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Paddington Bear USA Showcase
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This website earns a commission from online advertising. The advertising
model used is called affiliate marketing and enables websites to earn
money for promoting products or services. Amazon USA Associate In the first story, Paddington is found at Paddington railway station in
London by the Brown family, sitting on his suitcase with a note attached
to his coat that reads "Please look after this bear. Thank you." Bond
has said that his memories of newsreels showing trainloads of child
evacuees leaving London during World War II, with labels around their
necks and their possessions in small suitcases, prompted him to do the
same for Paddington. The BBC television series Paddington, produced by Michael Bond and London-based animation company FilmFair, was first broadcast in 1975. The storylines were based on comedic incidents from the books, chosen to appeal to the TV audience which included much younger children than those the books were written for. This series had an extremely distinctive appearance: Paddington was a stop-motion puppet moving in a three-dimensional space in front of two-dimensional backgrounds (which were frequently sparse black-and-white line drawings), while all other characters were 2D drawings. In one scene, Mr Brown is seen to hand Paddington a jar of marmalade that becomes 3D when Paddington touches it. Animator Ivor Wood also worked on The Magic Roundabout, The Wombles and Postman Pat. The series was narrated by Michael Hordern. In the United States, episodes aired on PBS, on the syndicated series Romper Room, on Nickelodeon as a segment on the programme Pinwheel and on USA Network as a segment on the Calliope (TV series) in the late 1970s and early 1980s, as well as in between preschool programming on The Disney Channel as a segment on the program Lunch Box from the late 1980s into the 1990s.[33][34] The series also aired on HBO in between features, usually when they were airing children's programmes. The series won a silver medal at the New York Film and Television Festival in 1979; the first British animated series to do so. |