The Raccoons

The Raccoons
Genre
Created by Kevin Gillis[1]
Directed by
Voices of
Narrated by Geoffrey Winter
Theme music composer
  • Kevin Gillis
  • Jon Stroll
Ending theme "Run with Us" by Steve Lunt (Season 1), Lisa Lougheed (Seasons 2–5)
Country of origin Canada, United States
Original language(s)
  • English
  • French
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 60 (plus 4 specials) (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Sheldon S. Wiseman
Producer(s) Kevin Gillis
Running time 25 mins
Production company(s)
  • Gillis-Wiseman Productions
  • Evergreen Raccoons Television Productions
Distributor
  • 20th Century Fox Television (1980s)
  • Skywriter Media & Entertainment Group (2009–present)
Release
Original network CBC Television (Canada)
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
Audio format
  • Stereo
  • Mono (some episodes)
Original release July 4, 1985 – August 28, 1992

The Raccoons is a Canadian animated series which was originally broadcast from 1985 to 1992, with three preceding television specials from its inception in 1980, and one direct to video special in 1984. The franchise was created by Kevin Gillis with the co-operation of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (French: Société Radio-Canada).[2]

Synopsis

The series revolves around Bert Raccoon and married couple Ralph and Melissa Raccoon, of whom Bert is a friend and roommate. The series mostly involved the trio's efforts against the industrialist forces of greedy aardvark millionaire Cyril Sneer, who usually tries to destroy the forest for a quick buck. However, the Raccoons would always save their forest from Cyril's schemes, with help from their forest friends including Schaeffer, a gentle Old English Sheepdog; Cedric, Cyril's college graduate son; and Sophia Tutu, Cedric's girlfriend. But, as the series progressed, Cyril became more of a sympathetic character, eventually becoming an antihero.

Lessons featured in the series mainly included environmentalism, but also included other lessons, including friendship and teamwork.

Episodes

Characters

Main

  • Bert Raccoon (voiced by Len Carlson) The main hero of the series. He is Ralph and Melissa's houseguest and is their best friend from childhood. An energetic raccoon with a lot of imagination, Bert always likes to seek out adventure and to live life to the fullest.
  • Ralph Raccoon (voiced by Bob Dermer) and Melissa Raccoon (voiced by Rita Coolidge (special 1–2), Dottie West (special 3), Linda Feige (season 1) and Susan Roman (season 2–5)) – the happily married couple who live in the "Raccoondominium" with their houseguest Bert, Ralph is also the founder of "The Evergreen Standard". Melissa is the most sensible of the three and is always there to give the boys a push in the right direction.
  • Cedric Sidney Sneer (voiced by Fred Little (specials) and Marvin Goldhar (series)) – Cyril Sneer's nerdy son and Bert Raccoon's best friend, and heir to the Sneer fortune.
  • Schaeffer (voiced by Carl Banas) – A large sheepdog, who is friends with the Raccoons. Originally portrayed as slow and dimwitted in the original specials, he quickly became one of the brightest characters on the series, and eventually opened the Blue Spruce Cafe as a Bartender and assists with the Raccoons' paper's technical needs.
  • Broo (voiced by Sharon Lewis) – A sheepdog puppy who seems to favour Bert as his owner in season 2 after the human characters were dropped from the show.
  • Sophia Tutu (voiced by Sharon Lewis) – Cedric's ditzy girlfriend, who is a superb swan glider and diver. She was phased out of the show in later years.
  • Cyril Sneer (voiced by Michael Magee) – Originally the main villain of the series.[3] Cyril is an aardvark, with a long, pink nose, a ruthless and greedy businessman and Cedric's father. Although Cyril starts off villainous, he later softens up, becoming distinctly less so as the series progresses, though he retains his greedy nature. Despite his money-grubbing ways, he has shown to genuinely love his son and tries grooming him to take over the family business.
  • Snag (voiced by Michael Magee) – Cyril and Cedric Sneer's pet dog. He has blue fur and a nose similar to his owners and a bad temper that rivals Cyril's.
  • The Pigs (voiced by Nick Nichols (Pig One (special 3-episode 50)), Keith Hampshire (Pig One (episode 51–60)), Len Carlson (Pigs Two and Three (series)) and Fred Little (Pig Three (special 3) – Cyril's three bumbling henchmen and assistants. They are almost never referred to by name (although they refer to one another as "Lloyd". Fans of the show have referred Pig One as "Lloyd" and the other two as "Boyd" and "Floyd"), listed as Pig One, Two and Three in the credits.
  • The Bears (voiced by Len Carlson, Bob Dermer and Carl Banas) – are Cyril Sneer's additional henchmen, workers, soldiers, spies, etc.
  • Bentley Raccoon (voiced by Noam Zylberman (episode 16–54) and Stuart Stone (as Stu Stone) (episode 55–60) – George and Nicole's son, He's an expert with computers, and is a very typical younger kid, with a tendency to overemphasize his personal setbacks. He often favours Bert while Cyril Sneer thinks highly of him. He is originally introduced as Ralph's cousin in his first appearance but later retconned and thereafter referred to as his and Melissa's nephew.
  • Lisa Raccoon (voiced by Lisa Lougheed) – Bentley's teenage basketball-playing sister, who becomes a prominent character in Season 5, after her first appearance in the Season 4 episode "Spring Fever", where she comes to visit. She is a caricature of her voice-actress (This would likely be similar to the narrators of many Rankin/Bass specials, usually being caricatures of their own celebrity voice actors).

Supporting

  • Forest Ranger Dan (voiced by Rupert Holmes (special 1), Leo Sayer (special 2), John Schneider (special 3), Kevin Gillis (special 4 (uncredited)) and Murray Crunchley (series) – He is the caretaker of the Evergreen Forest, as well as the father of Tommy and Julie and owner of Schaeffer and Broo during the specials and Season 1. He is shown to be a single father as there is no mention of the mother of his children in neither the specials nor the series.
  • Tommy (voiced by Hadley Kay (specials) and Noam Zylberman (series)) – Forest Ranger Dan's son and one of Schaeffer and Broo's original owners as well as Julie's little brother.
  • Julie (voiced by Tammy Bourne (specials) and Vanessa Lindorres (series) – Forest Ranger Dan's daughter and one of Schaeffer and Broo's original owners as well as Tommy's older sister.
  • Mr. Mammoth (voiced by Carl Banas) – A rhinoceros who is the richest, most powerful character on the show, he speaks in incoherent mumbles which are translated by his assistant
  • Sidekick (voiced by Rick Jones, Seasons 1–2) and Dan Hennessey (Season 5) – Mr. Mammoth's canary assistant who translates his grumbles.
  • Mr. Knox (voiced by Len Carlson) – An acquaintance of Cyril Sneer, a southern crocodile/business mogul; he is married to Lady Baden-Baden, and owner of the television company K.N.O.X. TV. He and Cyril are rivals, though it is a friendly one.
  • Cliff Sneer (voiced by Cory Fieldman) – Nephew to Cyril and always the cool cousin to Cedric very clever bloke and a hit with the ladies.
  • Lady Baden-Baden (voiced by Bob Dermer) – A wealthy, melodramatic hen who eventually marries Mr. Knox. She was a theatre actress in her old days, and now is an enthusiastic patron of the arts. She later becomes mayor of the Evergreen Forest.
  • Professor Witherspoon Smedley-Smythe (voiced by Len Carlson) – A goat who runs the Evergreen Museum.
  • Dr. Canard (voiced by Len Carlson) – A duck who is Cyril's doctor.
  • Mr. Willow (voiced by Carl Banas) – A friendly polar bear who is the owner of Willow's General Store.
  • Mrs. Suey-Ellen Pig (voiced by Nonnie Griffin) – The pigs' mother. She appears in two episodes, "Mom's the Word", where her name is revealed, and "Promises Promises".
  • Milton Midas (voiced by Len Carlson) – An eagle businessman and scam artist. He is responsible for the poisoning of the fishing hole at Rippling Pond in the series' penultimate episode "The One that Got Away".
  • George and Nicole Raccoon (voiced by Dan Hennessey and Elizabeth Hanna) – Ralph's respective older brother and sister-in-law and the father and mother of Bentley and Lisa Raccoon. A couple who were once nomads. George hosts "Chef Surprise", a cooking show on KNOX-TV.

Cast

Main

Additional voices

Production

The Raccoons franchise was originally conceived by Kevin Gillis in the 1970s, while appearing in shows like Celebrity Cooks and Yes You Can. The initial idea for the show was created by Gillis and columnist Gary Dunford (they drew their inspiration for Ralph Raccoon from a dilemma that happened at a cottage in Ottawa). Dunford backed out, but Gillis took his idea to Ottawa lawyer Sheldon S. Wiseman, who saw a potential in Gillis' idea and put together a large group – animators, musicians, and writers, to create the first special to star the characters known as The Christmas Raccoons.[4][5] Production on the special began in 1979 and was completed in 1980, and the special was shown on the December of the same year on CBC Television. It was also shown in countries around the world, including the United States and the United Kingdom. The special was a huge hit and resulted in two sequel specials The Raccoons on Ice and The Raccoons and the Lost Star and a direct-to-video special, The Raccoons: Let's Dance!. In 1981, United States TV networks CBS, NBC and ABC approached Sheldon Wiseman about producing a 13 episode Raccoons TV series.[6] In 1984, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Disney Channel began funding on the television series, which cost about $4.5 million to make.[7][8] In the United States, the show was run on The Disney Channel from July 4, 1985, to August 28, 1992.[9] In Canada, it was shown on CBC on Monday evenings for the first season and was shown in a block consisting of The Wonderful World of Disney and Fraggle Rock on Sundays for the next two seasons before moving to Wednesdays in its fourth, sharing an hour block with The Beachcombers and then finally Tuesdays in its fifth and final season.

Music

The series had a new wave soundtrack including the theme song "Run with Us" by cast member Lisa Lougheed. Season 1 ended with a different version of the song, not sung by Lougheed. "Run with Us" was performed in Season 1 by Stephen Lunt. In the first season, the French Canadian singer Luba performed several songs, several of which were later re-recorded by Lougheed for use in other seasons. There were also several other songs performed by other musicians such as Rita Coolidge and Rupert Holmes who performed songs for the first special, Leo Sayer and Coolidge again for the second, and John Schneider and Dottie West for the last television special. Three of the songs had replaced Schneider's vocals with Frank Floyd and Hank Martin. Rory Dodd, The Dior Bros. (actually Kevin Gillis and Jon Stroll under a pseudonym), and several other musicians also had songs performed, although somewhat rarely compared to the aforementioned people. According to Jon Stroll, Frank Floyd, the frontman of the 1970s R&B funk group The Writers, was originally selected to be the main male singer for the series. Instead, as backup singer Valerie Wilson suggested, they replaced Floyd at the last minute with Curtis King Jr.

The earlier version of "Run with Us", like quite a few of the other songs from The Raccoons, were never officially released. The songs from the first two specials were released on the album Lake Freeze – The Raccoons Songtrack in 1983. A soundtrack for the fourth special was released in 1984, but featured vocals from Frank Floyd and Hank Martin to replace John Schneider. Nine of the songs from the series featured on Lougheed's album Evergreen Nights (1988), though Lougheed only sang some of the songs (sometimes in duets), while some were sung by other artists (Curtis King Jr. and Stephen Lunt). The French version of "Run with Us", as well as most of Luba and Lisa Lougheed's songs, was performed by the French Canadian singer Jano Bergeron with "Run with Us" being renamed in French to "Viens Vers Nous".

The instrumental music was composed by Kevin Gillis and Jon Stroll and performed largely by the National Arts Centre Orchestra from Ottawa, Canada. Most of the instrumental cues heard in the series were actually recorded for The Raccoons and the Lost Star and re-used. Only six of the instrumental tunes (two from The Raccoons on Ice and four from The Raccoons and the Lost Star) have ever been released officially (they can be found on the Lake Freeze and Let's Dance! albums).

Animation

From 1979 to 1985, Canadian animation company Atkinson Film-Arts provided the animation for the four specials and first season of the series.[10][note 1] In 1986, after producing the first 11 episodes, Hinton Animation Studios took over to animate the remaining seasons of the show (seasons 2–5).[11][note 2]

Home video releases

Embassy Pictures and its home video counterpart were responsible for releasing the specials and select episodes (mostly Season 1) on home video from 1982 to 1994.[12] Embassy also released the specials on Laserdisc format. Other distributors, such as Catalyst & GoodTimes released some specials and episodes on VHS from in 1995 and 2001 to 2005.

In the UK, Embassy Home Entertainment released the four Raccoons specials on VHS in the mid-1980s, before the distribution rights went to Channel 5 Video (a division of Polygram Video) in 1986. They re-released the four specials on video, as well as released another video called The Raccoons Big Surprise with two Season 1 episodes "Surprise Attack" and "Going It Alone" (Cat. No. CFV 05042). Then three videos with Season 2 episodes were released, the first two were by Picture Music International (PMI) that included "Double Play" and "The Sweet Smell of Success" on volume 1, released in 1988 and then "Blast from the Past" and "Power Trip" on volume 2, released in 1989. Then Video Collection International Ltd released a third tape which contained the episodes "Stop The Clock" and "The Artful Dodger" on 13 August 1990 (Cat No. VC1191). That same tape was re-released again by Video Collection International Ltd on 22 July 1991, as part of their Children's Club range (Cat No. KK0019).

In 2003, Morningstar Entertainment released the show on DVD for the first time. Two 9-episode boxsets were released, each containing 3 discs that were also available separately. The discs were released without any region coding in NTSC format. The first set contained nine of the ten episodes from season 2 (omitting "Stop the Clock") and the second set contained the first nine episodes of season 3. The extras include character bios, a chance to create your own scene from The Raccoons and Raccoon-A-Roma DVD-ROM content, like QuickTime animated sequences. For this release, Len Carlson also reprised his role as Bert during menus and gave in-character commentary before and after episodes. Both sets are now out of print.

A 2-disc Region 2 PAL DVD release of the complete series 1 was released on September 17, 2007 through Fabulous Films Ltd. The bonus features on set 1 were duplicated from the Canadian release, mainly the create a scene and Raccoon-A-Roma DVD ROM content. They later released a DVD entitled "Three Adventures With The Raccoons" on April 7, 2008. This DVD contained the first 3 episodes of Series 1 with no extras. Series 2 was released on April 20, 2009 by Fabulous Films Ltd. in another 2-disc set. DVD extras on the set include character model sheets and a documentary.

On September 18, 2009, MORE Entertainment released an 8-disc DVD set in Germany, it contained all 60 episodes (7–8 per disc) and no extras. The language track is German only.

On December 14, 2009, the first season of The Raccoons is released on iTunes in Canada. On April 19, 2010, the first season is also released on iTunes in the United States.[13][14][15] The first two seasons are released on DVD to Netflix in the United States in early-2010 and in Canada on August 2011.

On November 29, 2013, MORE Entertainment in Germany had released a DVD featuring all four of the Raccoons specials on DVD. Like the complete series set the only language track is German.

Reception

The Raccoons was well received by critics. The New York Times, in its review for their second TV special, said "the Raccoons are an adorable lot, supported nicely by an attractive production."[1] Variety praised the third special, The Raccoons and the Lost Star, calling it "a rollicking good adventure filled with space-age animation, high-tech gadgetry, lilting tunes, a lovable sheepdog, and the delightful Raccoons team."[16]

The show was nominated for many awards, including a Gemini Award for Best Sound and Best Writing, and won the Gemini for Best Animated Series.

In 1990, Bert and Lisa were named the mascots of the Canadian Olympic team.[17] There were no Olympic Games that year.

Reboot

On July 4, 2017, it was revealed that series creator Kevin Gillis was working on a reboot of the series.[18] An unlisted pitch pilot with slightly redesigned characters was found on YouTube on the 11th of March, 2018, however the video was soon taken down by Big Jump Entertainment due to a copyright claim. On June 17th of that same year, Big Jump officially revealed the new designs for Bert, Ralph, Melissa, Cyril and Cedric on their website.[19]

Notes

  1. All episodes in season 1 say in the end credits "Animation Facility: Atkinson Film-Arts"
  2. All episodes in season 2–5 say in the end credits "Produced at Hinton Animation Studios Inc."

References

  1. 1 2 O'CONNOR, JOHN J. (April 16, 1982). "TV WEEKEND; A-BOMB NURSERY TALES, RACCOONS AND IRELAND". The New York Times. Retrieved December 7, 2011.
  2. "Raccoons Get Own Series". The Leader-Post. October 18, 1985. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  3. Cyril Sneer wins Magee new fans, Toronto Star – Sep 20, 1987
  4. Wesley, David (December 8, 1984). "Raccoons Land A Disney Series". The Montreal Gazette. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  5. "Christmas cartoon latest success for TV performer". Ottawa Citizen. November 13, 1980. Retrieved 2010-10-30.
  6. McLaughlin, Paula (November 2, 1981). "Film company skating on solid ice". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  7. "Raccoon in TV show Bigtime". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2010-10-30.
  8. Forchuk, Rick (November 15, 1985). "Raccoons Big Success". The Leader-Post. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  9. The Disney Channel Magazine, Vol. 10, no. 4, August/September 1992: p. 36, 52.
  10. "Raccoons Are No Bandits". The Windsor Star. December 19, 1981. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  11. Taylor, Noel (November 22, 1986). "Cartoon Characters Spawn A New Studio". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  12. Wayne, Jamie (December 14, 1985). "Raccoons Find Gold In Evergreen Forest". The Financial Post. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  13. Zahed, Ramin (July 23, 2010). "Skywriter Media and E1 Launch Raccoons on iTunes". Animation Magazine. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
  14. DeMott, Rick (July 23, 2010) Eco-Toon Raccoons Coming to iTunes Animation World Network. Retrieved December 29, 2010
  15. Getzler, Wendy (July 23, 2010). "The Raccoons make their comeback on iTunes US". KidScreen. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
  16. "The Raccoons: Promo Image". The UnOfficial Raccoons Home Page. Retrieved December 7, 2011.
  17. "Olympic mascots [Quickly...]". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 29 June 1990. p. C1.
  18. "The Raccoons Turn 32! Stay Tuned For A New Look Return…". Blog.truffleshuffle.co.uk. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  19. "The Raccoons - Big Jump Entertainment". www.bigjumpent.com. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
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