Dr Karl Shuker's Official Website - http://www.karlshuker.com/index.htm

IMPORTANT:
To view a complete, regularly-updated listing of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's articles (each one instantly clickable), please click HERE!

IMPORTANT:

To view a complete, regularly-updated listing of my ShukerNature blog's articles (each one instantly clickable), please click HERE!

IMPORTANT:
To view a complete, regularly-updated listing of my Shuker's Literary Likings blog's articles (each one instantly clickable), please click HERE!

IMPORTANT:
To view a complete, regularly-updated listing of my Starsteeds blog's poetry and other lyrical writings (each one instantly clickable), please click HERE!

IMPORTANT:
To view a complete, regularly-updated listing of my Eclectarium blog's articles (each one instantly clickable), please click HERE!


Search This Blog


Tuesday, October 12, 2021

MR PIPER

 
Two screenshots from Mr Piper, starring Alan Crofoot in the title role (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Time for another of my rare forays beyond the big-screen world of the movies into the small-screen but no less fascinating world of TV. Today, after almost 60 years on from my first viewing of it, I am revisiting what for me will always be a wonderful, uniquely special TV show.

What is the very first TV show that you can remember watching? In my case, it is the truly magical but nowadays all-but-forgotten children's show to which this present blog article of mine is devoted – Mr Piper.

Created in Toronto, Canada, by Martin Andrews and Allan Wargon in 1960, and with Wargon also serving as its executive producer,  Mr Piper was a 25-min show that was originally screened by CBC Television in Canada in 1963, and was also shown on ITV in the UK during the 1960s, initially in its entirety, but when reshown here during the 1970s it was split into two 12.5-min shows (see later for more details). It takes its name from its central character and narrator, the somewhat stout, ever-cheerful, and totally magical Mr Piper, played by Canadian actor/opera singer Alan Crowfoot, and clearly inspired both in costume and in concept by the Pied Piper of Hamelin of European folklore. But whereas the latter used dark enchantments to lure children away from their parents and homes, TV's Mr Piper used his sunny enchantments to lure children into spending a happy, fun-filled time watching his joyful and also subtly educational show, which I absolutely loved as a small child in the early 1960s, viewing it with Mom on ATV, ITV's now long-gone West Midlands regional channel.

Incidentally, there is some controversy in online coverages of Mr Piper regarding the total number of episodes that were made and screened, with claims ranging from 13, 14, or 15, right up to as many as 39. However, my own memories tally with 15 episodes (39 episodes seems far too high a number, unless the subsequently-screened 12.5-min split versions of the original 25-min ones are also being included in this count, i.e. as separate episodes in their own right?).

Moving on, here is a breakdown of the Mr Piper show's fondly-remembered format. Each episode would begin with Crofoot as Mr Piper very tunefully singing over its animated opening titles what is unquestionably one of the catchiest TV theme songs ever written. Although I last watched this show on TV during the early 1970s, I have never forgotten that irrepressibly cheery song, and when, several years ago, I was delighted to be able to buy at long last a couple of DVDs containing a few segments (mostly Tele Tunes, see below) from various Mr Piper episodes, I discovered that I had indeed accurately remembered its theme song verbatim. If you'd like to hear it for yourself, click here to do so on YouTube.

 
Mr Piper singing his show's theme song inside his magical home, Pied Piper House, the setting for all of the Mr Piper episodes (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

After the theme song ended, each episode would then consist of 4 wholly autonomous segments (each with its own director), which could therefore be shown in any sequence, but here in the UK they were always screened in the following one (in Canada, they were apparently shown in a different sequence).

Segment 1 was 'Bag of Tricks', directed by Allan Wargon, during which Mr Piper would invariably get himself into all manner of humorous slapstick trouble when he pulled out of his big, polka-dotted, box-shaped bag of tricks a magical object (a different one in each episode). Memorably, he would always preface this segment with a short but relevant introductory statement, and point with his thumb or index finger to add emphasis, an action often accompanied by the sound of a single invisible bell ring, emphasizing the magical nature of what is about to happen. 'Bag of Tricks' was my favourite of the four segments per episode, so I was always glad that it was shown first within each episode screened here in the UK.

 
Mr Piper with his big polka-dot spotted bag of tricks (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Segment 2 was 'Tele Tunes', directed by James Mackay, in which Mr Piper would narrate a fairy story, usually a traditional folktale from somewhere in Europe or from the Arabian Nights. It would be accompanied by a visual portrayal of the story using (very) limited but nonetheless charming animation, and end with Mr Piper drawing forth a worthy moral from the tale. I was to learn many years later that in much of the USA, the Tele Tune cartoons were the only segments broadcast from episodes of Mr Piper, so that viewers there were entirely unaware that each episode originally contained three other segments too. Crofoot would provide some of the character voices, with others provided by an uncredited Billie Mae Richards.

 
A scene from a Tele Tune cartoon segment entitled 'Ali Baba' (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Segment 3 was 'Port of Call' (whose director is not presently known to me), the most educational segment, in which Mr Piper would narrate documentary-style film footage about cultures from around the world as seen through the eyes of their children. Once again, this was very charmingly conceived and presented, but due to its distinct lack of either magic or animals, I'm ashamed to say that I personally found it to be the least interesting of the quartet of segments per episode of Mr Piper. Even at that tender age, it was clear that my future career leanings were not going to point towards any sociological or anthropological aspirations!

 
A scene from a Port of Call segment featuring a Hong Kong boat-dwelling family (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Much more to my liking, conversely, was Segment 4, entitled 'Animal Farm', and directed by Vincent Vaitiekunas. Reminiscent of another popular 1960s children's TV show, the UK's Tales From the Riverbank, it was a very sweet vignette featuring several small animals inside a tiny barnyard, who would be talking to one another with human voices, mostly supplied by Crowfoot (plus some by Richards again), and involved in all manner of adventures. All of the animals had alliterative names, with my favourite animal being a beautifully-marked black and white pet rat called Rupert. Others that I could still readily recall even before chancing upon the above-mentioned Mr Piper DVDs some years ago include Kookie the Kitten, Harriet the Hen, and Bessie the Bunny.

 
Rupert the Rat from an Animal Farm segment (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Finally, albeit not a full-length segment in its own right, usually being interposed between the end of Segment 4 and the show's closing credits instead, was a brief scene featuring a talking scarlet macaw named Polly who in each episode would poses a different taxing riddle for Mr Piper to solve. She would always begin by uttering the line: "Piper – fiddle diddle, here's a riddle", to which Mr Piper variously replied: "All right, Polly" or "What is it, Polly?" She would address him in a somewhat imperious, peremptory manner as "Piper", and squawk with triumphant laughter when he invariably failed to work out the answer to her riddle. Here’s one of them: "When is it correct to eat with a knife, fork, AND spoon?" I'll leave you to puzzle over that while reading the remainder of this review (but if you can't wait that long, the answer is revealed at the end of the review).

 
Mr Piper and Polly (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

There are 15 different Tele Tune segments known to exist (another reason for believing that there were 15 original full-length episodes of Mr Piper in total), and these can be variously found online on YouTube, DailyMotion, etc, as well as on various DVD releases. However, few examples of the other three segments apparently still survive, sadly.

When Mr Piper was rescreened in the UK during the 1970s, the original 4-segment, 25-min episodes were now screened in split format, as 2-segment, 12.5-min episodes. Each of these half-length versions either contained one Segment 1 and one Segment 2, or one Segment 3 and one Segment 4. Obviously, me being me, with an abiding love of magic and cartoons, I preferred those half-length versions that contained Segments 1 and 2.

Until I purchased the DVDs, I'd never seen Mr Piper in colour (back in the 1960s and early 1970s when it was being screened, we still had a b/w TV set). So it was interesting and also pleasing to discover when watching the DVDs that the principal shades which featured, especially in Segment 1, were pastel greens, ochre, russets, and browns, nothing garish or gaudy, which would have been so out of place in this very tasteful, thoroughly genteel, and gentle, little show.

 
Mr Piper and Pals is one of the two Mr Piper DVDs that I own – this one contains a selection of the Tele Tune cartoon segments from various episodes of Mr Piper (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution/East West Entertainment LLC – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Prior to the coming of the internet, I'd been wholly unable to locate any mention of Mr Piper in any book or magazine that I'd ever read through in search of information concerning it, and it was only my exceptionally detailed, and happy, memories of it (plus those of my mother, who'd watched it with me) that convinced me that the show had indeed existed, and was not a product of my extremely fertile imagination as a child! But scattered in cyberspace are various details and a few rare screenshots too, plus the Tele Tune segments, thereby reinforcing the internet's invaluable nature as a source of information if utilised carefully.

Consequently, my online perusals finally revealed what had long been for me the hitherto-cryptic identity of the man who had played Mr Piper. He was Alan Crofoot, who, as already mentioned here, was a Canadian actor and classically-trained opera tenor. He had performed well-received roles in several major operas, such as Puccini's Tosca, Smetana's The Bartered Bride, Richard Strauss's Salome, and Offenbach's Orpheus in the Underworld (click here to hear him on YouTube in the dual role of John Styx/Charon the Ferryman singing 'King of the Boeotians' from Offenbach's afore-mentioned opera when staged in London by the famous Sadler's Wells Opera Company in 1960), as well as in stage productions of the smash-hit musicals Oliver! in London's West End and Man of La Mancha on Broadway. Moreover, Crowfoot had also starred in several Western movies and in a wide range of notable TV shows, the latter including Encounter, Quest, The Forest Rangers, Police Surgeon, NET Opera Theater, and The Great Detective.

 
A photograph of Alan Crofoot when not playing his most famous, beloved TV role as Mr Piper (public domain – from the Toronto Star Photograph Archive, click here for further details regarding this photo)

Like I say, the internet is certainly a marvelous tool, enabling me to uncover information that had previously proved undiscoverable – but sometimes it can also yield information that I'd have preferred not to have uncovered. So it was with Mr Piper, for during my researches into this much-loved show, I was both shocked and extremely saddened to discover that Alan 'Mr Piper' Crofoot had committed suicide, in 1979, aged just 49. It was seemingly a tragic consequence of his inadvertent mixing of alcohol with blood pressure tablets. These tablets had previously sent him into fits of depression, and, exacerbated by alcohol drunk with them by him the night before, they apparently led Crofoot during the early morning of 5 March 1979 to jump to his death from the window of his fifth-floor hotel room in Dayton, Ohio – where he had been due to direct the Dayton Opera Company's production of Salome.

Such a tragic, terrible fate for someone who had always seemed so jolly and carefree in his Mr Piper persona, and who had brought so much happiness and joy to so many children, including me, down through the years, as well as to opera and stage musical aficionados, and to TV and movie buffs. May you rest in peace, Alan Crofoot, secure in the knowledge that even if Mr Piper is not widely known nowadays, with you as its star and genial title character it remains very fondly remembered and treasured in the memories of those of us who were fortunate enough to watch you in this warm-hearted, inspiring show back in its day, and which, by being both entertaining and educational, was far ahead of its time in the history of children's TV shows, a precursor of Play School and many others that have deftly combined fun and facts.

 
How I shall always remember Alan Crofoot, as Mr Piper (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

If this nostalgic blog article of mine (containing the most detailed Mr Piper coverage anywhere online) can help in however small or large a way to bring Mr Piper, and Mr Crowfoot, to the attention of modern generations of small-screen and music fans alike, I shall be very happy, and honoured.

Several of the Tele Tune cartoon segments from episodes of Mr Piper can be viewed on YouTube (here, here, here, and here, for example), and are preceded by this show's thoroughly charming theme song.

Finally, I was pleasantly surprised to see a brand-new jumbo-sized Mr Piper fridge/freezer/locker magnet for sale on ebay recently, for just £1.99 plus p&p. Did I buy it? What do you think!! And here it is, a precious physical memento of my first-ever TV experience – and which remains to this day my all-time favourite TV experience too:

 
My jumbo-sized Mr Piper fridge/freezer/locker magnet (photograph © Dr Karl Shuker)

And the answer to Polly's earlier riddle? "When you're hungry!" Speaking of which: Polly's riddles were clearly an acquired taste!

To view a complete chronological listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film/TV reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.

 
Rupert the Rat, Kookie the Kitten, and Bessie the Bunny, in a scene from an Animal Farm segment of an episode of Mr Piper (© Martin Andrews/Allan Wargon/Pied Piper Films Ltd/Independent Television Corporation/World Wide Distribution – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

 

8 comments:

  1. Great Memories,there were 39 episodes as detailed in Allan Wargon's Book: The Birth of HollyWood North-well worth reading.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for this info Adrian, and I'll certainly check out the book that you mention. All the best, Karl

    ReplyDelete
  3. After the opening song Mr.Piper would say 'Wait For Me-I'll Be Back!' at which stage presumably outside the UK adverts were added.Bag of tricks always started with it's own song.In the UK Tele Tune was known as Tale Time and could be shown in either the 2nd or 4th segment of the show.At the end of the show,normally following the joke from Polly Mr.Piper would smile and say well 'See You Again Next Time Until Then' and sang the theme tune again as the titles rolled.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Interesting! I have one complete original episode here, and there is no specific song introducing 'Bag of Tricks', nor do I ever remember there being one here in the UK. The episode that I have opens with the Mr Piper theme song, then goes straight into Bag of Tricks, with Mr Piper speaking, which is exactly how I remember it for all full episodes. Also, here in the UK, whenever I watched full episodes, Tele Tune aka Tale Time was always the second segment, never the fourth. So perhaps such changes occurred in later reshowings, or not in UK showings?

      Delete
  4. The Bag of Tricks song went something like 'Time to Open Up My Wonderful Bag of Tricks,huggedy puggedy,ziggedy zaggedy oh I wonder what I'll find today'though there were some other words to it.It may well be that it was introduced later in the series but I know it was in a lot of episodes I saw (on ATV) in the repeat runs.Not sure if it was in the episode I had on film once-maybe you could let me know what he found in his bag of tricks in the episode you have -mine involved singing bottles!.The one I had also had no 'Polly' joke but I have read that was not there at the very start.As to Tale Time / Teletune I've seen several listings where it is shown as the last item but it was cut about so much by some companies (including Southern who for a while only showed one part at a time in around 5 minute slots) so I guess we'll not now get a definitive answer to that one!.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The two directors I've seen listen for Port of Call were Hector Lemieux and Ken Poste.I'm of the opinion that quite a number of the episodes, though made in colour, were supplied in black and white versions to other countries including the UK.I say this because I know that this was the case with the early episodes of Forest Rangers and Hogan's Heroes as ITV showed black and white versions of these even when colour had been introduced in some regions but we know that they were all made in co!our.As we got into the seventies the black and white showings ceased which may well have accounted for the fact that there were a limited number of editions of Mr.Piper which seemed to keep being repeated-possibly a batch supplied in colour-it's possible that the shows were supplied in batches rather than all at once with perhaps some colour ones at the end though,of course,we can't be sure.It seems that some regions regularly saw Mr.Piper while others may never has shown it.At present I know that ATV,Southern,Anglia,HTV and Granada showed it at one time or another with the first three seeming to have made the most use of it.The Wales part of HTV used it for a while in the early seventies together with a Welsh programme to fill-up a one hour slot with other ITV companies were showing a networked programme (this was the last time I know of that it was shown in black and white).the last episode ATV showed in black and white I remember was in New Years Eve 1969 (the previous week they had shown it in colour on Christmas Day).I know of 25 minute,12.5 minute and 5/6 minute versions so there was a lot of cutting that went on probably not helping the series surviving in it's original form.I remember the same joke being repeated two weeks running in the case of at least one of the 12.5 minute editions being attached to both halves of an original 25 minute show.I'm always trying to find out more information as to wh at episodes still exist and in what form.I know there are 15 Tele tune (tale time) segments surviving and wonder if others were ditched because they only anymore existed in black and white,maybe we'll find out more.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I'm too young to have grown up with this on TV, but as a kid I saw these episodes a lot on a DVD of public domain cartoons. For a couple years now I've been trying to hunt down the show, specifically anything outside the Teletune segments. Some info I've found indicates that the reason why they exist and the rest are so hard to find is that the Teletune segments, at least for some of the episodes, were aired in the US, which had a much better system for preserving TV back in the day. If you do have any full episodes, I'd be thrilled to see them. Thanks for this wonderful article!

    ReplyDelete