Basil (Sesame Park)
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''Sesame Park'' is the Canadian version of ''Sesame Street'' co-produced by Sesame Workshop and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The series originally functioned as a re-edited version of the original American series, and was named ''Sesame Street Canada'' and later, ''Canadian Sesame Street'', with some of the segments replaced with ones produced in Canada and later featuring Canadian-exclusive Muppet characters. In 1996, the series adopted a new format and was renamed ''Sesame Park''.


''Canadian Sesame Street''

Daniel McCarthy (producer), Daniel McCarthy, the director of the CBC Sesame Street Project, developed ''Sesame Street Canada'' for CBC Television. The series, which debuted in 1972, was originally a hybrid of American and Canadian production segments. McCarthy partnered with the Children's Television Workshop to introduce new, CBC-produced segments to the show's original American footage. He also introduced distinct Canadian themes and set designs to the show. The series was later titled ''Canadian Sesame Street.'' During the 1970s and 1980s it anchored a three-show block that included ''Friendly Giant'' (later replaced by ''Fred Penner's Place'') and ''Mr. Dressup''. Most of the production of the Canadian segments took place in Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Halifax, and Montreal.


Content

In 1972, the bulk of ''Sesame Streets content was licensed out to CBC Television, originally as five-minute interstitials during commercial breaks. CBC then added live-action and animated segments teaching about Canadian culture and French language, French bilingualism, replacing segments on Spanish language, Spanish and American history on the original program. Some Spanish segments still aired in Canada, although fewer in number and usually related to the show's Hispanic main-cast characters, Maria and Luis. In 1981, the amount of Canadian content per show was increased to 30 minutes. In 1990 a seasonal special was created for the series, titled Basil Hears A Noise.


Characters

In 1987, a series of specially made Canadian Muppet characters were introduced, including Basil (Sesame Park), Basil the Bear (similar and equal in role to Big Bird), French-Canadian Louis the Otter (similar and equal in role to Oscar the Grouch), and Dodi the bush pilot. The following year, additional new characters included Dr. Bazuki, Fern, Robert, and wheelchair-user Katie (Sesame Street), Katie. The Henson Muppet shop also provided some List of Muppets#Whatnots, Anything Muppets which could be redressed to become whatever characters the script called for, including Barbara Plum (a parody of CBC broadcasting legend Barbara Frum). Beau Beaver, an animated character, would discuss national symbols, particularly those appearing on Canadian money. In 1994, anchorman Peter Londonbridge and storyteller Margaret Redwood were added to the cast.


Messaging

The 1987 season focused on multiculturalism, family, and the environment.


''Sesame Park''

In 1996, the CBC decided to take on the job of producing different kinds of content for the series; specifically to have their own "street". Producer Shirley Greenfield and screenwriter Jill Golick decided to set the show in a park, rather than on an urban street. A new half-hour series entitled ''Sesame Park'' was born. The series premiered in September 1996. It joined the CBC Playground lineup on October 21, along with ''Wimzie's House''. The show's animated sequences were created in Toronto, while live-action segments were shot in Regina, Saskatchewan, Regina, Vancouver, and Winnipeg. ''Sesame Park'' was cancelled in 2001 for undisclosed reasons.


Characters

Added to the cast were a Muppet kitten named Chaos (Sesame Park), Chaos (who is similar to Elmo, serving the same role, and is named after Golick's own cat), and a human character named Ray. Basil was now played by Bob Stutt. Guest appearances included ''Red Green (character), Red Green'', a Canadian situation-comedy character played by Steve Smith (comedian), Steve Smith, Eric Peterson as Old King Cole, and Janet-Laine Green as Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Goldilocks.


Content

About sixty percent of the new series was produced in Canada, with the remaining forty percent being segments from Children's Television Workshop.


Awards

In 1999, the series received its nomination and win from the Gemini Awards, for Best Preschool Program or Series (Wendy Smith, Susan Sheehan, Duncan Lamb). Bob Stutt was nominated that year for Best Performance in a Preschool Program or Series. In 2000, Sheila McCarthy won Best Performance in a Preschool Program or Series, for her role in an episode of the show, beating out fellow guest star Pier Kohl, as well as others. In 2001, the series won Best Preschool Program or Series (Wendy Smith, Susan Sheehan, Duncan Lamb), beating out ''Land O' Hands'' and ''The Nook Counting Network''. Guest Eric Peterson won again for Best Performance in a Preschool Program or Series, beating out Pier Kohl, James Rankin, Natasha LaForce and Gisèle Corinthios.


Legacy

As with the original ''Sesame Street'', some segments of ''Canadian Sesame Street'' and ''Sesame Park'' were farmed out to other versions of ''Sesame Street'', in particular, ''Plaza Sésamo'', the Latin American version of ''Sesame Street''. In addition, since the rise of cable television in Canada in the 1970s (and before that for communities close to the US border), the original American ''Sesame Street'' could still be viewed on PBS-affiliated stations. ''Sesame Street'' now airs on Treehouse TV, a Canadian channel aimed at preschoolers, with specials airing on the Global Television Network, one of Canada’s major terrestrial broadcast networks. Various segments, including ''Global Grover'' and ''Elmo's World'', have aired separately on the channel for many years after ''Open Sesame (TV series), Open Sesame''.


Cast

* Tim Gosley - Basil (Sesame Park), Basil the Polar bear, Polar Bear (1987–1996) * Trish Leeper - Katie (Sesame Street), Katie, Barbara Plum * Rob Mills - Dodi (1987–1996), Garth Burmengi * Pier Paquette - Louis the Otter * Derek Ritschel - Ray * Gord Robertson - Dodi (assistance in flying sequences) * Bob Stutt - Basil (Sesame Park), Basil the Polar bear, Polar Bear (1996–2001) * Karen Valleau - Chaos (Sesame Park), Chaos the Cat * Noreen Young - Dodi (1996–2001)


References


External links

* * {{Sesame Street international 1972 Canadian television series debuts Canadian television shows featuring puppetry CBC Kids original programming 2001 Canadian television series endings 1970s Canadian children's television series 1980s Canadian children's television series 1990s Canadian children's television series 2000s Canadian children's television series Sesame Street international co-productions 1970s preschool education television series 1980s preschool education television series 1990s preschool education television series 2000s preschool education television series Canadian preschool education television series Canadian television series based on American television series