The Berenstain Bears' Comic Valentine

The Berenstain Bears Comic Valentine is an animated television special based on the Berenstain Bears children's book series by Stan and Jan Berenstain. Produced by Buzz Potamkin and directed by Mordicai Gerstein and Al Kouzel, the program made its debut on NBC on February 13, 1982.[1][2][3]

The Berenstain Bears' Comic Valentine
Created byStan and Jan Berenstain
Written byStan and Jan Berenstain
Directed byMordicai Gerstein
Al Kouzel
Theme music composerElliot Lawrence
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Producer(s)Buzz Potamkin
Running time25 minutes
Production company(s)Perpetual Motion Pictures
The Joseph Cates Company
DistributorNBC
Embassy Home Entertainment
Release
Original networkNBC
Original release
  • February 13, 1982 (1982-02-13)
Chronology
Preceded byThe Berenstain Bears' Easter Surprise (1981)
Followed byThe Berenstain Bears Play Ball (1983)

Development

Stan and Jan Berenstain's first animated holiday special aired on NBC in December 1979. The Berenstain Bears' Christmas Tree was the first of five annual animated specials that would air on NBC, produced by Joe Cates and the Joseph Cates Production Company. The Berenstain Bears Meet Bigpaw was the second in this series.

The Berenstains utilized rhyming couplets in the script - for both the narrator and the character dialogue. This element had also been used in the Christmas Tree special and was familiar to audiences since a similar type of writing was used in the Berenstain Bears Beginner Books series.[4]

Production and casting

The 25-minute special was created and written by Stan and Jan Berenstain and featured original music composed and conducted by Emmy-winning musician Elliot Lawrence, with lyrics provided by Stan Berenstain. The score included three original songs.[5]

The special starred Ron McLarty, Gabriela Glatzer, Jonathan Lewis, and Pat Lysinger as Papa, Sister, Brother, and Mama Bear, respectively. McLarty also doubled as the show's narrator. All four actors were reprising their vocal roles from The Berenstain Bears' Christmas Tree.

It was the fourth of five Berenstain Bears animated specials that aired on NBC from 1979 to 1983.[6]

Premiere

The program premiered on NBC on Saturday February 13, 1982.

Plot

Book adaptation

Home media releases

In 1984, Embassy Home Entertainment released the special on LaserDisc as a double-feature with The Berenstain Bears' Christmas Tree, called A Berenstain Bears Celebration.[7] In 1987, the special was made available on VHS by Embassy Home Entertainment as part of their Children's Treasures series.[8] In 1989, the special was distributed on VHS by Kids Klassics.[9] The special was re-released in 1992 by GoodTimes Home Video, in a double-feature with The Berenstain Bears' Christmas Tree.[10] In 2002, the special was released on DVD by GoodTimes, also in a double-feature with The Berenstain Bears' Christmas Tree.[5]

gollark: I'm working on it.
gollark: Please link Workspace again?
gollark: At the age of 14 people develop instinctive Linux knowledge.
gollark: Ah, yes.
gollark: Ubuntu is a Linux distribution.

References

  1. Shaw, Jane. "Christmas tree is focus of Berenstain Bears' newest adventure." Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 1980-12-02, p. 32.
  2. Mariska, Bradley (2015). "Berenstain Bears Bibliography". Berenstain Bears Complete Bibliography & Blog. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  3. "The Berenstain Bears' Thanksgiving". www.amazon.com. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  4. Berenstain, Stan and Jan (2002). Down a Sunny Dirt Road: An Autobiography. Random House. ISBN 978-0375814037.
  5. The Berenstain Bears Double Feature (DVD). GoodTimes. 2002.
  6. Berenstain Bears History, The Berenstain Bears, Inc., 2015, retrieved 11 October 2015
  7. A Berenstain Bears Celebration (LaserDisc). Embassy Home Entertainment. 1984.
  8. The Berenstain Bears Meet Bigpaw (VHS). Embassy Home Entertainment. 1987.
  9. The Berenstain Bears Meet Bigpaw (VHS). Kids Klassics. 1989.
  10. The Berenstain Bears Double Feature (VHS). GoodTimes. 1992.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.