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Budgie the Little Helicopter is a British animated television series, relating to a fictional helicopter and his friends, based on a series of children's books. [4] The characters were based on the books by Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York . [ 5 ]
The rights of the show was owned by The Sleepy Kids Company Ltd (who also produced Potsworth & Co. and Budgie the Little Helicopter) which was later changed to SKD Media and Entertainment Rights, then dissolved into Classic Media (now DreamWorks Classics, in turn owned by DreamWorks Animation, a subsidiary of NBCUniversal) and later became the ...
Budgie the Little Helicopter books and 1994 animated children's television series: 1989, Budgie the Little Helicopter ISBN 978-0671676834; 1989, Budgie at Bendick's Point ISBN 978-0689808494; 1991, Budgie and the Blizzard ISBN 978-0671734756; 1992, The Adventures of Budgie ISBN 978-0671792497; 1995, Budgie Books – S and S USA ISBN 978-0750096638
The Grand Budgie is a minor character in 3rd & Bird, the leader of the Budgie troop. He is a blue-footed booby bird. The hawk is a minor character in 3rd & Bird, as well as one of the only antagonists in the series. The hummingbirds are minor characters in 3rd & Bird, two unnamed birds. The Jamaican party guests are minor characters in 3rd ...
Fred Wolf (born September 13, 1932) is an American animator and director. His works include the 1967 short subject The Box, for which he won an Academy Award; television specials such as The Point! and Free to Be...You and Me, and television series such as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, James Bond Jr., and Sarah Ferguson’s Budgie the Little Helicopter.
Television portal; United Kingdom portal; This category contains children's television programmes broadcast on ITV, particularly those as part of the CITV strand. It does not contain imports which were originally broadcast in another country.
Budgie the Little Helicopter (1999 – 1 September 2009) Bump (2 August 2004 – 2 October 2009) The Busy World of Richard Scarry (1998 – 1 July 2009) Button Moon (1 May 2005 – 30 March 2009) Camberwick Green (31 March 2008 – 5 October 2009) Chigley (28 May 2007 – 4 January 2009) Christopher Crocodile (2000 – 3 February 2009)
He later moved on to other theatre roles in the West End, such as Rocky Horror in The Rocky Horror Show in 1979, the voice of Audrey II in Little Shop of Horrors in 1983, which he described as a "deep, black, Harlem voice"; Time in 1986, Munkustrap in Cats from 1987 to 1990, Miss Saigon in 1989, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat in ...