Muppet Wiki

Kermiteye Welcome to Muppet Wiki!


Please visit Special:Community to learn how you can collaborate with the editing community.

READ MORE

Muppet Wiki
Muppet Wiki
44,519
pages
(take out citations needed, add refs for Wade Sampson article which is indeed the source; take out Coral, can't find a source for that at all)
Line 28: Line 28:
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
 
<gallery widths=200>
 
<gallery widths=200>
File:Lmi2.jpg|Flounder and his twin sister Coral, Ariel and Sebastien
+
File:Lmi2.jpg|Flounder and his twin sister Sandy, Ariel and Sebastien
File:Lmi3.jpg|Flotsam, Jetsam, Coral and Flounder
+
File:Lmi3.jpg|Flotsam, Jetsam, Sandy and Flounder
 
File:Lmi4.jpg|Scuttle, voiced by [[Buddy Hackett]]
 
File:Lmi4.jpg|Scuttle, voiced by [[Buddy Hackett]]
 
File:Lmi5.jpg|Sebastian, voiced by [[Samuel E. Wright]]
 
File:Lmi5.jpg|Sebastian, voiced by [[Samuel E. Wright]]

Revision as of 14:51, 6 May 2010

Lmi

Title card

Little Mermaid's Island was a show proposed by Jim Henson during his short time in talks with The Walt Disney Company. A pilot (called Sebastian's Birthday) and a second episode Tell The Truth was shot, intended for a daily series to air on the Disney Channel, with puppets against blue screen and human characters interacting. Filming took place in a very old studio (once owned by Mary Pickford) in the Silverlake district of Los Angeles. [1]

The show was a spin-off of Disney's animated film The Little Mermaid, with a human actress playing the role of Ariel, and puppet versions of Sebastian the crab, Scuttle the seagull, Flotsam and Jetsam and Flounder the fish and new character, Flounder's twin sister, Sandy[2] The other live cast member was character actor Clive Revill as a variation of Grimsby from the original film, here re-conceived as a jovial sea captain who lived on an island nearby to Ariel.[3] Ambrosius from Labyrinth was used as Max the sheepdog. There was also a full body puppet called Scales the Dragon, a musical dragon who lived in a cave and created songs with his rock piano and pots and pans.

Each episode was planned to have four musical numbers, with ten songwriters assigned to the project. The project went into pre-production before the release of the film, with many of the original vocal cast set to reprise their roles (including Samuel E. Wright and Buddy Hackett).[4]

For scenes of Ariel swimming, a rod puppet was used to simulate her movements underwater. [5]

Jim Henson died within two months after the pilot was shot. The two episodes filmed lack the end credits and the final opening titles. A Disney animated series of The Little Mermaid, unrelated to Henson's production, ran on CBS from 1992 to 1994.

Sebastian's Birthday

Pilot Episode

Ariel and her friends are planning a surprise birthday party for Sebastian. While searching for his friends, Sebastian tells Scuttle that it is his birthday, which the seagull misinterprets as "bird day." Sebastian is joined by a chorus of oysters in a song about his birthday, followed by another number by Ariel and Flounder which convinces the crab they are too busy to play with him. On his way to visit Scales, Flotsam and Jetsam try to convince the crustacean that his friends have forgotten his special day, and no longer care about him.

Once Sebastian reaches Scales, the dragon goes into another musical number to try and mask the noise of Sebastian's birthday balloons popping. Heading home with a headache, Sebastian meets the eels once again, who reinforce their message that friends are unnecessary.

Grimsby and Max the sheepdog dock at the pier with the three-layer birthday cake, where they meet up with the confused Scuttle. The seagull and Grimsby sing another song as they head towards the party.

Meanwhile, Ariel has broken Sebastian's present while attempting to wrap it. She sings another number about their friendship, and ponders another gift for the crab.

Convincing Sebastian to come to Scales' cave, a reprise of Sebastian's birthday song is sung, and Ariel presents the crab with his present, a framed poem written by the mermaid. As the show ends, Sebastian blows the candles of his cake out with a mighty gust, covering Scuttle with frosting.[6]

Tell the Truth

Gallery

Sources