Jay Jay the Jet Plane

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Jay Jay the Jet Plane
Also known asJay Jay
GenreChildren's television series Musical
Created by
  • David Michel
  • Deborah Michel
Written by
Starring
Voices of
Narrated by
  • John William Galt (pilot series)
  • Chuck Morgan (US)
  • Michael Donovan (US)
  • Brian Cant (UK)
Theme music composerStephen Michael Schwartz
Parachute Express
Opening theme"Gee, How I Love to Fly" (1994–1996); "Jay Jay the Jet Plane Theme Song" (1998–2005)
Ending theme"Gee, How I Love to Fly" (Reprise) (1994–2004); "Jay Jay the Jet Plane Theme Song" (1998–2005)
Composers
  • Craig Dobbin
  • Brian Mann
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes62 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • David Michel
  • Bruce D. Johnson
  • William T. Baumann
  • Chris Walker
ProducerDavid Michel
Running time25 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network
Release
  • Pilot series:
  • December 13, 1994 (1994-12-13) – October 29, 1996 (1996-10-29)
  • Main series:
  • November 2, 1998 (1998-11-02) – November 25, 2005 (2005-11-25)
  • Revival series:
  • TBD – TBD

Jay Jay the Jet Plane is an American live-action/CGI-animated musical children's television series which aired on The Learning Channel, PBS Kids, TBN and Smile.[1] The series aired for a total of 4 seasons and has 62 episodes. The series is centered on a group of aircraft that live in the city of Tarrytown, New York and takes place at the Tarrytown Airport. The episodes were commonly distributed in 25-minute-long (without commercials) pairs, with one header sequence and one end credit for each pair. Each episode contains one or more songs.

The theme song and many of the other songs were written by well-known children's singer/songwriter Stephen Michael Schwartz and sung by his popular musical group, Parachute Express. The series was created by David and Deborah Michel and was intended to be educational to teach life and moral lessons to children.

History

Original Series

Early episodes using physical models ('Pilot Series')

In late 1994, a short live-action series was produced at AMS Production Company in Dallas, Texas, with real model plane characters, and handcrafted human characters; they had the same personalities as in the later series. This original series was narrated similarly to the first twelve seasons of Thomas & Friends, or Theodore Tugboat.[2] Three videos were released: Jay Jay's First Flight in December 1994, Old Oscar Leads the Parade in February 1995, and Tracy's Handy Hideout in October 1996. This original series was narrated by and features the voices of John William Galt. These three were known as the "pilot series".

CGI and live-action-based episodes

On November 2, 1998, the CGI-animated/live-action series premiered on The Learning Channel as part of the Ready Set Learn block. Voice actress Mary Kay Bergman provided the original voice of Jay Jay, Herky, Savannah, and Revvin' Evan. After her death, Debi Derryberry and Donna Cherry replaced her.

In 2005, new episodes were produced featuring additional characters, including the red Latina monoplane Lina. Each episode begins featuring a Jay Jay's Mysteries segment in which Jay Jay and Lina explore things that may be mysteries to the intended age group, such as how planes fly, and how the five senses are used. The mysteries segment is followed by a story that comes from the third season episodes of the series, so in effect, the new series repackages previously broadcast content on the subchannel networks Qubo and Smile. It aired on Channel 5 and Tiny Pop in the UK.

In 2019, Yippee TV became the exclusive streaming service of Jay Jay the Jet Plane.[3]

Reboot

Promotional announcement image, depicting the new design of Jay Jay.

A new reboot of the series titled The New Adventures of Jay Jay the Jet Plane[4] (originally titled The New World of Jay Jay the Jet Plane) has been confirmed through Trilogy Animation Group's website.[5] Unlike the original series, the characters' faces are completely redesigned, and made to look more cartoony, and like the original series, it will be CGI-animated.[6]

The first trailer for the show was released in July 2022.

Production

The series was produced by Venice, California-based production company Modern Cartoons at their soundstage in Oxnard, California, United States. Unlike Thomas & Friends, this series used a variety of cutting edge animation techniques:[7]

  • The backgrounds were miniature sets (usually built on two 4 by 8 feet (1,200 mm × 2,400 mm) sheets of plywood).
  • The humans, including Brenda Blue, are live-action people and shot in front of a greenscreen.
  • The planes were computer models created in PowerAnimator in Seasons 1-2 and Maya in Season 3 and Jay Jay's Mysteries. Models from the pilot series were made for reference.
  • The movement of the planes was recorded by playing out the scene with wood models equipped with magnetic position sensors. The planes had a switch to aid landing and taxiing, due to some minor fluctuations in the magnetic positioning data.
  • The planes' faces and lip-syncing were done by face tracking, a technique where reflective spots are put on a voice actor's face. The voice track is digitally recorded along with the spot data. Then the face is rendered using a form of parametric animation.
  • Head movement and other effects were done by joysticks.

The complex mathematical and CGI issues were solved by Frank Ford Little, Ph.D.

Several proprietary software systems were used:

  • Data/audio recording and smoothing were done on a Windows machine.
  • Daily cuts were done on "Compaq Alpha" computers running a 64-bit version of Windows NT 4.0.

Characters

Starting in the pilot series, every character and model plane is voiced by John William Galt.

The planes and road vehicles are CGI characters, while the humans are live-action actors.

Relationship words for the airplane characters refer to being in loco parentis for purposes of upbringing, and education, not for biological parenthood. The story says that (some of) the airplane characters were made in factories.

Some of the stories describe characters as doing actions offscreen that would need foldaway arms (e.g. Big Jake digging holes), but those arms are never seen onscreen.

Aircraft

Young planes

  • Jay Jay (voiced originally by Mary Kay Bergman in Seasons 1-2, then later by Debi Derryberry in Season 3 and the reboot after Bergman's death and Donna Cherry in Jay Jay's Mysteries in the CGI/live-action series) is a small blue 6-year-old (originally brown in some of the pilot series) jet plane who acts as a twin brother figure. He is the titular character and main protagonist of the series. His catchphrases are "That's me!" in the opening sequence, "Yipeeee!", "Wheeeee!" and "Wingariffic!" His basis is greatly based on a heavily modified Airbus A318.
  • Tracy (voiced by Gina Ribisi in Seasons 1-2, and later by Sandy Fox in Season 3 and the reboot Jay Jay's Mysteries in the CGI/live-action series) is a small pink 6-year-old jet plane who is Jay Jay's twin sister and best friend. She has normal hearing but understands American Sign Language. Her catchphrases are "Zoomariffic!", "Terrific!" and "Yay!" Her basis is greatly based on a heavily modified Airbus A318.
  • Snuffy (voiced by Gina Ribisi in Seasons 1-2, and later by Sandy Fox in Season 3 and the reboot Jay Jay's Mysteries in the CGI/live-action series) is a small green, later yellow propeller-driven 4-year-old monoplane who is a good friend of Jay Jay and Tracy. He is equipped for skywriting. In episode consistency (which depends on the order), one episode says that he has not flown further away from Tarrytown than Lightning Bug Lake, but other episodes show him flying much further; in "Grumpy O'Malley", Snuffy still has not gotten rid of his initial shyness, but in many other episodes, he shows no sign of shyness. His catchphrases are "Oh, neat!", "Oh, goody, goody, goody!" and "Super-duper!" in the reboot.
  • Herky (originally voiced by Mary Kay Bergman in Seasons 1-2, and later by Debi Derryberry in Season 3 and the reboot after Bergman's death and Donna Cherry in Jay Jay's Mysteries in the CGI/live-action series) is a small (originally in some of the pilot series) yellow 5-year-old helicopter who is Jay Jay's friend. In the pilot series, he spoke in a fluent Italian accent with a stutter (like famous Looney Tunes character Porky Pig), provided by John William Galt, who voiced all the other characters. In the CGI/live-action series, he spoke in a fluent German accent and rolls his "R"s whenever he speaks. He has skids instead of wheels, and cannot taxi on the ground. His catchphrase is "All r-r-right!"
  • Ricky Rescue (voiced by Josh Keaton) is a yellow and red helicopter who acts as a teenage brother figure. He is known for his rescue duties. He is Herky's twin brother. Like Herky, he has skids and cannot taxi on the ground.

Adult planes

  • Big Jake (voiced by Chuck Morgan in Seasons 1-2, then later by Michael Donovan in Season 3 in the CGI/live-action series and James Mathis III in the full CGI reboot) is a silver, later green propeller-driven Lockheed Super Constellation cargo carrier and Lockheed Model 10 Electra mix who acts as a father figure to the young planes. In the pilot series, he seem to be based on a Boeing C-97 or a Douglas DC-7C.
  • Savannah (voiced by Mary Kay Bergman in Seasons 1-2, then later by Debi Derryberry in Season 3 after Bergman's death in the CGI/live-action series and Ozioma Akagha in the full CGI reboot) is a silver supersonic airliner who acts as a mother figure. She was made at Savannah, Georgia, hence her name and Southern Belle accent. She somewhat resembles the Concorde supersonic jet.
  • Old Oscar (voiced by Chuck Morgan in Seasons 1-2, and later by Michael Donovan in Season 3 and the reboot Jay Jay's Mysteries in the CGI/live-action series) is an old green (gray in the pilot series) biplane who knows all sorts of flying tricks and acts as a grandfather figure. His catchphrases are "Well, by golly gosh!" and "Eh-hee-hee-hee!"

Road vehicles

  • Revvin' Evan (originally voiced by Mary Kay Bergman in Seasons 1-2, and later by Debi Derryberry in Season 3 and the reboot after Bergman's death and Donna Cherry in Jay Jay's Mysteries) is a 6/7-year-old fire engine and is the cousin of Tuffy. His catchphrase is "I'm revvin', I'm Evan! I'm revvin', Revvin' Evan!"
  • Tuffy (voiced by Sandy Fox) is a confidential 3-year-old tow truck and is the cousin of Revvin' Evan; has a speech impediment. Her catchphrases are "I n-n-n-n-never give up!" and "Just let me try it one more time!"

Humans

  • Brenda Blue (portrayed by Eve Whittle in the US version, Vanessa Stacey in the UK version of the CGI/live-action series, and later voiced by Stephanie Southerland in the full CGI reboot) is a woman in a blue jumpsuit and usually wears a red cap or a blue cap, as well as a pair of red high top Converse. She is in charge of the airport and is the airplane mechanic. She does not use the airport's control tower but communicates with the planes by a portable two-way radio from the ground.
  • Miss Lee Jones is the librarian who works at the Tarrytown Public Library. She is deaf and cannot speak, as she uses sign language to do so. Tracy and Brenda are able to translate her. Despite the library being shown in some episodes, Miss Lee Jones only appeared in two episodes.
  • E.Z. O'Malley (portrayed by Brian Nahas in the CGI/live-action series) is the founder of E.Z. Airlines, with cousins Grumpy O'Malley (who lives at Dewdrop Farm), Pierre O'Malley (lives in France), and Tex O'Malley (lives in Texas). (Note: here the letter 'Z' is pronounced 'zee', not 'zed'.)
  • Mrs. Blue is Brenda Blue's mother, who sometimes visits Tarrytown Airport. She only appears in the CGI/live-action series episode "Brenda's Mother's Day".

Animals

  • Billy Bee and Bobby Bee, as their names suggest, are two bees found on Big Jake and Herky's head in "Catch the Buzz".
  • The lightning bugs at Lightning Bug Lake.
  • Breezy is a monarch butterfly who is good friends with Jay Jay. His only appearance is "Jay Jay's Butterfly Adventure".
  • The blue whale in the ocean.

Jay Jay's Mysteries

Aircraft

  • Lina (voiced by Ashley Whittaker) is a red propeller-driven monoplane and Old Oscar's niece from Mexico.
  • Montana (voiced by Donna Cherry) is a purple and green propeller-driven safari plane. She only appears in "The Mystery of Weather" and "The Mystery of Size and Shape".
  • Captain Bob is a firefighting plane.
  • Solar is a yellow solar-powered monoplane with 6 propellers and long, wide wings covered by solar panels on the tops of the wings.

Road vehicles

Places

  • Tarrytown is a small town in a hilly area with enough rain to keep the land green, and frost and snow sometimes in the winter; forested mountains and a desert are nearby.
  • Tarrytown Airport is the airport where Jay Jay and his friends live, and Brenda Blue works. It is also run by a small firm called E.Z. Airlines consist of the following structures:
    • Main Hangar
    • Kids' Hangar
    • Revvin' Evan's Firehouse
    • Herky's Hangar
    • Observation Tower
    • Old Oscar's Barn
  • Tarrytown National Park
  • Smiling Meadow
  • Sandy Landing has a waterfront area.
  • Pangabula Island
  • Tarrytown Quarry
  • Sunshine Desert
  • Tippy Toppy Peak
  • Frosty Pines
  • Whistlin' Pines
  • Echo Canyon
  • Cherry Tree Lake
  • Crystal Cave
  • Lightning Bug Lake
  • Michael O'Tarry School
  • Andy's Donut Shop
  • Farmer Dale's Ranch
  • Rocky Peak

Sometimes, the planes taxi on the town streets.

Episodes

Season Episodes Originally aired (United States dates) Original network
First aired Last aired
Pilot series 12 December 13, 1994 (1994-12-13) October 31, 1995 (1995-10-31) Direct-to-video
1 12 November 2, 1998 (1998-11-02) December 21, 1998 (1998-12-21) TLC
2 14 January 4, 1999 (1999-01-04) March 14, 2000 (2000-03-14)
3 14 June 11, 2001 (2001-06-11) July 20, 2001 (2001-07-20) PBS Kids
4 10 September 5, 2005 (2005-09-05) November 25, 2005 (2005-11-25)


Reception

Common Sense Media gave the series a four out of five stars, saying, "Parents need to know that this series offers young fans life lessons such as valuing friends, overcoming shyness, and learning to like yourself. Kids will enjoy the often funny antics of 6-year-old Jay Jay and his friends. Don't be surprised if you catch your preschooler singing along with the show's simple songs."[8]

References

  1. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 442–443. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  2. ^ Amazon.com Jay Jay's First Flight VHS. ASIN 6303398499.
  3. ^ "Jay Jay the Jet Plane". Yippee TV.
  4. ^ "Trilogy Animation Group Reveals New Animation Slate".
  5. ^ "Animation Studio | Trilogy Animation| Orange County | United States". Trilogy Animation.
  6. ^ "resume". Denis Morella Animation Portfolio.
  7. ^ "Practical MoCap: Motion Capture for TV". Creative Planet Network. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  8. ^ "Jay Jay the Jet Plane - TV Review". www.commonsensemedia.org. October 19, 2009.

External links