Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto!: Difference between revisions
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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The television series is about a [[bird-of-paradise]], an [[armadillo]], and a [[spider monkey]] who live and go on adventures in the wilderness where they all live and can only communicate by saying each other's names. |
The television series is about a [[bird-of-paradise]], an [[giant armadillo]], and a [[spider monkey]] who live and go on adventures in the wilderness where they all live and can only communicate by saying each other's names. |
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==Broadcast== |
==Broadcast== |
Revision as of 15:12, 15 December 2023
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2022) |
Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto! | |
---|---|
Genre | Children's TV series |
Created by | Tony Collingwood |
Written by | Jimmy Hibbert Trevor Rickets Tony Collingwood Moya O'Shea James Mason Chris Drew |
Directed by | Tony Collingwood Andrea O'Tran |
Voices of | Alex Kelly Rob Rackstraw Alistair McGowan Gary Martin Maria Darling Colin McFarlane Alan Marriott Kate Harbour Moya O'Shea |
Theme music composer | Roger Jackson |
Composer | Roger Jackson |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 56 |
Production | |
Producer | Christopher O'Hare |
Editor | Fred Ziecker |
Running time | 5 minutes per episode (approx.) |
Production companies | Collingwood O'Hare Productions Limited HIT Entertainment |
Original release | |
Network | ITV (CITV) CBeebies |
Release | 2 June 2003 29 August 2005 | –
Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto! is an animated children's television series, produced by Collingwood O'Hare Productions Limited for HIT Entertainment and currently distributed by Foothill Entertainment, which aired from 6 January 2003 until 29 August 2005 on CITV, and then aired on CBeebies from 6 January 2003 to 13 October 2006 and again from 26 January 2009 to 2 June 2013.[1]
Plot
The television series is about a bird-of-paradise, an giant armadillo, and a spider monkey who live and go on adventures in the wilderness where they all live and can only communicate by saying each other's names.
Broadcast
An animated short film from the series made its American debut on 2 June 2003 as part of the New York International Children's Film Festival.
The show has aired on ABC in Australia (as well as its digital networks ABC Kids and ABC 2) from 24 February 2003 to 27 November 2006, TVOKids in Canada, Kids Central in Singapore, ATV in Hong Kong, e-Junior in the U.A.E., TBS in Japan, MiniMini in Poland, Super3 in Spain, Canal Once in Mexico, Super RTL in Germany, Pakapaka in Argentina, ETTV in Taiwan, SVT in Sweden, NRK1 in Norway, RTP2 in Portugal, Piwi in France and Cartoon Network (in the former Tickle-U block) in the US. Unlike most animated series, when the show was sold to several countries that don't speak English and have English as their first language it was never dubbed or translated into different languages or redubbed with a different range of voices as the characters in the show only had limited dialogue and can only communicate by saying anybody's names making all the voices retained and left alone.
Development
While the series was in production, the distribution was done by Gullane Entertainment (formally known as The Britt Allcroft Company, the company that made Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends) up until July 2002, when the company was bought by HIT Entertainment.
Awards
Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto! has won numerous industry awards including Best Pilot at the Annecy International Festival of Animation, Best Writer at the British Animation Awards and two British Academy Children's Awards, including Best Writer and Best Pre-School Animation.
UK Voice Cast
- Maria Darling - Yoko the Bird of Paradise
- Gary Martin - Jakamoko the Armadillo
- Rob Rackstraw - Toto the Spider Monkey
- Alistair McGowan, Kate Harbour, Moya O'Shea, Alan Marriott, Colin McFarlane and Alex Kelly - additional voices
Episode listing
56 5-minute-long episodes were produced. Every episode title starts with "The", much like The Amazing World of Gumball, Wander Over Yonder, and Igloo Gloo.
Season 1 (2003-2005)
- 1. The Special Thing/The Scary Monster/The Water-Hole/The Patient
- 2. The Whale/The Night/The Shell/The Very Sticky Thing
- 3. The Fly/The Egg/The Blip/The Visit
- 4. The Naughty Noise/The New Best Friend/The Girlfriend/The Cave
- 5. The Other Side/The Longest Day/The Lesson/The Song
- 6. The Meal/The Windy Day/The Hiccups/The Copycat
- 7. The New King/The Other Monkey/The Nightmare/The Oyster
- 8. The Smell/The Babysitters/The Seeds/The Traveller
- 9. The Hole/The Rival/The Island/The Voice
- 10. The Beetle/The Coconut/The Puzzle/The Late Night
- 11. The Sand/The Leaf/The Dreamers/The Migration
- 12. The Tallest/The Snow/The Log/The Contest
- 13. The Meerkats/The Mango/The Bad Word/The In-Crowd
- 14. The Butterfly/The Dance/The Chicken/The Show
References
External links
- 2003 British television series debuts
- 2005 British television series endings
- 2000s British animated television series
- 2000s British children's television series
- BAFTA winners (television series)
- BBC children's television shows
- British children's animated adventure television series
- British preschool education television series
- Animated preschool education television series
- Animated television series without speech
- Animated television series about birds
- Animated television series about monkeys
- Animated television series about animals
- Fictional armadillos
- 2000s preschool education television series
- CBeebies
- English-language television shows
- ITV children's television shows
- TBS Television (Japan) original programming
- Television series by Mattel Television