Fingerbobs | |
---|---|
Genre | Live-action/Puppet TV series |
Created by | Joanne Cole Michael Cole |
Presented by | Rick Jones |
Theme music composer | Michael Jessett |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Producer | Q3 London |
Running time | 15 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | BBC1 |
Release | 14 February 15 May 1972 | –
Related | |
Fingermouse | |
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview) |
Fingerbobs is a British children's television programme made by Q3 for the BBC. The first episode was broadcast on 14 February 1972 on BBC1 as part of Watch with Mother.[1] The show was created by Joanne and Michael Cole, who also created Bod. Only thirteen episodes were ever made and were regularly repeated until December 1984.
Presented by mime artist "Yoffy" (played by Canadian actor Rick Jones), each ten-minute episode told a story centred on a paper finger puppet animal and usually involved collecting various items (such as pebbles or feathers) to make up another object at the end. The finger puppets, each of whom had their own song, included:
Other animal characters included Enoch the woodpecker, Scaredy the crow, Louise the squirrel, Prickly Friend the hedgehog and Gloria, a white mouse who appeared in the last edition as a girlfriend for Fingermouse. These creatures only made occasional appearances and did not have their own songs.
Fingermouse gained his own series in 1985. In this series, the focus was more on musical instruments. One series was made of thirteen programmes.
The memorable theme tune went "Yoffy lifts a finger, and a mouse is there/Puts his hands together, and a seagull takes the air/Yoffy lifts a finger, and a scampi darts about/Yoffy bends another, and a tortoise head peeps out/These hands were made for making, and making they must do."
After filming the last episode, Jones destroyed the mouse puppet while the camera was still rolling.[2]
Fingerbobs was referenced in the video of "A Town Called Hypocrisy" by Lostprophets.