Stoppit and Tidyup


Stoppit and Tidyup is a British children's animated cartoon comedy television series which was produced by CMTB Animation and Queensgate Productions in 1987 and screened on BBC One with repeats on BBC Two from 12 September to 5 December 1988. The episodes feature two protagonists, Stoppit and Tidyup, interacting with various other inhabitants of the mythical land of Do As You're Told. Each episode was five minutes in length, and narrated by Terry Wogan. The series was created by Charles Mills and Terry Brain, and partly funded by The Tidy Britain Group. The third member of the team behind the show was animator Steve Box who later gained success after moving to Aardman Animations.
The introduction theme music to Stoppit and Tidyup's friends coming along the screen at the start of each episode was "Follow the Leader" by Bobby Heath, Eric Peters and Robert Hunter from the Spectrum mood library.

Description

The short-running series features microscopic characters who live in the fictitious land of "Do As You're Told", a strange and colourful place whose inhabitants are insects named after orders directed at children, grandchildren and pupils by their adult peers or authority figures. Unlike The Trap Door, which ran for 40 episodes over two series, only a single series of 13 episodes was produced. Each episode is named after a character that features in the episode.
The series followed the exploits of the eponymous Stoppit, and Tidyup, in their native land, which is filled with giant-to-them gherkins. Supporting characters include Beequiet and Beehave, Eat Your Greens, Comb Your Hair, Wash Your Face, Go And Play, the big bad I Said No, Hurry Up, Calm Down, Don't Do That, Go To Bed, Sayplease and Saythankyou, Clean Your Teeth, and Take Care. There are also groups of extra characters referred to as Naughties and Sit Downs. None of the characters actually speak decipherable words as such. Instead they gabble, grunt, squeak, click, make trumpet or raspberry sounds and hum whilst series narrator Terry Wogan unravels the tale for viewers. The characters' noises were provided by the show's co-creator Terry Brain but he was not credited for it.
The storylines are notable for their random, abstract nature, and the fact that an episode will frequently end without any moral message at all. For example, in the twelfth episode, "Clean Your Teeth", it changes from summer to winter and begins to snow, and Stoppit gets left behind on his own while Tidyup and Clean Your Teeth spend the rest of the episode playing on sledges at the end, even though he loves the snow.

Episodes

All thirteen episodes featuring Stoppit & Tidyup's friends were shown on BBC One and repeated on BBC Two as part of the Children's BBC strand, as it was known before 1997, on Mondays at 3:50pm.

Production

Unlike its predecessor, Stoppit and Tidyup was cel-animated, and while a single episode of The Trap Door would take Charles Mills and Terry Brain an average of two weeks to write, build and shoot in 1984, a single episode of this series would only take them an average of ten days to write and film in 1987. After the series concluded, they mainly did commercials and title sequences.

Media

A series of twelve tie-in books were published by Price Stern Sloan Ltd. when the series was first aired in 1988, with 'Sayplease and Saythankyou' being the only episode not novelised. An illustrated annual was released in 1989.
All thirteen episodes were released on VHS by BBC Video in 1988, but this is now out of print.
All thirteen episodes were later rereleased on DVD by Universal Pictures Video and Right Entertainment in 2004.