Secret Life of Toys | |
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Genre | Children's television series |
Written by | Jocelyn Stevenson |
Voices of | |
Theme music composer | PEEK-A-BOO |
Composers | Jocelyn Stevenson (Lyrics) Markus Windt (Sound) |
Country of origin | Germany United Kingdom United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Brian Henson |
Producer | Peter Coogan |
Running time | 10 minutes |
Production company | Jim Henson Productions |
Original release | |
Network | The Disney Channel (U.S.) BBC (UK) |
Release | 5 March – 28 May 1994 |
Secret Life of Toys is a 1994 children's TV series based on the 1986 Christmas TV special The Christmas Toy. Each of the fourteen 30-minute episodes consists of two 15-minute stories. The show was taped in Monheim, Germany (near the Dutch border), and aired on The Disney Channel in the US (beginning on 5 March 1994),[1][2] the BBC in the United Kingdom, Family Channel, Vrak and TVO in Canada, Spacetoon in the Arab world, Top TV in South Africa, The Kids' Channel in Israel, RTB in Brunei, American Forces Network in Germany and Japan, TVP1 in Poland, Channel 55 in Bahrain and on ABC TV in Australia. The series was formerly streamed on Netflix and Hulu and is currently available on Kidoodle.TV
Plot
This series depicts the further adventures of Rugby Tiger and his friends in a new playroom with two different children, Penny and Simon. Penny and Simon's playtime affect how the toys' setting and situations are in the children's absence. For the toys' safety, they have a code called a set of No-nos. However one of the toys end up breaking one of those rules by accident. When that happens, the toys have to work together to keep the fact they can move and speak away from the humans.
Characters
Main characters
- Rugby Tiger (Dave Goelz) is a plucky tiger plush toy who is always looking for an adventure. He was designed by Larry DiFiori and built by Rollie Krewson.
- Mew (Nigel Plaskitt) is Rugby's good friend who is a catnip mouse toy that belongs to the family cat. He was designed by Larry DiFiori and built by Joann Green.
- Balthazar (Jerry Nelson) is a really old bear plush toy who is very wise. He functions as a fatherlike leader to the toys, and tells them when it's safe for them to move. He was designed by Larry DiFiori and built by Joann Green
- Raisin (Louise Gold) is a tomboyish rag doll replacing Apple.
- Hortense (Louise Gold) is a worry-prone rocking horse replacing Belmont.
- Ditz (Dave Goelz) is a clown plush toy who can easily get mixed up. He was designed by Larry DiFiori and built by Marian Keating.
Other characters
- Bratty Rat (Jerry Nelson) is a shifty rat who was purchased at a secondhand store.
- Bunny Lamp (Mike Quinn) takes care of the lighting in the toy room and warns the toys when people are coming.
- Bleep (Rob Mills) is a toy robot who sometimes freezes during his speech. He was designed by Larry DiFiori and built by Tom Newby and Norman Tempia.
- Cruiser (Brian Henson) looks like a Fisher Price Little People figure who drives a taxi. He loves to use cool slang words. His motto is: "A dollar on the drop, and ten cents for any additional miles." He was designed by Larry DiFiori and built by Tom Newby and Norman Tempia.
- Datz (Jerry Nelson) is a paper bag puppet that looks like his brother Ditz.
- Dinkybeard (Jerry Nelson) is a wooden toy pirate. He was designed and built by Paul Andrejco.
- Daffodil (Louise Gold) is a breakable princess doll who lives on the top shelf replacing Queen Meteora. Nobody really understands her. Daffodil is arguably the oldest toy in the house, having belonged to a family that previously owned it. After her original owner grew up and moved away, she lived alone in the attic of the house for many childhoods until the current family's children found her and brought her into their playroom. She alone among the toys understands what the attic actually is.
- Eggie (Mike Quinn) is a dimwitted Humpty Dumpty-like toy egg who thinks eggs are the smartest creatures in the world.
- Humble Gary (Mike Quinn) is an extremely humble tiger.
Episodes
No. | Title | Original air date | |
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1 | "Oops! / Don't Tell Me" | 5 March 1994 | |
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2 | "Follow the Leader / Disappearing Ditz" | 12 March 1994 | |
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3 | "I'm Going to Tell... / The Cat Toy That Roared" | 19 March 1994 | |
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4 | "Rock-a-Bye Worries / The Magic Fish" | 26 March 1994 | |
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5 | "Climbers / Be Plush" | 2 April 1994 | |
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6 | "Queen Raisin / Balthazar in Beam Land" | 9 April 1994 | |
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7 | "Ditz and Datz / Mummies" | 16 April 1994 | |
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8 | "All Washed Up / Bunnochio" | 23 April 1994 | |
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9 | "More Than a Mouse / Happy Hortense to You" | 30 April 1994 | |
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10 | "Down with Dinkybeard / The Sky is Falling!" | 7 May 1994 | |
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11 | "Baby Balthazar / True Mew" | 14 May 1994 | |
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12 | "Mr. and Mrs. Rugby / I Spy" | 21 May 1994 | |
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13 | "Who Shares Wins / It's a Giveaway" | 28 May 1994 | |
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References
- ↑ "TV REVIEWS : Muppets Come to Life in 'Toys'". Los Angeles Times. 5 March 1994. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
- ↑ The Disney Channel Magazine, Vol. 12, no. 2, February/March 1994: pp. 32, 39.