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Encyclopedia :
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The Wombles |
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The WomblesThis article refers to the children's TV programme, not the radical anarchist WOMBLES groupThe Wombles are fictional characters created by British author Elisabeth Beresford, originally appearing in a series of children's novels from 1968. Wombles are pointy-nosed furry creatures that live in burrows, where they help the environment by recycling rubbish in useful and ingenious ways. This "green message was ahead of its time in the 1970s. Although Wombles live in every country in the world, the stories focus on the life of the Wimbledon Common burrow in London, England. Beresford reportedly invented the name "Womble" when one of her children referred to Wimbledon Common as "Wombledon Common". Wombles is also a term used by fans of Wimbledon FC (and now AFC Wimbledon) to describe themselves affectionately. Fans have many terrace songs in which 'Wombles' are referred to. CharactersAll of the Wombles have names taken from an old Atlas; the main characters were:
Children's NovelsThere were a total of five novels:
Beresford also wrote a collection of short stories entitled The Invisible Womble and Other Stories (1973), in which the original Wimbledon Common setting was restored. Although based on episodes from the TV series, these stories occasionally refer to events in the novels. In addition to these books, a great many annuals, picture-books and childrens' early readers have been published over the years, some of which were also written by Elisabeth Beresford. TV and FilmThe Wombles was adapted as a British children's television programme, The Wombles, a series of five-minute stop-motion episodes produced by FilmFair for the BBC and voiced by Bernard Cribbins. The first series aired in 1973 and the second in 1975, sixty episodes in all. In 1977, a feature-length live-action movie Wombling Free appeared, starring David Tomlinson and Bonnie Langford. The Wombles were re-invented from 1998 as a cartoon after FilmFair was acquired by the Canadian company Cinar Films in 1996, a number of new geographically-named Wombles were introduced. MusicSongwriter and producer Mike Batt wrote the series' theme tune, and later went on to perform and produce a number of successful novelty singles as The Wombles. He and his band appeared on music shows dressed in full Womble costumes, which were sweltering in the heat of the studios. On one edition of Top of the Pops, the costumes were filled by members of Steeleye Span. Their hits were: Batt's success with the Wombles (they were the band with most weeks in the singles charts in the UK in 1974) tended to overshadow his genuine songwriting talents. The Borribles Of tangental connection to The Wombles are The Borribles Trilogy, which is comprised of The Borribles, The Borribles Go For Broke and Across the Dark Metropolis). Written by Michael De Larrabeiti, they feature a group of perpetual children known as the Borribles who live an underground existence on the streets of London. In the first book they battle a group of giant, intelligent rats known as the Rumbles, who many readers have suggested are intended to represent the Wombles. If this is intentional it is a very different depiction of the Wombles than that of the canon texts, but if it is coincidence then it is a very large and improbable one. External links
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