Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: SATURDAY, March 19, 1994 TAG: 9403190153 SECTION: SPECTATOR PAGE: S-4 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: By N.F. Mendoza Los Angeles Times DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
The first of the show's final three episodes, "Too Many Pranks," airs this week. But fans still will be able to catch reruns on the premium cable channel "for the next couple of years," producer Noreen Young reports.
The popular and colorful show focuses on an artist (Holly LaRoque) and her puppet roommates, Jacob the Jay Bird, Gloria the Gopher and Iggy the Iguana. The quartet live in a treehouse.
Although the show is aimed at preschoolers, fans are up to 8 years old. "The youngest viewers, who can be 1 1/2 years old, love the colors and the puppets," Young says. "The older kids like the jokes."
Each episode, Young says, "discusses problems familiar to kids. The problem gets solved. We try not to be preachy. We always try to show the humorous side of things. We want something that will make them laugh and help them cope in a domestic situation they might encounter and how they relate to adult figures."
Previous shows have dealt with death, sportsmanship, sexism, envy and careers.
This week's half-hour show - most weeks two 15-minute segments air back to back - offers a contemporary twist to the classic tale of the boy who cried wolf. The puppets learn an important lesson when Iggy's practical jokes go awry. Iggy thinks his antics are funny, but the others disagree. When he finally tries to tell them about something that has really happened, no one believes him.
It's hard for Young to believe that her show is ending, that it encountered budget problems that made it "not viable from a business perspective."
In addition to Disney Channel reruns, parents will be able to find "Umbrella Tree" on video this winter: all 270 15-minute episodes, as well as 15 half-hour specials.
by CNB