gold is only valuable because people *think it is*; this also applies to paper money.
gollark: There is no intrinsic value. The lack of gold just means you can trivially print it.
gollark: Ah yes, "intrinsic monetary value" TOTALLY EXISTS.
gollark: I'm not in the US, though.
gollark: As far as I can tell, I can buy those things from multiple places.

References

  1. Sheridan, Simon (2004). The A-Z of Classic Children's Television: From Alberto Frog to Zebedee. Reynolds & Hearn Ltd. pp. 149–151. ISBN 1903111277.
  2. Crump, William D. (2019). Happy Holidays—Animated! A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and New Year's Cartoons on Television and Film. McFarland & Co. p. 177. ISBN 9781476672939.
  3. iludwig.co.uk
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.