Bagpuss is a British children's television series, made by Peter Firmin and Oliver Postgate through their company Smallfilms.
The series of 13 episodes was first broadcast from Tuesday 12 February  to Tuesday 7 May 1974.
The title character was "a saggy, old cloth cat, baggy, and a bit loose at the seams".
Although only 13 episodes were made, it remains fondly remembered, and was frequently repeated in the UK until 1986.
In early 1999, Bagpuss topped a BBC poll for the UK's favourite children's television programme.
Format
Each programme began in the same way: through a series of sepia photographs, the viewer is told of a little girl named Emily (played by Emily Firmin, the daughter of illustrator Peter Firmin), who owned a shop.
Emily found lost and broken things and displayed them in the window, so their owners could come and collect them; the shop did not sell anything.
She would leave the object in front of her favourite stuffed toy, the large, saggy, pink and white striped cat named Bagpuss.
Emily then recited a verse:
After Emily had left, Bagpuss woke up.
The programme shifted from sepia to colour stop motion film, and various toys in the shop came to life: Gabriel the toad (who, unlike most Smallfilms characters, could move by a special device beneath his can without the use of stop motion animation) and a rag doll called Madeleine.
The wooden woodpecker bookend became the drily academic Professor Yaffle (based on the philosopher Bertrand Russell, whom Postgate had once met),Channel 4 News, 9 December 2008.
while the mice carved on the side of the "mouse organ" (a small mechanical pipe organ that played rolls of music) woke up and scurried around, singing in high-pitched voices.
Sandra Kerr and John Faulkner provided the voices of Madeleine and Gabriel respectively, and put together and performed all the folk songs.
All the other voices (including the narrator and one out-of-tune mouse) were provided by Postgate, who also wrote the stories.
The toys discussed what the new object was; someone (usually Madeleine) would tell a story related to the object (shown in an animated thought bubble over Bagpuss's head), often with a song, accompanied by Gabriel on the banjo (which often sounded a lot more like a guitar), and then the mice, singing in high-pitched squeaky harmony to the tune of Sumer Is Icumen In as they worked, mended the broken object.
There was much banter between the characters, with the pompous Yaffle constantly finding fault with the playful mice: his complaint, 'Those mice are never serious!'
became his main catchphrase.
However, peace was always restored by the end of the episode, usually thanks to the timely intervention of Bagpuss, Gabriel or Madeleine.
The newly mended object was placed in the shop window so that its owner might see it in passing and come in to claim it.
Bagpuss then yawned and fell asleep, and he and the others became toys again as the colour faded to sepia and the narrator spoke.
Title sequence
The scene is set at the turn of the 20th century, with Emily Firmin (Peter Firmin's daughter) playing the part of the Victorian child Emily.Postgate, Oliver (2000) Seeing Things-A Memoir  The first antique village vignette is a cropped image of Horrabridge taken in 1898, though nothing is known of the other photo of the children with the pram.
The shop window was at the Firmin family home in Blean.
Episodes
The episodes were originally broadcast at 1:45 pm on BBC1.
The titles of the episodes each refer in some way to the object Emily found.
Production
thumb|upright|The characters of Bagpuss
The programmes were made using stop-frame animation.
Bagpuss is an actual cloth cat but was not intended to be such an electric pink.
"It should have been a ginger marmalade cat but the company in Folkestone dyeing the material made a mistake and it turned out pink and cream.
It was the best thing that ever happened," said Firmin.
Madeleine the rag doll was made by Firmin's wife, Joan, with an extra-long dress to hold their children's nightdresses, but Postgate asked Joan to make a new version as one of the characters.
Gabriel the Toad was the only character in the series who could move freely without the use of stop-frame animation.
Scenes featuring him playing the banjo and singing would have taken quite a bit of time if filmed with the stop-frame method, so Peter Firmin created a mechanism that helped him control Gabriel through a hole in his can.
The character was based on a real toad that lived in the basement area of the flat that Peter and Joan rented in Twickenham beside the River Thames.
Gabriel (named after Walter Gabriel in The Archers, a long-running British radio soap opera) was originally made for Firmin's live ITV programme The Musical Box.
Postgate chose him to be one of the characters in Bagpuss and he was made into a new, slightly larger version.
Professor Yaffle was created as the book-End who had access to "facts".
The BBC did not like the original character, a man in a top hat made from black Irish bog oak, called "Professor Bogwood".
They thought he was too frightening and asked for a non-human instead.
After production ended, Bagpuss was put on display with Rupert Bear at the Rupert Bear Museum in Canterbury, part of the Canterbury Heritage Museum.
Following its closure in 2018, both toys were relocated to the Beaney House of Art and Knowledge in the same city.
thumb|The original Bagpuss doll in the Beaney House of Art and Knowledge in Canterbury, June 2018
Most of the stories and songs used in the series are based on folk songs and fairy tales from around the world.
Recognition
In 1987, the University of Kent at Canterbury awarded honorary degrees to Postgate and Firmin.
In his speech, Postgate stated that the degree was really intended for Bagpuss, who was subsequently displayed in academic dress.
In 1999, Bagpuss came first in a BBC poll selecting the nation's favourite children's programme made and broadcast by that corporation.
It also came fourth in the Channel 4 poll, The 100 Greatest Kids' TV Shows, broadcast in 2001.
In 2002 and 2005, a stage show of Bagpuss songs toured the UK folk festivals and theatres with original singers Sandra Kerr and John Faulkner, along with Kerr's daughter Nancy Kerr and her husband, James Fagan.
In June 2002, the charity Hospices of Hope opened the Bagpuss Children's Wing in its hospice in Brașov, Romania.
The wing was funded entirely by Postgate from royalties received from the BBC.
In April 2012, Marc Jenner from Tunbridge Wells in Kent ran in the Virgin London Marathon dressed in a  Bagpuss costume to raise money for the charity, supported by Emily Firmin (seen in the programme's opening titles) and Postgate's family.
Thom Yorke of the band Radiohead has claimed to be a fan of the series, watching it with his son.
It was an influence for the 2003 album Hail to the Thief.
Gabriel's song in Episode 2 was the acknowledged inspiration for the album track (and first single) "There There" (originally titled "The Bony King of Nowhere").
Bagpuss appeared on one of the twelve postage stamps issued by Royal Mail in January 2014 to celebrate classic children's programmes.
The first episode of the BBC show Man Like Mobeen was called Bagpuss.
Home media
In March 1993 and then in May 1999, PolyGram released a video entitled The Complete Bagpuss which included all 13 episodes.
It was released in DVD format in April 2005, and then re-released in April 2015.
The first video was released by Channel 5, and the rest were released by Universal Pictures.
VHS
A CD and vinyl LP of the original songs from the series was released in 2018.
References
External links
The Smallfilms Treasury's Bagpuss site
Bagpuss at British Film Institute Screen Online
Bagpuss & Co
