Bear in the Big Blue House explained

Image Alt:The Bear in the Big Blue House logo, featuring a simplistic depiction of Bear's head in a dark blue house above dark blue text giving the series's title.
Runtime:25 minutes
Genre:Children's television series
Creator:Mitchell Kriegman
Developer:The Jim Henson Company
Producer:Richard A. Fernandes
Country:United States
Language:English
Network:Playhouse Disney
Num Seasons:4
Num Episodes:118
List Episodes:List of Bear in the Big Blue House episodes

Bear in the Big Blue House is an American children's television series created by Mitchell Kriegman and produced by Jim Henson Television for Disney Channel's Playhouse Disney preschool television block. Debuting on October 20, 1997,[1] [2] it aired its last episode on April 28, 2006. Reruns of the program continued to air on Playhouse Disney until May 6, 2007.

In 2004, The Jim Henson Company sold the rights to the show, including characters, content library and copyrights, to The Walt Disney Company; it is now owned by The Muppets Studio, a subsidiary of Disney that also owns, and is named after, The Muppets characters and copyrights.

Plot

Bear lives in the Big Blue House where he is a caregiver for his friends Ojo, a bear cub; Tutter, a mouse; Treelo, a lemur; otters Pip and Pop; and storyteller Shadow. He and his friends have many adventures together. Those normally include solving problems, sharing, cooperating with each other, and developing social/life skills.

Each episode opens with the welcome song, Bear detecting a scent in the viewers (which he likens to a pleasant smell) and appearance of the characters. Each show focuses on a theme (ex; "sleep", "doctors", "Thanksgiving") which folds into a lesson at the end. Songs and jokes accompany the episode. The character "Shadow" narrates a segment with shadow puppets in each episode. Most of the segments are in song, while some are simply a short story relating to the episode's theme. At the end of the program, Bear sings the goodbye song with Luna, the moon.

Episodes

See main article: List of Bear in the Big Blue House episodes.

Characters

Main

Supporting

Several of these characters appeared in a music video for the We Are Family Foundation. Bear also appeared as a celebrity in the 2002 revival of The Hollywood Squares; he notably appeared in Whoopi Goldberg's final episode.

Cancellation

Bear in the Big Blue House was initially produced from 1997 to 2003. The sudden death of Lynne Thigpen, who voiced 'Luna' the Moon, led to production being put on hiatus for three years, along with a planned film.

In 2005, two years after Thigpen's death, Tara Mooney, who voiced Shadow, told Irish radio station Today FM that "the crew's hearts just weren't in it anymore".

Spin-off

After the hiatus and the spin-off Breakfast with Bear, a final run of new episodes aired on the Disney Channel in April 2006, with the last episode airing on April 28, 2006. Repeats of the show ceased altogether in May 2007 (December 2010 in the UK). Thigpen was posthumously nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award for voicing Luna.

International airings

The show was shown throughout the world including in the United Kingdom on Playhouse Disney UK and Channel 5, on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Australia, on RTÉ Two in Ireland and on Playhouse Disney and TV Globo in Brazil.

Awards

2000Outstanding Sound Mixing – Peter Hefter and John Alberts (won)[3] (Tied with Bill Nye the Science Guy and)

2000Outstanding Directing in a Children's Series – Mitchell Kriegman, Richard A. Fernandes and Dean Gordon (won)

2003Outstanding Directing in a Children's Series – Mitchell Kriegman and Dean Gordon (won)[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bear in the Big Blue House: Disney Has Big Plans . 19 December 2014 . TV Series Finale . 8 January 2007 . Trevor . Kimball . 1 July 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140701184112/http://tvseriesfinale.com/tv-show/bear-in-the-big-blue-house-disney-has-big-plans/ . live .
  2. News: Preschoolers Will Grin and 'Bear' New Henson Series . . 19 December 2014 . 20 October 1997 . Lynne . Heffley.
  3. Emmy time for 'Rosie' & 'Bill Nye' . . 19 December 2014 . Melissa . Grego . 15 May 2000 . . 31 August 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170831084834/http://variety.com/2000/tv/news/emmy-time-for-rosie-bill-nye-1117781621/ . live .
  4. Web site: THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF TELEVISION OF ARTS AND SCIENCES PRESENTS THE 30TH ANNUAL DAYTIME EMMY AWARDS IN 42 CATEGORIES . New York . 10 May 2003 . 3 September 2018 . . Lori . Genes . Harry . Eggart . Stacey . Sanner . Barrie . Nedler . Emmy Online . https://web.archive.org/web/20140625155616/http://cdn.emmyonline.org/day_30th_winners_creative.pdf . 25 June 2014 . dead .
  5. Web site: 2000 Parents' Choice Award-Winning Television . 19 December 2014 . 2000 . . 9 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160309162337/http://www.parents-choice.org/previousawardlist.cfm?p_code=p_tel&awdyr=2000&thePage=television&award=AW . dead .
  6. Web site: 2002 Parents' Choice Award-Winning Television . 19 December 2014 . 2002 . . 3 September 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180903215220/http://www.parents-choice.org/previousawardlist.cfm?p_code=p_tel&awdyr=2002&thePage=television&award=AW . dead .