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Pinky and Perky

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Pinky and Perky
Pinky and Perky as they appeared on their original BBC TV show
GenreChildren's television series
Created by
  • Jan Dalibor
  • Vlasta Dalibor
Presented by
  • Jan Dalibor
  • Vlasta Dalibor
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Original release
NetworkBBC1 (1957–1968), ITV (1968–1971)

Pinky and Perky is an animated children's television series first broadcast by BBC TV in 1957, and revived in 2008 as a CGI animation.

Original series

The title characters are a pair of anthropomorphic puppet pigs, named "Pinky" and "Perky", who were originally going to be named "Pinky" and "Porky" but there was a problem registering Porky as a character name. This was solved by Margaret Potter, the wife of their producer, Trevor Hill, who also discovered them, when she woke him up one night announcing "I've got it! Pinky and Perky!"[This quote needs a citation] They were created by Czechoslovakian immigrants Jan and Vlasta Dalibor. The characters of pigs were chosen because the pig is seen as a symbol of good luck in the former Czechoslovakia.[citation needed] The puppets, who had only very limited movements, looked very alike. Pinky wore red clothes and Perky wore blue, but this distinction was of little use on monochrome TV, so Perky often wore a hat.

Pinky and Perky spoke and sang in high-pitched voices, created by re-playing original voice recordings at twice the original recorded speed; the vocals were sung by Mike Sammes[1] while the backing track was played at half normal speed (Sammes did the same job for Ken Dodd's Diddymen, as Ross Bagdasarian did for the original Chipmunks in the early 1960s)—hence the expression "Pinky and Perky speed", when an LP record is played at 45 rpm or 78 rpm instead of the correct 33⅓ rpm. Pinky and Perky would often sing cover versions of popular songs, but also had their own theme song, "We Belong Together".

They had their own fictional TV station "PPC TV". They also performed comedy sketches usually with a human foil (similar to Basil Brush). Actor John Slater worked with them as a straight man for many years, enduring soakings from water pistols and such pranks. Other human companions included Roger Moffat, Jimmy Thompson, Bryan Burdon and Fred Emney.

Their show included other puppets such as the Beakles, (an avian parody of the Beatles), Topo Gigio, a mouse puppet who appeared in many later episodes as well as a female pig. Other puppets included Ambrose Cat, Basil Bloodhound, Bertie Bonkers the baby elephant, Conchita the Cow, Horace Hare and Vera Vixen.

The puppets also appeared on TV in the USA on a number of episodes of The Ed Sullivan Show: 532 (14 September 1958), 548 (4 January 1959), 573 (5 July 1959), 740 (10 March 1963), 780 (23 February 1964, where they shared the bill with the Beatles and Morecambe and Wise) and 908 (26 February 1967).

The pigs featured in series, such as Pinky and Perky's Pop Parade and Pinky and Perky's Island, for 11 years until 1968 on the BBC before transferring to ITV until 1971. There were no real people, sketches or stories in the shows at all. Instead, the puppets would be seen lip-synching and dancing to songs by the likes of Petula Clark. In this incarnation, each episode would end with the characters singing the Scaffold's hit "Thank U Very Much"; at the end of every episode, they would sing "Thank you very, very, very". At this point, there would be the only piece of spoken dialogue, which went along these lines:

"Who's going to say it?"
"Oh, let me!"
"No! I want to!"
"Alright, then, let's do it together! Ready—MUCH!"

Other shows and appearances

The characters enjoyed a brief revival in the 1990s, on the short-lived children's series The Pig Attraction. A children's annual was also produced in the '60s featuring their adventures.

The Pinky and Perky Show reappeared in an all-new CGI-animated television series on CBBC, beginning in November 2008 on BBC One. There are 52 episodes, each 13 minutes in length. Some of the old characters remained in the show, such as Vera Vixen (who often hatches schemes to try and get rid of the two pigs) and Morton Frog (who works in the production control room, usually running the end titles [or in "Cartoon Mash-Up", cueing the end music] at the end of an episode.). Alongside them, there were a host of new characters, such as K.T. the studio manager cat, Wilberforce the tortoise security guard (who comes up with impractical ideas for new acts or games for the show), and a pair of poodle receptionists called Tara and Tamara (who, in a recurring gag, often get Pinky and Perky's names wrong). There is also a steady stream of special 'celebrity' guests, many of which spoof better-known franchises, such as Doctor Who as "Dr. Roo" and Harry Potter as "Harry Trotter". The series was produced by Lupus Films, and line produced by Sally Marchant.

A DVD of the new look Pinky and Perky, featuring eight episodes from the new series, entitled Licence to Swill was released in 2009.[2]

Discography

Singles

All singles were released on 7" vinyl format unless otherwise stated:

EPs

EP cover of Children's Favourites with Pinky and Perky. Photographic illustration: Perky and a blue bird stand alongside Perky (seated) in front of a brick wall.
EP cover of Children's Favourites with Pinky and Perky (1961 Columbia Graphophone Company)
  • Children's Choice with Pinky and Perky (Columbia, 1960)
  • Children's Favourites with Pinky and Perky (Columbia, 1961)
  • Christmas with Pinky and Perky (Columbia, 1961)
  • Pinky and Perky Out West (Columbia, 1962)
  • Pinky and Perky's Pals (Columbia, 1962)
  • Pinky and Perky Down on the Farm (Columbia, 1963)
  • Nursery Romp (Columbia, 1963)
  • Pinky and Perky at the Circus (Columbia, 1964)
  • Pinky and Perky's Beat Party (Columbia, 1965)
  • Pinky and Perky in Outer Space (Columbia, 1965)
  • Playtime (Columbia, 1966)
  • Celebration Day (Columbia, 1966)
  • Pinky and Perky's Summer Holiday (Columbia, 1967)
  • Up, Up and Away (Columbia, 1967)
  • Coming Your Way (Columbia, 1968)

LPs

  • Pinky and Perky's Melodymaster (Columbia, 1963)
  • Pinky and Perky's Hit Parade (MFP, 1968)
  • Christmas with Pinky and Perky (MFP, 1969)
  • Pinky and Perky's Nursery Rhymes (MFP, 1970)
  • Pinky and Perky's Film Parade (MFP, 1970)
  • Pinky and Perky's Hit Parade No. 2 (MFP, 1971)
  • Pinky and Perky Have a Party (MFP, 1972)
  • Pinky and Perky's Hit Parade No. 3 (MFP, 1973)
  • Singalong Party (MFP, 1974)
  • Pinky and Perky's Pop Parade (MFP, 1975)
  • The Pig Attraction (also released on CD) (Telstar, 1993)

Cultural references

  • In Nick Hornby's 1998 novel About a Boy, the main character, Will, visits the record shop Championship Vinyl and sees an attractive woman asking for a Pinky and Perky record. She is met with contempt from the sales clerk. A few days later Will thinks he sees the woman again and, trying to make an impression, introduces himself with the line, "I like Pinky and Perky," only to suddenly realize that it's a different woman.
  • Pinky and Perky are mentioned in Richard Thompson's song "Let It Blow" which is the first track of his 2005 album Front Parlour Ballads.
  • The two appear in The Goodies episode The Goodies Rule – O.K.? where they sound a buzzer ("Not so fast!").
  • Pinky and Perky are mentioned in The Bank Job, a 2008 British crime film, in reference to two supporting characters.
  • In BBC1's Red Dwarf episode "Better Than Life", Rimmer refers to the Skutters as "Pinky and smegging Perky".
  • In BBC1's The Good Life, the pigs adopted by Barbara and Tom Good are named Pinky and Perky.
  • In BBC2's Top Gear, James May refers to co-presenters Jeremy Clarkson and Richard Hammond as Pinky and Perky.
  • BBC1's Call the Midwife, set in the late 1950s, makes several references to Pinky and Perky.

Notes