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Boohbah

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Boohbah
Created byAnne Wood
Directed byChris Bernard
Annie Gibbs
Vic Finch
StarringEmma Insley
Alex Poulter
Cal Jaggers
Phil Hayes
Laura Pero
ComposerAndrew McCrorie-Shand
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes104
Production
ProducerAnne Wood
Running time20 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network
Release14 April 2003 (2003-04-14) –
6 January 2006 (2006-01-06)
Related
Teletubbies
In the Night Garden...

Boohbah is a British preschool television series created by Anne Wood and produced by Wood's company, Ragdoll Productions. It premiered on ITV1 on 14 April 2003 in the United Kingdom, before becoming a regular fixture of the Nick Jr. UK lineup in 2005. The series, with 104 episodes, was designed for preschoolers aged 3 to 6 (a slightly older age group than Wood's previous show, Teletubbies).

According to Anne Wood, the show's visuals were inspired by scientific photographs of microscopic life and cell structures. The main characters, the Boohbahs, are "atoms of energy" who sleep in charging pods. Every episode follows the Boohbahs performing a dance routine where the audience is encouraged to participate. The creators at Ragdoll Productions designed the show as an interactive "televisual game" with an emphasis on spatial awareness, motor skill development and puzzle solving.

Characters

Episodes of Boohbah are divided into two main segments: one featuring the Boohbahs and another featuring the Storypeople.

Boohbahs

The Boohbahs are five colourful creatures, described as "magical atoms" of energy, who can fly and make musical noises. They are played by actors in full-body costumes. Their fur sparkles and shimmers with tiny lights, and they have big eyes and rows of lights for eyebrows. Each Boohbah is a different colour:

  • Humbah, played by Emma Insley, is a yellow Boohbah.
  • Zumbah, played by Alex Poulter, is a purple Boohbah.
  • Zing Zing Zingbah, played by Cal Jaggers, is an orange Boohbah.
  • Jumbah, played by Phil Hayes, is a blue Boohbah.
  • Jingbah, played by Laura Pero, is a pink Boohbah.

Storypeople

The Storypeople are silent human characters whose actions are controlled by off-screen children using the magic word "Boohbah." Every episode of Boohbah includes a segment where the Storypeople are magically given a present. The Los Angeles Times called these segments "comic visual puzzles executed with vaudevillian flair."

  • Grandmamma (Linda Kerr-Scott) – An elderly yet spry Caucasian woman. She has white banana hair and wears a dark pink housedress, pale blue sweater, white socks, and red trainers.
  • Grandpappa (Robin Stevens) – An elderly yet spry Caucasian man. He has white hair and a white moustache; he wears a long-sleeved yellow shirt, dark grey slacks, red braces, and white trainers.
  • Mrs. Lady (Harvey Virdi) – An Indian woman. She has dark hair and wears a loose light blue blouse, loose bright pink trousers, and pink trainers.
  • Mr. Man (Mark Ramsey) – A black man. He wears a short-sleeved bright pink shirt, white trousers, and black trainers.
  • Brother (Manuel Bravo) and Sister (Vee Vimolmal) – Always paired, they both appear to be in their late teens. Brother is a Latino boy with short black hair; he wears a bright blue T-shirt, bright red knee-length shorts, and white trainers with pink laces. Sister is a Thai girl with hip-length black hair in a long ponytail; she wears a bright red T-shirt, bright blue capri pants, and white trainers with pink laces.
  • Auntie (Sachi Kimura) – A Japanese woman. She has short black hair and wears a long-sleeved lavender blouse, black trousers, purple tights, and black shoes.
  • Little Dog Fido (Dash) – A Jack Russell Terrier. He wears a red collar. He is the only character in Storyworld who is not wholly controlled by the magic word "Boohbah."

Episodes

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104 episodes were produced, including:

  1. Skipping Rope
  2. Pearly Shells
  3. Rope and Rock
  4. Musical Pipe
  5. Windows
  6. Armchair
  7. Record Player
  8. Squeaky Socks
  9. A Pile of Balls
  10. Painting the Fence
  11. Big Bass Drum
  12. Hammock
  13. Squeaky Seesaw
  14. Jack in the Box
  15. Bubbles

Reception

Ken Tucker, in his review for Entertainment Weekly, gave the show an "A-" score and commented, "I'm positive that Boohbah can be experienced by both its intended audience (kids ages 3 to 6) and its inevitable inadvertent audience (doting parents and stoners of every age) as a mind-blowing gas." Tucker joked that when Boohbah aired in America, it would prove more popular than The Price Is Right due to having more "flashing lights, blinding colors, and silly noise". Lorraine Ali, a senior writer for Newsweek, also gave Boohbah a positive review and wrote, "Move over, Barney, and make room for Zing Zing Zingbah." Common Sense Media gave Boohbah a rating of 3/5 stars, writing that its educational and fitness goals were "admirable," but that "the real test is whether or not the show works with your kid."

The New York Times commented that although the show's sequence of events "may sound incoherent...the overall effect is mesmerizing, sometimes funny, even beautiful." The Boston Globe felt that the "segments featuring the Boohbahs are ploddingly slow, maddeningly repetitive, and without much purpose...the live-action segments with real people are the only things worth watching." Slate was bemused by the show's segments and design, feeling that Boohbah was less effective than Anne Wood's previous show Teletubbies: "For all its earnest intentions, Boohbah lacks both the conceptual purity of Teletubbies and its sublimely silly sensibility." Cheat Sheet ranked the show first on their list of "5 Most Horrifying TV Shows That Aren't Supposed to Be Scary", criticising the characters appearances, although crediting it for encouraging children to perform in physical exercise.

References

  1. https://www.c21media.net/news/itv-lines-up-atoms-for-preschool-push/
  2. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20060304094335/http://www.nickjr.co.uk/shows/boohbah/index.aspx
  3. "Television: Tubby, And Bouncy Too". TIME Magazine. 19 January 2004.
  4. ^ https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-jan-23-et-heffley23-story.html
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20060222001559/http://www.nickjr.co.uk/shows/boohbah/boohbahs.aspx
  6. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20060222001625/http://www.nickjr.co.uk/shows/boohbah/storyworld.aspx
  7. ^ "Boohbah". EW.com. Retrieved 18 June 2021.
  8. https://www.newsweek.com/entertainment-shorts-television-125907
  9. https://www.commonsensemedia.org/tv-reviews/boohbah
  10. https://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/04/magazine/she-speaks-3-year-old.html
  11. Boohbah: Season 1, retrieved 18 June 2021
  12. Creature Feature – Is Boohbah the new Teletubbies?, retrieved 4 July 2021
  13. Roberts, Will; Articles, More; October 27, 2016 (27 October 2016). "5 Most Horrifying TV Shows That Aren't Supposed to Be Scary". Showbiz Cheat Sheet. Retrieved 18 June 2021. {{cite web}}: |first3= has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

External links

Ragdoll Productions
Founders
Television series
Films
Former PBS Kids original programming
1960s–1980s debuts
PBS
Syndicated
1990s debuts
PBS
Syndicated
2000s debuts
PBS
Syndicated
2010s–2020s debuts
PBS
Syndicated
  • Pocoyo (2010–2011)
  • Scientastic! (2010)
  • Wild Animal Baby Explorers (2010–2012)
  • Space Racers (2014–2015)
  • Mixed Nutz (2014)
  • Thomas Edison's Secret Lab (2015–2016)
  • Bug Bites (2016)
  • Ruby's Studio (2016)
  • Mack & Moxy (2016)
  • Young Voices for the Planet (2016–2019)
  • Kids for Positive Change (2021–2024)
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