Wonder Pets 

Wonder Pets
Genre Animated series
Created by Josh Selig
Voices of (United States)
Sofie Zamchick
Teala Dunn
Danica Lee
(UK)1
Isabella Moylan
Callum Hanks
Khloe Fry
Country of origin  United States
Language(s) English
Production
Running time 30 min.
Broadcast
Original channel Nickelodeon
Original run March 3, 2006 – present
External links
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

Wonder Pets is an American animated children's television series. It debuted on March 3, 2006, on the Nick Jr. block of the Nickelodeon cable television network and Noggin on August 31, 2006. It won an Emmy Award in 2008 for Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition.

Contents

History and Format

The Wonder Pets television series was created by Josh Selig for Little Airplane Productions. The show was first seen as a short Nick Jr.'s film series called The New Adventures of Linny the Guinea Pig, in which a guinea pig named Linny traveled into space and under the ocean. Ming-Ming Duckling and Turtle Tuck were created when the show was expanded and called The Super Singing Power Pets!. The title was later shortened to Wonder Pets. The show's main characters are three elementary school classroom pets — Linny the Guinea Pig, Turtle Tuck, and Ming-Ming Duckling. They are presented as a trio of heroes who rescue baby animals as they demonstrate the benefits of teamwork.

The animation style used to create Wonder Pets! is called "photo-puppetry", and was created for the series to allow animators to manipulate photographs of real animals. It also uses drawn objects (not characters), so the total presentation could be considered animated mixed-media.

A good deal of the dialog is sung, so the show has been likened to operetta or singspiel. A 10-member live orchestra performs each episode, sometimes including other instrumentalists skilled in music from the region to which the pets are traveling during the episode.2 Completing each episode takes 33 weeks from script to final delivery.3

Preceding each show is a disclaimer indicating the show develops vocabulary and the concept of teamwork in pre-schoolers.

Characters and voice cast

Ming-Ming is voiced by Danica Lee in the United States version (Khloe Fry in the UK Version). When Lee auditioned for the role, she pronounced "R" and "L" sounds as "W" sounds (as in "This is Se-wious!" and "wearn to fwy"). The producers said that Lee's speech impediment had an endearing quality and that young children commonly mispronounce certain sounds.citation needed Some parents have criticized Ming-Ming's speech pattern, but consultants for the show point out that many characters in children's programs have childlike speech patterns. 5 Danica Lee has been nominated twice, in 2007 and 2008, for a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program. 6
Ollie is voiced by Cooper Corrao in the United States version.7 The first three Ollie appearances were voiced by TJ Stanton, however the role was recast due to TJ's changing voice.citation needed

Ollie's Family

Episode structure

Each episode follows a similar structure, with some variation, in terms of the storyline and the musical form.

As each episode begins, viewers hear the school children, off-screen, leaving school at the end of the day. They say goodbye to the classroom pets. Once the classroom is vacant, a pencil holder rattles to create the ringing of a tin can telephone. Often, the classroom will be decorated with student artwork or other items related to the storyline, particular animal or geographic location of that episode. One by one, the classroom pets wordlessly notice the ringing phone. Up to this point in the episode, they have acted like normal animals and not said a single word. But as the phone rings, the Wonder Pets get dressed (Linny in a yellow cap, Ming-Ming in a leather pilot's helmet, Tuck in a white French sailor's cap and blue water shoes on his back feet) and make their way towards the phone (Linny dropping through a hole hidden under her food bowl and landing on a toy horse, Ming-Ming opening a hidden door in the wiring of her cage and then flying out, Tuck diving into the water in his tank and emerging in the classroom sink) while singing their opening verses:

Linny: "The phone, the phone is ringing!"
Ming-Ming: "The phone, we'll be wight there!"
Tuck: "The phone, the phone is ringing!"
Linny: "There's an animal in trouble..."
Ming-Ming: "There's an animal in twouble..."
Tuck: "There's an animal in trouble somewhere!"

The Wonder Pets answer the phone and find that an animal is in trouble somewhere. Linny explains the situation to the other two. When the situation is clear, they sing:

Tuck: "A baby [animal]
[In the specific peril.]"
Ming-Ming: "This is se-wious!"
Tuck: "We have to help him/her"
Linny: "Let's save the [animal]!"
Tuck and Ming-Ming or All then All: "Let's save the [animal]!"

They all jump into a box filled with fabric scraps and jump back out, wearing various different outfits, often alluding to the area of the world they will be visiting. They make a quick joke then jump back into the box and emerge in their Wonder Pets capes.

Linny: "Linny,"
Tuck: "Tuck,"
Ming-Ming: "And Ming-Ming, too!"
All: "We're Wonder Pets and we'll help you!"

They assemble a flying toy sailboat called "The Flyboat" from classroom objects: a frisbee for a body, magic marker caps as rocket exhausts, a marble, wheels, the mast, and a sheet of paper for the sail. As they work, they sing:

Linny: "What's gonna work?"
Tuck and Ming-Ming or All: "Teamwork!"
Linny: "What's gonna work?"
Tuck and Ming-Ming or All: "Teamwork!"

Usually, the Wonder Pets encounter some sort of obstacle before leaving the classroom. The solution is invariably similar to the action they will need to take to save the animal in trouble. Then they rush off to the rescue, singing:

All: "Wonder Pets! Wonder Pets! We're on our way
To help a baby [animal] and save the day!"
Ming-Ming: "We're not too big,"
Tuck: "And we're not too tough,"
All: "But when we work together we've got the right stuff!
Go, Wonder Pets! Yay!"

When saving the animal, the Wonder Pets often fail on the first few attempts. Then the danger escalates, prompting Ming-Ming to once again sing, "This is se-wious!" Suddenly, the Wonder Pets remember how they solved the problem in the classroom and realize that the rescue has the same solution. Then they have to work together to achieve the rescue. They reprise their earlier song:

Linny: "Linny,"
Tuck: "Tuck,"
Ming-Ming: "And Ming-Ming, too."
All: "We're Wonder Pets and we'll help you!"
Linny: "What's gonna work?"
Tuck and Ming-Ming or All: "Teamwork!"
Linny: "What's gonna work?"
Tuck and Ming-Ming or All: "Teamwork!"

Once the animal is saved, a parent or other relation often comes out of nowhere to give grateful thanks to the Wonder Pets for saving its baby. The Wonder Pets celebrate with a celery snack, which the rescued animal's parent sometimes adds to with a bit of regional food, or they insist on a regional preparation. Then they fly back to the classroom, singing:

All: "Wonder Pets! Wonder Pets! We found a way
To help the baby [animal] and save the day!"
Ming-Ming: "We're not too big,"
Tuck: "And we're not too tough,"
All: "But when we work together we've got the right stuff!
Go, Wonder Pets! Yay!"

They wordlessly return to their cages until the next episode. The Flyboat smoothly disassembles by itself. Linny is always the last one to get back in her cage, and her cape and cap come off. The music style that has to do with the saving that day is played, as Linny takes a bite out of the celery in her cage and blinks and all the way to the closing credits, THE END.

Episode list

Broadcast history

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Toys and merchandising

Fisher Price began distributing a line of official Wonder Pets toys in the U.S. in March 2008.8 Toys include the Flyboat, figurine playsets and plush animals. These figurine playsets have each Wonder Pet saving a different baby animal. These include Linny saving a baby penguin, Tuck saving a baby bluebird and Ming-Ming rescuing a kitten. In addition there is a whale playset for the tub. Nickelodeon Universe, a theme park inside Minnesota's Mall of America, also has a children's ride dedicated to the Flyboat.9

Media

External links

Notes

  1. ^ Meet The Wonder Pets! wonder-pets.littletoons.co.uk, retrieved 2008-10-24
  2. ^ Lynne Heffley, "Unchained melodies; In scoring the kids' show 'The Wonder Pets!,' top-notch composers get a warm and fuzzy feeling," Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, Calif.: Mar 3, 2006. pg. E.29.
  3. ^ Jennifer Oxley, "Meet the Creators of Wonder Pets!"
  4. ^ a b Robert Lloyd, "'Wonder Pets!' to the rescue", Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, Calif.: Mar 3, 2006. pg. E.29.
  5. ^ Want to write for Wonder Pets? Here’s a tip: Stay away from moths., Laura Brown Interview, Smart Television Alliance, September 9, 2008
  6. ^ Edward Wyatt, "Nickelodeon's 'Wonder Pets' Offers Operetta for Preschoolers", New York Times, March 28, 2006. pg. E.1.
  7. ^ Morton, Rebecca, Youngster, 7, racks up acting, modeling credits , Great Media News, gmnews.som, August 20 2008
  8. ^ Video, Toys R Us television commercial
  9. ^ "New attraction spotlight: Nickelodeon Universe at Mall of America", March 11, 2008
  10. ^ Freisen, Eric, DVD Review:Save the Wonder Pets!, BlogCritics Magazine, April 21, 2007
  11. ^ Save the Unicorn Wonder Pets DVD, Amazon.com
  12. ^ Save the Reindeer!, Wonder Pets, Amazon.com DVD
  13. ^ Save the Dinoasaur!, Wonder Pets DVD, Amazon.com
  14. ^ Save the Beetles Wonder Pets DVD, Amazon.com
  15. ^ Save the Nursery Rhyme, Wonder Pets DVD, Amazon.com
  16. ^ Save the Bengal Tiger, Wonder Pets DVD, Amazon.com
  17. ^ "Wonder Pets! Save the Nutcracker!": Saving A Nutcracker Is Sewious, Review, Toon Zone, October 10, 2008