Around the World in Eighty Days (1972 TV series)
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Around the World in Eighty Days is an animated television series that lasted one season of sixteen episodes, broadcast during the 1972–1973 season by NBC. It was the first Australian-produced cartoon to be shown on American network television. Leif Gram directed all sixteen episodes, and the stories were loosely adapted by Chester "Chet" Stover from the novel by Jules Verne.
Plot
More comedic in tone than Verne's novel, the motives of Phileas Fogg (Alistair Duncan) differed somewhat from those of his literary forerunner.
Fogg was passionately in love with Belinda Maze (Janet Waldo), whose uncle, Lord Maze (Owen Weingott), sternly disapproved of the commoner Fogg marrying his niece. Fogg proposed a wager: if he could travel around the world in eighty days, then Lord Maze would give him Belinda's hand in marriage; if Fogg failed, he would abandon her. The two men also made a side bet of ₤20,000.
Fogg was accompanied by his manservant, Jean Passepartout (Ross Higgins), and Passepartout's pet monkey, Toto. They employed all the methods of transportation available in the late 19th Century–balloons, trains, elephants, and steam ships–in the course of their journey. Fogg and Passepartout dispensed geographical knowledge to the audience at each of their stops.
Lord Maze hires a saboteur, Mr. Fix (Max Osbiston), to interfere with Fogg and Passepartout's journey. Unlike his counterpart in Verne's novel, Fix was not a Scotland Yard detective attempting to arrest Fogg on suspicion of bank robbery.
Fogg managed to complete his journey by the end of the programme's single-season run, winning Belinda's hand with little time to spare.
Episode structure
Each episode has the same structure:
- Fogg describes their destination to Passepartout.
- Fogg asks Passepartout to pack the bag with a seemingly random collection of items.
- Fogg teaches a proverb.
- Fix describes aloud about his plan to stop Fogg.
- Fogg and Passepartout follow their itinerary, while Fix tries to stop them.
- During the journey, Fogg finds the time to explain the history and geography of the locations they visit.
- Eventually, all the items Fogg and Passepartout took with them prove to be essential.
- The proverb Fogg introduced at the beginning of the episode also proves to be essential for their success.
- The episode ends with Fogg saying "Good show, Passepartout!"
Places and proverbs in each episode
Number of chapter | Place | Proverb |
---|---|---|
1 | London, Buckingham Palace | The motto of the wise is, be prepared for surprises. |
2 | Paris | Don't jump to conclusions, or conclusions may jump on you. |
3 | Switzerland and the Alps | There is always a way to save the day. |
4 | Rome | Don't put the cart before the horse. |
5 | Naples, Pompei | Don't make a mountain out of a molehill. |
6 | Mediterranean sea, Greek islands | Doubting your chances before you're done, may cost you the race you might have won.[1] |
7 | Greece, Athens | There is a time and a place for everything. |
8 | Egypt and the pyramids | Always think a problem through, before deciding what to do. |
9 | Sinai and Petra | The cure to most fear is knowledge. |
10 | Gaza, Damascus and Palmyra | The little things in life are like links in a chain: they never seem important by themselves. |
11 | Persia, Isfahan | To win life's game without a fall, keep your eyes open and on the ball. |
12 | India, Udaipur | We always help ourselves whenever we help others. |
13 | China sea, China | Honesty is the best policy. |
14 | Japan, Tokyo, Mount Fuji | Our rewards will be sweet, if we keep our world neat. |
15 | United States, California, San Francisco | Don't let your thoughts get in a rut; the knife which spreads may also cut. |
16 | United States, Louisiana, New Orleans; boat to England. | Learn to use what you have got, and you won't need what you have not. |
Production history
The series was produced through Australian Air Programs International, one of whose staff producers, Walter J. Hucker, served as the showrunner. NBC transmitted the sixteen episodes in the United States on its Saturday morning schedule during the 1972–1973 season.
Music
John Sangster composed the theme music, set to a variation on the tune of "Mademoiselle from Armentières." The lyrics were written, specifically for the show, by an uncredited writer.
Home video release
Around the World in Eighty Days was released on Region 1 DVD in the United States in a two disc set by Visual Entertainment on September 27, 2011.
References
- ^ On the other hand: "If you're over confident, you might miss the boat".
External links
- Around the World in Eighty Days at IMDb
- The theme song in YouTube.