Faerie Tale Theatre | |
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220px The 6-DVD box set cover by Starmaker II. |
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Also known as | Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre |
Genre | Fairytale fantasy |
Format | Children's anthology series |
Created by | Shelley Duvall |
Presented by | Shelley Duvall |
Starring | Various |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 27 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Shelley Duvall |
Running time | 50 min. |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Showtime |
Original run | September 11, 1982 – November 14, 1987 |
Chronology | |
Followed by | Tall Tales & Legends |
Related shows | Shirley Temple Theatre |
Faerie Tale Theatre (also known as Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre) is a live-action children's television anthology series retelling popular fairy tales. Shelley Duvall serves as narrator, host and executive producer of the program, and occasionally stars in episodes. The series was followed by another, shorter series called Tall Tales & Legends which followed the same format as Faerie Tale Theatre and focused on classic American folk tales. Both series feature well known actors and directors, and were inspired by the children's television series Shirley Temple Theatre (also known as The Shirley Temple Show and Shirley Temple's Storybook).
Faerie Tale Theatre originally aired on Showtime from 1982 to 1987. It later aired as edited re-runs on the Disney Channel[1] as well as in syndication on various television stations,[2] including PBS[3][4] and BookTelevision.[5]
Contents |
Shelley Duvall began conception of Faerie Tale Theatre while filming Popeye. She reportedly asked her co-star, Robin Williams, his opinion on "The Frog Prince," a fairy tale she was reading during production.[6] Williams would later star in the pilot episode of the series, "The Tale of the Frog Prince".
Every episode opens with Shelley Duvall introducing herself and welcoming the viewer to the show, after which she would provide a brief synopsis of the story that would follow. All the episodes feature live-action twist adaptations of fairy tales in costume by many well-known actors and are directed by such diverse directors as Tim Burton and Francis Ford Coppola. Though Duvall introduced each show, she has starring roles in only two of the episodes: "Rumpelstiltskin" (airing in 1982) and "Rapunzel" (airing in 1983). Many episodes feature backdrops and settings inspired by specific artists and children's book illustrators,[7] including Maxfield Parrish ("The Frog Prince"), Norman Rockwell ("Goldilocks and the Three Bears"), Arthur Rackham ("Hansel and Gretel"), Edmund Dulac ("The Nightingale"), Gustav Klimt ("Rapunzel"), N.C. Wyeth ("Rumpelstiltskin", "Snow White"), Kay Nielsen ("Sleeping Beauty"), Breughel and Muer ("The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers"), Jennie Harbour ("Little Red Riding Hood"), and George Cruikshank ("Thumbelina"), as well as filmmakers, such as Jean Cocteau ("Beauty and the Beast").
Faerie Tale Theatre was released on VHS, Betamax, CED and Laserdisc in the 1980s through mid 1990s, by Playhouse Video, CBS/Fox, and later Razz Ma Tazz Entertainment/Cabin Fever Entertainment.
Starmaker II held the rights to the series from 2004 to 2006, and at first released 26 episodes as individual DVDs.[8] This was followed by a double-sided 4-disc box set and then a 6-disc box set, each version containing the same 26 episodes. The "Greatest Moments" episode was not included in this release.
After 2006, Koch Vision held the series' distribution rights, and in November 2006 licensed the rights worldwide (excluding DVDs in North America) to the British company 3DD Entertainment.[9][10] A new remastered 7-disc box set, including the lost "Greatest Moments" episode, was released by Koch Vision on September 2, 2008.[11] In 2009, Koch Vision released the episodes by theme on six DVD compilations: Tales from the Brothers Grimm, Funny Tales, Tales from Hans Christian Andersen, Princess Tales, Magical Tales, and Bedtime Tales.[12]
When released on DVD by Starmaker II and Koch Vision, the following scenes were cut from the series:[citation needed]
Gahter round and listen to
the tales I have to tell
Of demons, death and misery
In this wonderland called hell
The things that children dream of
Are present in this land
Look in my eyes and trust me
Come take my hand
The looking glass doth break
Revealing all inside
A land of joy and misery
No place for you to hide
We are your darkest fears
Faerie tale, nightmare fantasy
Keeper or souls, stealer or breath
the legions. Revel in ecstacy
The nightmares that awake you
Believe that they are real
The demons laugh and feast upon
The children's hearts they steal
Tempted into darkness
By those who would be true
Lured and deceived
by the evil that we do
Sugar and spice
and everything nice
fortune favours the chosen few
Laughter and tears
Heartache and tears
Emotional torture inside of you
Sing a song of sixpence
Mummy's going to die
Daddy is the devil
And baby's going to cry
Yu're safe with me
you wait with bated breath
the pied piper plays his song