The Charlie Horse Music Pizza Explained

Genre:Preschool
Creator:Shari Lewis
Jeremy Tarcher
Developer:MalloryTarcher
Shari Lewis
Bernard Rothman
Num Seasons:2
Director:Niles Davenport
Stan Jacobson
Presenter:Shari Lewis
Starring:Shari Lewis
Lamb Chop
Charlie Horse
Hush Puppy
Dom DeLuise
Wezley Morris
Chancz Perry
Chantal Strand
Opentheme:"Charlie Horse Music Pizza"
Endtheme:"Still Be Friends"
Executive Producer:Bernard Rothman
Producer:Shawn Williamson
Runtime:30 minutes
Company:Golden Books Family Entertainment
KCET
Country:United States
Canada
Language:English
Channel:PBS Kids
Num Episodes:23
List Episodes:
  1. Episodes
Related:Lamb Chop's Play-Along

The Charlie Horse Music Pizza is a children's television show that was shown on PBS Kids in the United States from January 5, 1998, to January 17, 1999, with reruns continuing to air until September 3, 1999. Reruns again aired on PBJ until 2016. It is the short-lived spin-off of Lamb Chop's Play-Along and was hosted by Shari Lewis, whose strong belief in the benefits of music education for children led to the creation of the series. The Charlie Horse Music Pizza was shot at the CBC Studios in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The Charlie Horse Music Pizza was Shari's final project before her death on August 2, 1988.

Plot

The show takes place around a pizzeria on the beach. Alongside the original cast of Lamb Chop, Hush Puppy, Charlie Horse, and Lewis, Charlie Horse Music Pizza introduced five new characters: Take Out, a big anthropomorphized dim-witted orangutan who makes deliveries on roller skates (played by Chancz Perry); Fingers, a giant, sassy purple raccoon that lives in the dumpster behind the pizzeria (played by Gordon Robertson); Cookie, the soft-hearted opera loving cook (played by Dom DeLuise), Junior, a cool teenager who works at the pizzeria part time and plays the tuba for his high school marching band (played by Wezley Morris), and Holly, a young girl in a wheelchair (played by Chantal Strand).

Episodes

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired (U.S. dates)
Season premiereSeason finale
120
23

Season 1 (1998)

List of EpisodesRelease Date
1Back Story January 5, 1998
2My Dog Has Fleas January 6, 1998
3Musicians of Bremen January 7, 1998
4Blow Hard January 8, 1998
5Follow the Leader January 9, 1998
6Spooky Opera Show January 12, 1998
7A Pirate's Life January 13, 1998
8The Audition January 14, 1998
9Group Soup January 15, 1998
10Rapunzel January 16, 1998
11Toy Exchange January 19, 1998
12Charlie on the Run January 20, 1998
13Wise Queen January 21, 1998
14Star-Spangled Charlie January 22, 1998
15Charlie's Ant January 23, 1998
16Whistle While You Work January 26, 1998
17Jazzy January 27, 1998
18Hush Puppy the Hero January 28, 1998
19Can I Sing You My Song? January 29, 1998
20Drum Show January 30, 1998

Season 2 (1999)

List of EpisodesRelease Date
21One Man Band January 3, 1999
22The George & Bill Show January 10, 1999
23Hello, Goodbye January 17, 1999

Cancellation

When Lamb Chop's Play-Along! ended, Shari and her husband Jeremy created The Charlie Horse Music Pizza to teach children about music after talking about what kids loved the most.[1] Because a third of elementary schools were cutting music class from their curriculum at the time, Shari and Jeremy felt that they should introduce kids to music through the show.[2] After Shari was diagnosed with inoperable uterine cancer, the show was put on hold on June 18, 1998, while she underwent chemotherapy at Cedars-Sinai Hospital. She died from viral pneumonia on August 2, 1998.[3] After her death, The Charlie Horse Music Pizza was cancelled.[4] The last episode of The Charlie Horse Music Pizza aired on January 17, 1999, on what would have been her 66th birthday.[5]

Awards

|-| 2000| Shari Lewis for playing "Host" (posthumous award; accepted by Mallory Tarcher Lewis)| Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in a Children's Series|

Notes and References

  1. News: Signoff; Shari Lewis's Jazzy New Pals (Published 1998). Debbie. Seaman. The New York Times . May 3, 1998. NYTimes.com.
  2. Web site: Shari Lewis, Television Puppeteer, Dies at 65. Claudia. Levy. August 4, 1998. www.washingtonpost.com.
  3. Web site: Puppeteer Shari Lewis, 65, Creator, Voice of Lamb Chop. Rick . Kogan. chicagotribune.com. 4 August 1998 .
  4. Web site: Puppeteer Shari Lewis Dies. Myrna. Oliver. courant.com. 4 August 1998 .
  5. Web site: Shari Lewis' Farewell / Ch. 13 to broadcast late puppeteer's last. Andy. Edelstein . January 20, 1999. Newsday.