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Pigeon Street


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Pigeon Street Info
Title:
Pigeon Street
Country of Origin:
UK
Produced by:

Air Date:

Number of Episodes:

Episode Length:
Shown in: UK

Pigeon Street

Info: Lovely British animation about a village town that happened to be home to a few pigeons!

Pigeon Street Theme Tune Lyrics
Pigeon Street lyrics

Opening theme tune lyrics:

If you lived, in Pigeon Street,
Here are the people you could meet,
Here are the people who would say,
Hello, goodbye, hello, goodbye, everyday.

If you lived, in Pigeon Street,
Here are the people you could meet,
Here are the people who would share
The sights, the sounds, the air, where...,
Pigeons beat, their wings wings beat,
Pigeons beat, their wings wings beat,

To meet in Pigeon Street!

 

Pigeon Street Characters
Pigeon Street Characters

Coming soon


Interview with Alan Rogers, part creator of Pigeon Street, Bod and the Flumps!! You submitted the questions.... here are his answers! (December 2005)

1) Many, many people asked… Is Pigeon Street ever going to become available on DVD?
I'd like to think so. It's not in my hands because the BBC hold the rights. I've prompted them several times but with such a big organisation it's often difficult to target the right person. I'm in discussions with them at the moment....lets hope something comes of it. Maybe someone out there should organise a lobby! There is an online petition - sign here!

2) Simon from Spalding: Question: Who came up with the idea of Long Distance Clara? I'm sure the program influenced a whole generation of girls to become lorry drivers.
I can't quite remember who came up with the idea but I imagine it was the writer Mike Cole. I know we angsted for a while over whether we could use a word like "Juggernaut" for under fives! I wanted to keep her fairly feminine rather than make her blokey, so I gave her big hair and lipstick, (it was the 80's!). Then Benni Lees wrote music that had a sort of country and Western truck driver twang. So I suppose the end result was, as usual, a combination of several people's inputs.
I know of a number of instances where women have said they were directly influenced by Clara in their choice of career. I wonder if Hugo effected Jamie Oliver?

3) DK from Watford: Question: How far was Pigeon Street based on, or informed by educational techniques/requirements for children? Was there a 'hidden curriculum' in there and if so did educational experts advice on it?
There were no formal educational advisors on the series. There was no "Hidden Curriculum". In those days Education and Entertainment were kept pretty much apart and handled by two different departments at the BBC. There was less overlap than there is today, no one had yet coined the word "Edutainment"!
Having said that though, we were all aware we talking to under fives and being parents ourselves we were conscious and careful of what messages we were sending to the audience. Mike Cole in particular had had a long experience of making BBC programmes that contained some educational content like "Playschool". In some ways, everything is education when you are under five!

4) Jen from Leicester: Question: What ever happened to Pigeon Street and would it be such as successful now as it was when I was a kid or do you think that it would not fit in with children's TV today?
Like all programmes, Pigeon Street reached the end of it's natural transmission life. Though it was repeated for a lot longer than many children's series.
I doubt that Pigeon Street would work as well for today's audience, without making some changes to it. Even as relatively recently as the 80's, TV was generally more slowly paced than it is now. There was a more limited choice of alternative TV channels and every TV didn't have a remote control! So audiences were easier to hold on to. Today's MTV generation would probably be hitting their remote controls looking for something faster than Pigeon Street.
In the 70's and 80's I think children's TV was consciously slower in an attempt to allow children to keep up with the plot etc. Children are now more used to rapidly changing images, though sometimes that can simply be used to mesmerise rather than inform.
Also on a practical level, working to limited BBC budgets meant that by holding each shot for a few frames longer less actual animation was required and so the budget stretched further!

6) Chris from Portsmouth: Question: Hi, Firstly I'd just like to say that the shows that you have made are classics that I have grown up with- Pigeon Street in particular I've always loved because it was so different to other shows. I just wondered why in the end credits, does it say "production DAVID YATES" in capitals and then have your name in small lettering? The other thing I was interested in was, in Rosie and Jim in 1990/91 when you animated John Cunliffe's stories, where some of the animated drawings of background characters actually characters from Pigeon Street such as Long Distance Clara?
Thanks Chris. I'm not really sure I know the full answer to the end credit question! David Yates owned the company and he initially set up the project with the BBC. So he was in fact the "Producer". I was actually "Director/Designer" though at the start of the series David had a sort of Directorial role too. It was often a BBC TV convention at the time to merge the two roles for their in house programmes. We were an outside company but for some reason I don't think we had a "Director" credit. I only became a "company director" of David Yates Ltd after Pigeon Street was finished, so I think it was also a hierarchical thing!
Clara does a lot of travelling around but I'm sure she never turned up in Rosie and Jim! She wouldn't dare do that because her contract wouldn't allow it! The background characters were left to me to invent so I suppose I might have unconsciously reverted to my natural default drawing style which is more or less the one I used for Pigeon Street.

7) from 80sCartoons: Question: Who was your favourite character and why?
Ah, that's like one of those, "what's your favourite colour" questions! It depends on my mood etc. I liked Clara's individuality. But I had a soft spot for Bob cos he was based in some ways on me and Reg who was based on my Dad. I also liked drawing William and Mr Baskerville best. Though if I met Baskerville in real life, I probably wouldn't have liked him too much! Sorry to be vague on this one but I'm hopeless at filling in those tick the box questionaires too.
I had to consider this question recently when I decided to sell some of the original artwork from the series. Which character would be most likely to sell etc. I think there were about 25 characters in the series and making up 25 pictures at the outset was out of the question, since all the artwork is in many cut-out pieces. Having asked around, Clara cropped up repeatedly as a favourite, so she appears in 2 of the six, (so far) set ups.
You can see the pictures online at www.lollipopanimation.com, you can even buy them! There will also shortly be limited addition, signed Giclee prints available too - click here

Many thanks to Alan for his great answers, and his time and patience!

Pigeon Street MP3s
Pigeon Street MP3 downloads

mp3 Pigeon Street theme tune (opening)
sound Molly and Polly's song
sound Mr Macadoo's song
sound Long Distance Clara's song
sound Mr Jupiter (with Flash) and Mr Baskerville (with Watson) song


Pigeon Street News
Pigeon Street Bags

Pigeon Street Bag

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Pigeon Street Bag

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PIgeon Street Purse

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Pigeon Street  Media

Pigeon Street video and more

Pigeon Street Intro


Pigeon Street Episodes
Pigeon Street Episode Guide

Season One
1. All In A Day’s Work
2. Light In The Sky
3. Pigeon At Sea
4. Can I Have My Ball Back?
5. Noisy Neighbours
6. Pigeon Post
7. A Cold Day
8. Somewhere to Eat

Season Two
9. Down With The Car Park
10. The Flood
11. Hobbies
12. Springtime For Hugo
13. Getting Away

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