The Famous Five
Original 3rd edition cover of the first book in the series Five on a Treasure Island | |
Author | Enid Blyton |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Mystery,Adventure |
Publisher | Hodder & Stoughton |
Publication date | 1942–1963 |
Publication place | UK |
Media type | Print (hardcover and paperback) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-340-79614-6 (Hodder) Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character |
OCLC | 46332627 |
The Famous Five is the name of a series of children's books written by British author Enid Blyton. The first book, Five on a Treasure Island, was published in 1942.
The series features a fictional group of children — Julian, Dick, Anne and George — and their dog Timmy. Blyton also created several such groups for her detective series, including The Secret Seven, The Adventurous Four and Five Find-Outers and Dog, but the Famous Five are the best-known and most popular of these.
Blyton only intended to write about 6 to 8 books in the series but, owing to their high sales and immense commercial success, she went on to write 21 full-length books featuring the characters. By the end of 1953, more than 6 million copies of these books had been printed and sold. Today, more than two million copies of the books are sold each year, making them one of the biggest-selling series for children ever written. Nearly all of the novels have subsequently been adapted for television.
Chorion, who now own the rights to Blyton's books and characters, have announced the Famous Five will return in the Famous Five's Survival Guide. The new book sees the grown-up characters revisit a case they failed to solve in their childhood.[1][2]
Overview
Three of the children, Julian, Dick and Anne, are brothers and sister. During their holidays, they are regularly sent to the seaside town of Kirrin to stay with their Aunt Fanny and Uncle Quentin, whose daughter, Georgina, is a tomboy always known as George. George owns a mongrel dog, Timmy, who is very much part of the gang and a character in his own right. Timmy accompanies the four children on every adventure.
The stories always take place in the children's holidays when they come home from their respective boarding schools. Every time they meet in the holidays, they get caught up in an adventure, the location of which varies from book to book. Sometimes the scene is set close to George's family home at Kirrin Cottage in Cornwall: "Kirrin Island", a picturesque island owned by George and her family in Kirrin Bay, for example, presents many opportunities for adventure. George's own home and various other houses the children visit or stay in are hundreds of years old, and often contain secret passages or smugglers' tunnels. In some books, the children go camping in the countryside, on a hike or holiday together elsewhere. The settings, however, are almost always rural and enable the children to discover the simple joys of cottages, islands, the English and Welsh countryside and sea shores, as well as the adventures, picnics, lemonade, bicycle trips, home-made food, and copious amounts of ginger beer.
In some of the books, the four children and Timmy are joined by other children. Some of these newcomers start off being disliked by the four children including the gypsy girl Jo, and Henrietta,(Who prefers to be called Henry) another tomboy; and some of them are friends from the start, including Sooty and Tinker, both sons of Uncle Quentin's scientist friends.
Blyton always said that George was based on a real girl she had once known: in her later life, she admitted that the girl was herself.
Characters
- Julian : Julian is the eldest of the five, cousin to George and older brother to Dick and Anne. Tall, strong and intelligent as well as caring, responsible and kind, he is the leader of the group. He is very protective and possessive of Anne like any big brother.
- Dick : Dick has a subtly cheeky sense of humour, but is also dependable and kind in nature. He is the same age as his cousin George, a year younger than his brother Julian and older than his sister Anne. Dick is very caring of Anne and does his best to keep her cheered up when she gets upset.
- Anne : Anne is the youngest in the group, and generally takes care of their domestic duties during the Five's various camping holidays. She is more likely than the others to become frightened and famously dislikes the adventures the Five constantly encounter.
- George (Georgina) : Georgina is a tomboy and insists that people call her George and not Georgina. With her short hair and her boy's clothes she is often mistaken for a boy and this pleases her enormously. Like her father, Quentin, George has a fiery temper. She is fierce, headstrong and very loyal to those she loves. George is cousin to siblings Julian, Dick and Anne.
- Timothy (Timmy or Tim): Timmy, sometimes called Tim, is George's dog. Timmy is the archetypal loyal mongrel — very clever, affectionate and loyal to the Five and to George in particular; he provides physical protection for the children on multiple occasions. George adores Timmy and thinks that he is the best dog in the world. In the first book of the series, George's parents have forbidden her to keep Timmy and George is forced to hide him with a friend in the village. After the end of the Five's first adventure, her parents relent and she is allowed to keep him.
- Jo, the gypsy girl. Jo, clever but wild, joins the Five on several adventures and is especially friendly towards Dick.
- Aunt Fanny: Fanny is George's mother, and aunt to Dick, Julian and Anne. Called Aunt Fanny by Julian, Dick and Anne, she is married to Uncle Quentin, and is, through most of Blyton's Famous Five novels, the principal maternal figure in the lives of the children. (Julian, Dick and Anne's parents are very rarely seen, and rarely even mentioned, as most of their adventures take place on school holidays while visiting the village of Kirrin.)
- Uncle Quentin: Quentin is George's father, and a world-famous scientist. He possesses an infamous temper and has little tolerance for children on school holidays, but is nevertheless not as heartless as he may at first seem. In the first book of the series, it is established that he is the brother of Julian, Dick and Anne's father.
The characters, as is usual in Blyton's fiction, are outlined with very few words, and there is very limited description of scenes, but this style of writing keeps children's attention and is seen by enthusiasts as fuelling their imagination and encouraging them to think for themselves. Blyton's characterisation, however, has also been much criticised as being stereotyped and encouraging sexist attitudes; and the books have as a result been extensively parodied (see below).
Bibliography
Enid Blyton wrote 21 Famous Five books; in chronological order they are:
- Five on a Treasure Island
- Five Go Adventuring Again
- Five Run Away Together
- Five Go to Smuggler's Top
- Five Go Off in a Caravan
- Five on Kirrin Island Again
- Five Go Off to Camp
- Five Get Into Trouble
- Five Fall Into Adventure
- Five on a Hike Together
- Five Have a Wonderful Time
- Five Go Down To The Sea
- Five Go To Mystery Moor
- Five Have Plenty Of Fun
- Five on a Secret Trail
- Five Go to Billycock Hill
- Five Get Into a Fix
- Five on Finniston Farm
- Five Go to Demon's Rocks
- Five Have a Mystery To Solve
- Five Are Together Again
Blyton also wrote a number of short stories featuring the characters. These were finally collected together in 1998 as Five Have a Puzzling Time and Other Stories.
Round Robin
The Yahoo! group for Enid Blyton fans has started a Round Robin, where members can write a chapter each. The Story is called Five go back to Kirrin Island . You can find it at http://www.enidblyton.net/famous-five/five-go-back-to-kirrin-island.html
By Claude Voilier
There are also books written originally in French by Claude Voilier (the Five have long been extremely popular in translation in the French-speaking parts of Europe) and later translated into English. The Voilier titles are:
- Les Cinq sont les plus forts (1971; English title: The Famous Five and the Mystery of the Emeralds)
- Les Cinq au bal des espions (1971; English title: The Famous Five in Fancy Dress)
- Le Marquis appelle les Cinq (1972; English title: The Famous Five and the Stately Homes Gang)
- Les Cinq au Cap des tempêtes (1972; English title: The Famous Five and the Missing Cheetah)
- Les Cinq à la Télévision (1973; English title: The Famous Five Go on Television)
- Les Cinq et les pirates du ciel (1973; English title: The Famous Five and the Hijackers)
- Les Cinq contre le masque noir (1974; English title: The Famous Five Versus the Black Mask)
- Les Cinq et le galion d'or (1974; English title: The Famous Five and the Golden Galleon)
- Les Cinq font de la brocante (1975; English title: The Famous Five and the Inca God)
- Les Cinq se mettent en quatre (1975; English title: The Famous Five and the Pink Pearls)
- Les Cinq dans la cité secrète (1976; English title: The Famous Five and the Secret of the Caves)
- La fortune sourit aux Cinq (1976; English title: The Famous Five and the Cavalier's Treasure)
- Les Cinq et le rayon Z (1977; English title: The Famous Five and the Z-Rays)
- Les Cinq vendent la peau de l'ours (1977; English title: The Famous Five and the Blue Bear Mystery)
- Les Cinq aux rendez-vous du diable (1978; English title: The Famous Five in Deadly Danger)
- Du neuf pour les Cinq (1978; English title: The Famous Five and the Strange Legacy)
- Les Cinq et le trésor de Roquépine (1979; English title: The Famous Five and the Knights' Treasure)
- Les Cinq et le diamant bleu (1979; reprinted in 1980 as Les Cinq et le rubis d'Akbar; never translated into English)
- Les Cinq jouent serré (1980; English title: The Famous Five and the Strange Scientist)
- Les Cinq en croisière (1980; never translated into English)
- Les Cinq contre les fantômes (1981; never translated into English)
- Les Cinq en Amazonie (1983; never translated into English)
- Les Cinq et le trésor du pirate (1984; never translated into English)
- Les Cinq contre le loup-garou (1985; never translated into English)
By Sarah Bosse
Starting in 2004, an additional 16 new Famous Five novels written by Sarah Bosse have been published in Germany, but as yet, they have not been translated into English. The 10th Bosse book, published in February 2007, is numbered 50 in the German sequence, and is a two-in-one volume, although the second novel in the volume is a sequel to the first.[citation needed]
Gamebooks
Two sets of gamebooks in a Choose Your Own Adventure style have been published. These books involve reading small sections of print and being given two or more options to follow, with a different page number for each option. The first series of these, written by Stephen Thraves, featured stories loosely based on the original books. They were issued in plastic wallets with accessories such as maps, dice and codebooks. The gamebooks were titled as follows:
- The Wreckers' Tower Game, based on Five Go Down to the Sea
- The Haunted Railway Game, based on Five Go Off to Camp
- The Whispering Island Game, based on Five Have a Mystery to Solve
- The Sinister Lake Game, based on Five On a Hike Together
- The Wailing Lighthouse Game, based on Five Go to Demon's Rocks
- The Secret Airfield Game, based on Five Go to Billycock Hill
- The Shuddering Mountain Game, based on Five Get into a Fix
- The Missing Scientist Game, based on Five Have a Wonderful Time
The second series, written by Mary Danby, was entitled "The Famous Five and You". [3] These consisted of abridged versions of the original text, with additional text for the alternative story routes. The books in this series were based on the first six original Famous Five books:
- The Famous Five and You Search for Treasure!
- The Famous Five and You Find Adventure!
- The Famous Five and You Run Away!
- The Famous Five and You Search for Smugglers!
- The Famous Five and You Take Off!
- The Famous Five and You Underground!
Television series
1978 series
The Famous Five 1978 television series was produced by Southern Television for the ITV network in the UK, in 26 episodes of thirty minutes. It starred Michele Gallagher as Georgina, Marcus Harris as Julian, Jennifer Thanisch as Anne, Gary Russell as Dick, Toddy Woodgate as Timmy, Michael Hinz [4] as Uncle Quentin and Sue Best as Aunt Fanny. It also starred Ronald Fraser, John Carson, Patrick Troughton, James Villiers, Cyril Luckham and Brian Glover. The screenplays were written by Gloria Tors, Gail Renard, Richard Carpenter and Richard Sparks. The episodes were directed by Peter Duffell, Don Leaver, James Gatward and Mike Connor. The series was produced by Don Leaver and James Gatward. Most of the outdoor filming was done in the New Forest and parts of Dorset and Devon.
Finnish punk rock band Widows (of Helsinki) made three different cover versions of the theme song, first one in early 1979 ,as did Irish Indie outfit Fleur, in 1996.[5]
All the books apart from Five on a Treasure Island, Five Have a Mystery to Solve and Five Have Plenty of Fun were dramatised; the first two were excluded because the Children's Film Foundation still had the film and TV rights to the books (see below), and the third because it could not fit in the production schedule. Plans to make a third series which would have included this story plus new ones written purely for television were abandoned after the Blyton estate exercised its veto. The series was originally released on video in the 1980s by Portman Productions.
1996 series
A later TV series was produced around 1996, a co-production between a number of companies including Tyne Tees Television, HTV, Zenith North and the German channel ZDF; this was also shown on ITV in the UK. Unlike the previous series, this was a period piece, set in Wales, and also unlike the previous series it dramatised all the original books. Of the juvenile actors the best-known is probably Jemima Rooper, who played George. Julian was portrayed by Marco Williamson, Dick by Paul Child and Anne was Portrayed by Laura Petela. Timmy the dog was called Connal in real life. In this series, because of the slang meaning of the word fanny, Aunt Fanny was known as Aunt Frances played by Mary Waterhouse. (In recent reprints of the book, the character has been re-christened Aunt Franny.)
Famous 5: On the Case (2008)
A new animated TV series of the Famous Five began airing 2008. Famous 5: On the Case is set in modern times and features the children of the original Famous Five. These children are Max (the son of Julian), Dylan (son of Dick), Jo (daughter of George, a tomboy who, like her mother, prefers a shorter name to her given name Jyoti) and Allie (daughter of Anne).[6] It has not been stated whether their dog is the son of the previous dog, too. The new series was first announced in 2005, and is a co-production between Chorion (which currently owns all Famous Five rights) and Marathon in association with France 3 and The Disney Channel. Disney confirmed their involvement in December 2006.[7] Stories were developed by Douglas Tuber and Tim Maile, who have previously written for Lizzie McGuire. Chorion claims on its Web site that "these new programmes will remain faithful to the themes of mystery and adventure central to Enid Blyton’s classic series of books."[8] In total, there will be 26 episodes, and each episode will be 22 minutes long.
Adult series
On 28 August 2007, it was announced on the BBC News website that a revival of The Famous Five is being developed.[9] Julian, Dick, Anne and Georgina were all going to be in the story - now all as adults in their forties; they would also be joined by a descendant of Timmy The Dog. Co-developer Twofour states "casting and writing talent is still very much under wraps and no broadcaster is yet confirmed. However, some of the best-known acting talent in Britain is already under consideration."[10]
Video and DVD
The 1978 series was released on video with reasonable regularity between 1983 and 1999, many of which are still easy to find second-hand, although the sound and picture quality is not always what it could be.
A four-disc DVD collection, containing 23 of the 26 episodes produced for the 1978 series (and two episodes from the 1996 series) was released in region 4 (Australia and New Zealand) in 2005. The box and disc art identify it as a release of 1996 series. (The distributor had licenced the 1996 series but due to an administrative glitch, it was supplied with master tapes and artwork for the 1978 series.) The error was corrected in a later release.
The 1996 series was released in its entirety on video; only the adaptation of Five On A Treasure Island seems to have been released on DVD in the UK, although there are apparently some rare mainland European DVD releases of the series, available via certain websites in the UK (these are, of course, Region 2 DVDs).
A three-disc DVD collection, containing 13 of the 26 episodes of the 1996 series, was released in Australia and New Zealand in 2005 (these are region 4 DVDs). This release followed the erroneous release of the 1978 series with 1996 artwork, and is marked "Revised Edition" to avoid confusion.
There are also two Children's Film Foundation films of the Famous Five books — Five On A Treasure Island, made in 1957, and Five Have A Mystery To Solve, produced in 1963 — plus other film adaptations of the books made in countries such as Denmark.
Movies
Two of the Famous Five stories by Enid Blyton have been filmed by Danish director Katrine Hedman. The cast consisted of Danish actors and the movie was originally released in Danish. Ove Sprogøe stars as Uncle Quentin. The movies are: De 5 og spionerne (Five and the Spies) (1969) and De 5 i fedtefadet (Famous Five Get in Trouble) (1970).
Radio dramas
The 21 original stories by Enid Blyton have been released in the 70s as Fünf Freunde radio dramas in Germany as well. The speakers were the German dubbing artists for Gallagher, Thanisch, Russell and Harris, the protagonists of the first television series.
For the sequels (not written by Blyton and decidedly more "modern" action-oriented stories) the speakers were replaced by younger ones, because it was felt that they sounded too mature. In addition to the original Blyton books, another 80+ stories have subsequently been released and published as radio plays and books in Germany. They are based on the original characters, but written by various German writers.
Stage Musical
A 1997 musical was made to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Enid Blyton's birth with the title Smuggler's Gold and later released on DVD as The Famous Five - The Musical: Smuggler's Gold.
Principal actors: Elizabeth Marsland, Lyndon Ogbourne, Matthew Johnson, Vicky Taylor, Jon Lee, Director: Roz Storey
[11]
and also in the five
Computer game
In 1990 an interactive fiction computer game based on the first of the books, Five On A Treasure Island, was released. It was programmed by Colin Jordan and first released for the little known SAM Coupé by Enigma Variations.
He originally started coding the game on the ZX Spectrum using his own "worldscape" technique. When the SAM Coupé was launched, he switched to it as the target platform while still hosting the code on the ZX Spectrum. He later ported it to the Amstrad CPC and completed the ZX Spectrum version. The game was also ported to the Commodore 64, Amiga and Atari ST by others.
Later Ravensburger published the interactive CD games Famous Five The Silver Tower, Famous Five Treasure Island, Famous Five - Kidnapped for the PC or Mac.
Comic books
Six comic books created by Bernard Dufossé and scripted by Serge Rosenzweig and Rafael Carlo Marcello were released in France between 1982 and 1986, under the title Le Club des Cinq. Most of comic books in the series are based on Famous Five books created by Claude Voilier. Books were released by Hachette Livre. The first three of these volumes have also been released in English, under the name Famous Five[12]. The titles included "Famous Five and the Golden Galleon" (which featured a sunken ship that was laden with gold with the Five fending off villains seeking to make off with the gold, "Famous Five and the Treasure of the Templars", where it transpires that Kirrin Castle is actually a Templar Castle that houses their hidden treasure which the Five ultimately secure with the help of members of the order, and "Famous Five and the Inca God" which was set in an antiquities museum and dealt with the theft of an Incan fetish.
Parodies
Musician John Lennon's first book of short stories and poems, In His Own Write, contains a piece of nonsense titled The Famous Five through Woenow Abbey, in which the famous five by Enig Blyter; Tom, Stan, Dave, Nigel, Berniss, Arthur, Harry, Wee Jockey, Matoombo, and Craig?, together with their famous ill bred dog, Cragesmure, have a holliday adventure in which they meet a mysterious stranger and find an olde crypped.
The Five also inspired the Comic Strip parody Five Go Mad in Dorset and its sequel Five Go Mad On Mescalin, in which the characters express sympathies with Nazi Germany and opposition to the Welfare State, homosexuals, immigrants and Jews, in an extremely broad parody not so much of Blyton but of wider perceived 1950s prejudices.[13] The parodies were deliberately set towards the end of the original Famous Five "era" (1942-1963) so as to make the point that the books were already becoming outmoded while they were still being written, although the continuing popularity of the books even in the 21st century may be seen to suggest otherwise. Both parodies made use of Famous Five set pieces, such as the surrender of the criminals at the end when Julian states "We're the Famous Five!", the arrival of the police just in the nick of time, and the appeal for "some of your home-made ices" at a village shop.
A 2005 story in The Guardian' also parodies the Famous Five. It argues that Anne, Dick, George and Julian are caricatures rather than characters, portraying Anne as having no life outside of domestic labour. It highlights what the writer, Lucy Mangan, considers to be the power struggle between Dick, George and Julian while Anne is sidelined.[14]
Famous Five effect
The seemingly perpetual youth of the Famous Five who experience a world of seemingly endless summers while not ageing significantly has been highlighted by a number of contemporary children's fiction authors as an influence upon their own work. J. K. Rowling, the author of the Harry Potter series of books has been quoted as saying of the titular character: "in book four the hormones are going to kick in - I don't want him stuck in a state of permanent pre-pubescence like poor Julian in the Famous Five!"[15]
References
- ^ Famous Five to return in new book, Sky News, August 24 2008
- ^ Geoghegan, Tom, The mystery of Enid Blyton's revival, BBC News Magazine, September 5 2008
- ^ http://www.gamebooks.org/show_series.php?id=147
- ^ http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Hinz
- ^ http://www.tampere.fi/kirjasto/kirpeko/widisko.htm
- ^ http://www.stuff.co.nz/4447609a1860.html
- ^ http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article659361.ece
- ^ http://www.chorion.co.uk/chorion/brand/famfive
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6967050.stm
- ^ http://www.twofourbroadcast.com/news-famous-five.asp
- ^ The Famous Five - The Musical: Smuggler's Gold, Amazon
- ^ [1]
- ^ Milmo, Cahill Back for more jolly japes: the return of the Famous Five The Independent, December 5 2006
- ^ Mangan, Lucy The Famous Five - in their own wordsThe Guardian, December 22, 2005
- ^ Carey, Joanna, Who hasn't met Harry?, The Guardian, February 16 1999