TV Colosso

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TV Colosso (also known as The Hot Dog Channel)[1] was a Brazilian children's television series produced by Rede Globo, that began on April 19, 1993, and finished on January 3, 1997. The show utilized puppets, body puppets, remote-controlled animatronics and bluescreen puppets. It stars a group of working dogs in a TV station that struggle to put her TV shows on air.[2]

The show presented the fictional programs "Jornal Colossal"; "Clip-Cão"; "Pedigree", a parody of Rede Globo's soap operas; "As Aventuras do Super-Cão"; "Olimpíadas de Cachorro"; "Acredite Se Puder" (Believe it if you can) satirizing the Ripley's Believe It or Not! ; "ColosShow"; "Asfalto Quente"; "Aprendendo Prá Cachorro"; "CapaShow"; and others.

The show was created by , a graphic artist, who also created its characters; and directed by , famous for Rede Globo's hits No Limite (Brazilian version of Survivor) and Big Brother Brasil. The puppets were all made by from Ferré's own puppet company Criadores e Criaturas (100 Modos).

It was a big hit on Brazil and worldwide, but was cancelled due to intense production costs. The show was also broadcast in Japan by NHK.

In 2009, the show's return in April of the same year was discussed by the producer, but not happened. Also in that year, it was reported that a DVD box set featuring the show's most important episodes and a Broadway-inspired musical are in works.

On October 12, 2016, the show resumed production as a webseries for Playkids.

History[]

After the ending of Xou da Xuxa in 1993, TV Globo wanted a new children's show for filling the timeslot. Director Boninho got in touch with the artist Luiz Ferré to create a concept for the program.[2]

Characters[]

  • Priscila, a charming female sheepdog, main and only producer and also an artist.
  • Gilmar (Manny) and his 20.000 Gilmar workers, the group of working dogs.
  • JF, the pessimistic TV Colosso CEO and mentor, probably a reference to J.R. Ewing
  • Capachildo Capachão, JF's servile assistant. His name is a reference to capacho (Portuguese to doormat).
  • Borges, the bulldog picture director.
  • Bullborg, Borges' dog-bot.
  • Walter Gate, the Jornal Colossal host, an homage to Walter Cronkite and to Jornal Nacional host William Bonner, and a reference to Watergate
  • Waltinho, Walter Gate's son.
  • Peggy Sunshine, the female weather newsdog.
  • Paulo Paulada, the security dog.
  • Jaca Paladium, the host of "Acredite Se Puder", an homage to Jack Palance in Ripley's Believe It or Not!
  • Vira-Lata de Aço, the show's antagonist.
  • Camera Ney, the cameraman dog.
  • Roberval, the chocolate thief.
  • Castilho, Priscila's annoying boyfriend.
  • Bob Dog, Priscila's rock 'n' roll star.
  • Daniel, a keyboarding dog.
  • Malabi, the magician dog.
  • Thunderdog, the musician dog and Luiz Thunderbird's parody.
  • Professor Haftas Arden, the scientist dog. His name is a reference to burning Aphthous ulcer in Portuguese
  • Ajudante, Professor's assistant.
  • Dr. Frankenstof, Professor's brother.
  • Dr. Kobalski, Frankenstof's assistant, probably a reference to one character in Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (Kowalski)
  • Godoy, the elderly dog.
  • Bóris, the not-so-haunted house dweller.
  • Astor, Bóris' assistant.
  • Nestor, the repairing dog.
  • Jaca Palladium's childish fans.
  • Peteleco, the dog that was kidnapped in Rede Globo's telenovela A Lua Me Disse.
  • Parmessão & Provolone, the comic pair.
  • Supercão, the show's super-hero and Gilmar's alter ego.
  • the fleas that enjoy causing havoc on TV Colosso Studios.
  • Professor Gagá, the rock 'n' roll singer and professor rooster.
  • Capachete Capachona, Capachão's professional friend.
  • Laerte Canini, TV Colosso's scriptwriter and a reference to the show's scriptwriter and cartoonist Laerte Coutinho.
  • Detetive Farofinha, the Sherlock Holmes dog counterpart.
  • the winning Viking girl dogs of Capachão's Capashow.
  • the fairy dogparents who lose the Capashow to her rival Viking girl dogs.
  • Plínio Bragança Cardoso, son of the Bragança Cardoso family and the protagonist of TV Colosso's telenovela "Inimigos Para Sempre". He has a relationship with Marina Couto Pereira despite its parents' hostility towards the Bragança Cardoso family.
  • Marina Couto Pereira, daughter of the Couto Pereira family and the female protagonist from "Inimigos Para Sempre". She has a crush towards Plínio Bragança Cardoso while its parents seen to have heartlessness towards the Couto Pereira clan.
  • Pelados, the rebel boys from the high school who appreciate milkshakes, sports, heavy metal songs and scamming and tormenting the Peludos.
  • Peludos, the kind-hearted and sensitive boys from the same school as Pelados who, in contrast to them, appreciate classical music, romantic poetry and studying a lot to fulfill their destiny.
  • Shirley, the popular girl from the high school who loves both the Pelados and the Peludos and despises their cruelty, violence and heartlessness towards each other.
  • Delicatessen, the princess protagonist from "A Princesa Pirata" who desires to be a pirate in order to ease their boringness.

Making[]

The 28 puppets were 25 dogs and 3 fleas.

The body puppets needed dancers to control its movements.

The puppets needed electronic puppeteers and voice actors.

The puppet mechanisms were made by who visited Los Angeles studios searching special effects technology. The animations were radio-controlled, making more realism.

The sets were created by Lia Renha, Maria Odile, Kátia Florêncio and Fernando Schmidt, and had different dimensions variating since miniature to the big ones.

All props were built specially for TV Colosso.

Cartoons[]

Just below is the list of some series that were shown on TV Colosso:

TV Specials[]

TV Colosso Especial[]

This made-for-TV featurette film was aired on December 24, 1993, and retold traditional Christmas stories.

The story tells TV Colosso's gang celebrating Christmas at JF's house and watching special scheduling at a high-technology TV. Priscila, Capachildo Capachão, Thunder Dog and others watch "A Estrela de Belém, Cada Gilmar é um Rei" (loosely based on the "Three Wise Men" classic tale) and "O Avarento" (loosely based on "Ebeneezer Scrooger" by Charles Dickens).

The sets on this special were made by Lia Renha and Fernando Schmidt, the costumes were designed by , and art was produced by Silvana Estrella.

TV Colosso Especial Terça Nobre[]

Due to celebration of Children's Day in 1994, an episode of TV Colosso was specially produced to be shown on (primetime block), mixing for the first time puppets with live actors.

In this special, Priscila and the gang are producing and hosting the special show. The guest stars were the Rede Globo cast: Renato Aragão, Dedé Santana, Casseta & Planeta Team, Regina Casé, Tom Cavalcante, Xuxa, Sandy & Júnior, Claudio Heinrich, Ana Paula Tabalipa, André Marques and Carolina Dieckmann.

The special was taped at the original sets of TV Colosso and at Teatro Fenix, on Rio de Janeiro, where Fernando Schmidt turned the theater at TV Colosso's auditorium.

Merchandising[]

The success of TV Colosso launched 2 records by Som Livre, a feature film, shows, a theatrical play, toys and games by Estrela and Sega, and comic books by Editora Abril.

Super-Colosso - Uma Aventura de Cinema da TV Colosso[]

Due to major success of TV Colosso, a feature film was produced by Paris Filmes, and Play Video Produções Para TV & Cinema. The film was released in 1994 and the biggest sadness about it were its R$2,000,000 budget and that to date his producers didn't pay incentive taxes.

Plot[]

Priscila, Alice, Gilmar, Capachildo Capachão, JF, Nestor, Castilho, Malabi, Walter Gate, Waltinho, Borges, Bullborg, Bóris, Jaca Paladium, Paulo Paulada, and all staff of TV Colosso want to throw a party to celebrate the Dog's Day. They organize a game contest, and Gilmar chooses the Thinker Dog Statue, by renowned sculptor Cacheau Rodin, as a trophy. But Afrânio Furtado, Dona Jóia Furtado and his children Rubi and Furtadinho manage to steal it, trying to cut the fun short.

Cast[]

  • Rafael Nomais: Marcelo Serrado
  • Alice: Luana Piovani
  • The Furtado Family: Antônio Carlos Falcão, Debora Olivieri, Jussara Marques, Fredy Allan
  • Gabriela: Ilana Kaplan
  • Flávio: Luciano Quirino
  • The French Delegation: Bhá Bocchi Prince, Graziella Moretto, Luiz Miranda
  • voice of Priscila: Mônica Rossi
  • voices of Gilmar/Supercão, Malabi and Professor Cacá: Mário Jorge
  • voice of Castilho: Marco Ribeiro
  • voices of Capachão and Nestor: Mauro Ramos
  • voices of JF, Thunderdog, and Daniel: Garcia Júnior
  • voice of chicken song teacher: Carmen Sheila
  • voices of Jaca Paladium, Paulo Paulada and Vira-Lata de Aço: Hamilton Ricardo
  • voice of flea: Isis Koschdoski
  • voices of Walter Gate, Sr. Bóris, Bullborg and flea: Márcio Simões
  • voice of Waltinho: Reynaldo Buzzoni
  • voice of Peggy Sunshine and flea: Sheila Dorfman
  • additional voices: Marco Antônio, Hércules Fernando (uncredited), Carlos Seidl (uncredited)
  • puppeteers: , (uncredited), Ana Andreata, Astrid Toledo, , , , Guilherme Pires, (uncredited), José Carnevale, Luciano Quirino, Luiz Cláudio Pacini, (uncredited), Marcelo Burkoff, Marcos Lima, (uncredited), (uncredited), Paulo Ferrer, Pi Heins, , , , Rodrigo Scarpa (uncredited),

Crew[]

  • director:
  • puppet director:
  • voice director: Mário Jorge
  • production director: Siomara Blumer
  • production coordinators: Geno Riva, Socorro Goes
  • executive producer: Guga de Oliveira
  • music: Ruriá Duprat
  • editor: Luiz Elias
  • costume designer: Sylvia Moraes
  • art director: Felipe Tassara
  • director of photography: Christian Lesage
  • script: Giba Assis Brasil, Laerte

Crew[]

  • created by: ,
  • written by: Valério Campos, Toninho Neves, Laerte, Angeli, Glauco, Luiz Gê, Fernando Gonzalez, Newton Foot, Gilmar Rodrigues, Adão Iturrusgarai, Flávio Luiz, Nani, Ique, Chico Soares, Toni Marques, Antônio Costa Neto, Luiz Martins, José Rubens Chachá
  • English adaptation: Kyle Logan, Michael Bruza, Juliana Gaspari
  • puppeteering director:
  • directed by: , Mário Meirelles, Roberto Vaz
  • puppets - : , , , , , Luiz Rogério, ,
  • puppeteers: , , , , , , Joana Correa, Jefferson Antônio, Milton Carvalho, Renato Coelho, , Rodrigo Scarpa, , , , , Otávio Ferreira, Charlene Brito, , Rodolpho Brandão, Vandriani Lazarini, , André Vagon, Cláudia Raduzewsky
  • voices directed by: Mário Jorge
  • American voice directors: Michael Bruza, Kyle Logan
  • narrator: Sylvia Salustti
  • with the voice talents of: Mário Jorge, Mônica Rossi, Ísis Kochdosky, Garcia Jr., Guilherme Briggs, Sheila Dorfman, Márcio Simões, Carmen Sheila, Hércules Fernando, Carlos Seidl, Marco Antônio, Hamilton Ricardo, Mauro Ramos, Marco Ribeiro, Reynaldo Buzzoni
  • English voice cast: Dorothy Fahn, Sandy Fox, Nathan Turner, Brian Habicht, Kelly Jean Badgley
  • puppet technicians: Daniel Segal, Sidnei Antonioli
  • production coordinator: Jayme Henriques
  • editing: Marco Siciliano, Robson M. Schneider, Rosemeire Barros
  • production team: Mara Martins, Mário Viana, Sérgio Barata, Gilson de Souza, Carla Braga, José de Andrade
  • sets designed by: Lia Renha, Maria Odile, Kátia Florêncio, Fernando Schmidt
  • costumes designed by: Cao, Lúcia Cunha, , Helena Araújo, Bia Rocha, Marília Carneiro
  • art produced by: Silvana Estrella
  • visual effects:
  • camera: Paulo Cesar Moreira, Maurício Soares, Afonso Enrique, Oswaldo Rogério, Lídio Carlos, Jorge Gaby
  • sound designed by: Leonardo da Vinci
  • music: Rodolfo Rebuzzi, Ricardo Ottoboni, Edson e Felipe, Fernando Figueiredo
  • music directed by: Márcio Vip Antonucci
  • cinematography: Manuel Neves
  • main titles by: Hans Donner, Nilton Nunes, Ruth Reis, Capy Ramazzina
  • director of photography: Luiz Paulo Nenem
  • executive producer: Flávio Goldemberg
  • production director: Marcelo Paranhos
  • art directed by: Ana Blota,
  • production: CENTRAL GLOBO DE PRODUÇÃO

DVD[]

In October 2009, Som Livre and Globo Marcas released an DVD trilogy focusing the show's best episodes:

  • Volume 1: A Princesa Pirata e As Aventuras do Supercão
  • Volume 2: A Carrocinha do Amor e outras histórias
  • Volume 3: Inimigos Para Sempre e a dupla Rodoválio e Gumercindo.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Folha de S.Paulo - Globo parece `mexicana' na Internet (com foto) - 26/01/97". www1.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved 2016-10-17.
  2. ^ a b "A história oral da 'TV Colosso' - Risca Faca". Risca Faca (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2016-10-13. Retrieved 2016-10-15.

External links[]

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