The Wombles
1 9 7 3 - 1 9 7 5
(UK)
60 x 5 minute episodes
Underground,
overground, wombling free . . . The furry, long-nosed Wombles of
Wimbledon Common were England's foremost ecologists in the 1970s,
"making good use of the things that they find - things that the
everyday folk leave behind". The incredibly devious Wombles
turned trash into useful items - well, useful to a Womble at least.
Their burrow was wallpapered in discarded
newspaper and there was always some new contraption being conjured up
and constructed from discarded garbage.
Headed by Great Uncle Bulgaria, the Wombles were
Tomsk, Orinoco, Tobermory, Wellington, Bungo and their French
housemaid (ahem!) Mme. Cholet. Great Uncle Bulgaria was very old
indeed with fur that had turned snow white with age. He could be
rather strict at times but had a kind heart and was very wise.
The young Wombles thought he knew absolutely everything and sometimes,
he thought he did as well.
Tobermory was Mr Fixit Womble. He made all kinds
of remarkable and useful gadgets out of the rubbish which the working
Wombles brought to him. Orinoco was certainly the fattest Womble in
the burrow, and frequently needed forty winks before he could get up
the energy to begin work. Tomsk was the largest Womble and a keep-fit
freak who tried to get Orinoco to take more exercise but without
success. Wellington was the smallest and shyest Womble. He wore
spectacles and was rather absent minded (despite having invented the
Womble telephone).
Based
on the stories by Elisabeth Beresford, the five minute Wombles tales
were animated by Ivor Wood and whimsically narrated by Bernard
Cribbins.
Mike Batt performed the theme music which
became a hit in 1974 and led to a spate of other Wombling pop pieces.
A feature film called Wombling Free was released in 1977, and
the busy little creatures were resurrected by ITV in 1990/1991 for two
one-off stories.
In 1998 the Wombles were back again, with four
new members to the clan; Stepney (a cockney Womble), Obidos (a pan
piper from Brazil), Shanshi (from China) and the skateboarding
Alderney. New technology (such as the Internet and Wom-faxes) now made
life much easier for the fluffy ecologists. But it's just not RIGHT,
is it?! Memo to the arrogant arsehole who thought it was a good idea
to dick around with a near-perfect formula: Change for change's sake
is never a good thing!
|