Mr. Piper

Mr. Piper is a 1963 Canadian children's TV series. The series was created by Martin Andrews and Allan Wargon, who was also the producer. 39 episodes were produced.[1]

Overview

The show's host was a large Canadian opera tenor Alan Crofoot, dressed as a Pied Piper with a flower in his hat. He would introduce four segments in each half-hour programme:

  • Teletune - as a narrator of limited animation cartoons of fantasy stories
  • Port of Call - presenter of films about children and events in other lands;
  • Bag of Tricks - Crofoot performs magic tricks;
  • Animal Farm - many farmyard characters telling the story of the day in miniature barnyard sets, featuring Rupert the Rat, Bessie the Bunny, Kookie the Kitten, Harriet Hen, Freddie Frog, Calvin (Rac)Coon and Charlotte Cow.

Thirty-nine episodes were produced.

It was originally shown by CBC Television and also became well known in the United Kingdom,[2] where it was repeated on ITV throughout the 1960s and 1970s, often as part of school summer holiday programming. In May/June 1972, some Mr. Piper episodes were transmitted, dubbed into Italian, by the RAI-TV network.

Episode list

  • Oh My Baby
  • Ali Baba
  • Brave Molly
  • It's A Triple
  • Touch Me
  • Hasty and the Princess
  • Kindhearted Girl
  • Three Sisters
  • Proud Princess
  • It Grew Two Sizes
  • Ahmed the Merchant
  • Hansel and Gretel
  • The Tin Soldier
  • Three Brothers
gollark: I don't see how that works. That's just putting your brain into bizarre edge-case states, it wouldn't give you visibility into the afterlife or lack thereof (unless whatever controls access to that is very badly designed and easily tricked).
gollark: If it just means it in some fuzzy sense of "we are somewhat connected and should be nice to each other" then... sure, but it should say that directly (in a more eloquent way I can't be bothered to come up with).
gollark: I'm not aware of *other* definitions which, well, make sense.
gollark: Impressive sleep schedule.
gollark: That's not the same thing, though.

References

  1. 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. 201. ISBN 9781476672939.
  2. Sterling Times
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