Barney & the Backyard Gang
Barney & the Backyard Gang | |
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Voices of | |
Opening theme | Barney & the Backyard Gang Theme Song |
Ending theme | Various |
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Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 8 |
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Producers |
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Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company | The Lyons Group |
Original release | |
Release | August 29, 1988[1] – September 21, 1991[1] |
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Barney & the Backyard Gang is an American direct-to-video series produced by The Lyons Group and released in periodic installments from August 29, 1988, to September 21, 1991. The series' success led to the launch of the children's television show, Barney & Friends, which in its original run aired on PBS from April 6, 1992, to November 2, 2010.[2]
The first three episodes from 1988 and 1989 include Sandy Duncan as Michael and Amy's mother. (At the time, Duncan was starring on the NBC sitcom The Hogan Family.) Music for the Barney & the Backyard Gang videos was created by Stephen Bates Baltes and Phillip Parker (as with the television series), and Lory Lazarus wrote the first original song produced for Barney, "Friends Are Forever", sung by Duncan. In the first five videos, "I Love You" was sung at the beginning. Although "I Love You" was sung at the end of Barney Goes to School and Barney in Concert, and later frequently sung at the end of all episodes of Barney & Friends, it was not featured at the end of Rock with Barney.
The series was a regional success, but only a moderate success throughout the rest of the country.[citation needed] Then one day, in 1991, Larry Rifkin, then head of Connecticut Public Television, rented a Barney video for his daughter Leora.[3] He liked the concept and talked to Leach about possibly putting Barney on television through the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Rock with Barney was the final video in the series before the television show debuted. Also, only four of the kids from the videos (Michael, Derek, Tina, and Luci) were carried over to the television show.
Video list
In order of release date:[1]
- The Backyard Show (originally released on August 29, 1988; last reissued in 1992)
- Three Wishes (originally released on December 10, 1988; last reissued in 1992)
- A Day at the Beach (originally released on February 24, 1989; last reissued in 1992)
- Waiting for Santa (originally released on April 30, 1990; last reissued on September 29, 1998)
- Campfire Sing-Along (originally released on May 30, 1990; last reissued on March 26, 1996)
- Barney Goes to School (originally released on August 15, 1990; last reissued on March 26, 1996)
- Barney in Concert (originally released on July 29, 1991; last reissued on July 18, 2000)
- Rock with Barney (Series Finale) (originally released on September 21, 1991; last reissued on March 26, 1996)
Cast
- Baby Bop (Costume) - Dao Knight (1991)
- Baby Bop (Voice) - Julie Johnson (1991)
- Barney (Costume) - David Voss (1988–1990), David Joyner (1991)[4]
- Barney (Voice) - Bob West (1988–1991)
- Adam - Alexander Jhin (1988–1991)
- Amy - Becky Swonke (1988–1991)
- Dad - Bob Reed (1988–1989)
- Derek - Rickey Carter (1990–1991)
- Jason - Salim Grant (1988–1989)
- Jeffrey - Jeffrey Lowe (1990)
- Luci - Leah Gloria (1988–1991)
- Michael - Brian Eppes (1988–1991)
- Mom - Sandy Duncan (1988–1989)
- Tina - Jessica Zucha (1988–1991)
Guest appearances
- Sandy Duncan (played Molly the Mermaid in A Day at the Beach)
- Jeanne Cairns (played Mrs. Claus in Waiting for Santa)
- Henry Hammack (played Santa Claus in Waiting for Santa)
- Sonya Resendez (played Tina's Mom in Campfire Sing-Along)
- Philip Parker (performed as the Bear in Campfire Sing-Along)
- Lauren King (played Kathy in Rock with Barney)
- Alexis Harris (played Jennifer in Rock with Barney)
- Ajay Reddy (played AJ in Rock with Barney)
- Chris Rodriguez (played Joseph in Rock with Barney)
- Lourdes Regala (played Adam's mother in Rock with Barney)
Syndication
The first six videos of this series aired on The Disney Channel in November 1990 as a part of its "Music Box" program.[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Classic Barney Videos". Classic Barney. Tripod.com. Archived from the original on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-19.
- ^ Lawson, Carol (3 December 1992). "Why Young Children Scream". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
- ^ Walters, John (February 2002). The Same River Twice. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-9716999-0-8.
- ^ Petit, Stephanie (8 June 2017). "Barney Unmasked! Meet the Man Who 'Loved' Playing the Iconic Purple Dinosaur for a Decade". People. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
- ^ "On the set of "Barney"". Entertainment Weekly. October 5, 1990. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- 1988 American television series debuts
- 1991 American television series endings
- 1980s American children's television series
- 1990s American children's television series
- 1980s preschool education television series
- 1990s preschool education television series
- American preschool education television series
- American television shows featuring puppetry
- Barney (franchise)
- Direct-to-video television series
- Television series about dinosaurs