Olga da Polga explained

Olga da Polga is a fictional guinea pig, who is the heroine of a BBC television series for CBeebies and a series of books for children.

The books were originally written by Michael Bond and published between 1971 and 2002. Unlike Bond's more famous character, Paddington Bear, Olga is a teller of tall tales in the style of Baron Munchausen. The typical plot of each story is that something fairly ordinary happens to Olga, and she gives her animal friends a wildly exaggerated version of events, subsequently revealed to be untrue by what the humans say.

Bond's books were memorably illustrated by Danish artist Hans Helweg, who was also well known for his "pulp fiction" covers for Pan paperbacks.[1] His illustrations are still strongly associated with Olga, although later editions have used different imagery including artwork by Catherine Rayner for Usborne.[2]

Olga was named after the Bond family's real guinea pig. In 2014, Guardian journalist Michelle Pauli met Olga number six.[3]

Television series

In 2022, the BBC commissioned 13 episodes of a live-action TV series of Olga da Polga for CBeebies, featuring Julie Wilson Nimmo and Greg Hemphill. A second series aired in 2023 on the channel.[4]

Books

Chapter books

Picture books

Characters

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hans Helweg . HCA Illustration . 21 March 2011 . 24 January 2018 .
  2. Web site: Olga da Polga . Usborne Books & More . 24 January 2018 .
  3. News: Pauli . Michelle . Michael Bond: 'Paddington stands up for things, he's not afraid of going to the top and giving them a hard stare' . 28 November 2014. The Guardian . London. 3 December 2014 .
  4. Web site: Sherwin . Adam . 2022-07-11 . Paddington Bear's Peruvian guinea pig cousin to star in new CBeebies show amid BBC kids' revamp . 2022-08-02 . inews.co.uk . en.
  5. Gurney specialised in the treatment of guinea pigs, and treated Bond's guinea pig who was the inspiration for Olga. Daily telegraph