Wonder Pets!
Wonder Pets! is an American animated musical children's television series produced by Little Airplane Productions. The series follows a trio of anthropomorphic classroom pets—Linny the Guinea Pig, Turtle Tuck, and Ming-Ming Duckling—who use teamwork to help animals in need. Most of the characters' dialogue is sung in the style of a sung-through musical. Each episode is set to original music by a 10-member live orchestra.
Josh Selig and Jennifer Oxley developed the idea for Wonder Pets! while working on their previous show, Oobi. The series started out with two animated shorts called "Linny the Guinea Pig", which acted as pilot episodes. To animate them, Oxley created a style of animation called "photo-puppetry" that uses photos of real objects and moves them using Adobe After Effects. The shorts featured Linny going on adventures set to classical music. In 2003, Little Airplane screened the shorts at the wrap party for Oobis second season. The shorts caught the attention of Nickelodeon, who picked up the shorts to air in between shows on the Nick Jr. block.
The two original shorts were aired throughout 2003 and 2004. For the full-length series, the characters of Tuck and Ming-Ming were added to form a team of hero pets. Tuck was created using photos of Jennifer Oxley's own pet turtle. The first long-form episode debuted on March 3, 2006, as part of the Nick Jr. block on Nickelodeon. On that same day, the series started airing on Noggin as well. It ran for three seasons and 62 episodes. The final episode aired on October 17, 2016. The first two seasons and majority of season 3 aired on Nickelodeon, while the last 9 episodes only aired on the separate Nick Jr. Channel.
A reboot series titled Wonder Pets: In the City, was released on Apple TV+ on December 13, 2024. The series, produced without the involvement of Selig or Little Airplane, centers on a new team of Wonder Pets and takes place in New York City. Much like the original series, the revival is produced by Nickelodeon Animation Studio.
Premise
The series centers on three pets living in a school. Each episode follows a similar structure, with many hallmarks and repeated elements. As each episode begins, children and a teacher are heard from off-screen, leaving school as they say goodbye to the classroom pets. The classroom is always decorated with student artwork and other items related to a given episode's particular storyline, featured animal, or geographic location. Once the classroom is empty, a pencil holder rattles to create the ringing of a phone.One by one, the classroom pets notice the ringing phone. As the phone rings, they put on their accessories and make their way towards the phone while singing their opening verses. The Wonder Pets answer the phone and find that an animal is in trouble somewhere. Linny, the Guinea Pig, explains the situation to the other two: Turtle Tuck and Ming-Ming Duckling. They all jump into a box filled with fabric scraps and jump back out wearing different outfits, often referencing the area of the world they will be visiting. They make a quick joke and jump back into the box, before reemerging wearing superhero capes.
Once dressed, they assemble a flying vehicle called the Flyboat. In some episodes, the Wonder Pets opt for a different mode of transportation by adjusting the Flyboat. Usually, the pets face a problem before leaving the classroom, and sometimes while on the way to where the animal is. The solution is invariably similar to the action they will do to save or help the animal in trouble.
When trying to save the animal, the Wonder Pets always fail on the first few attempts, and the danger escalates, prompting Ming-Ming to sing, "This is sewious!" Suddenly, the Wonder Pets remember how they solved the problem in the classroom and realize that the rescue has a similar solution and they work together to achieve the rescue. Once the animal is saved, its parent or other relative appears to give grateful thanks to the Wonder Pets, who then celebrate with a celery snack. The rescued animal's parent sometimes adds a bit of regional food or insists on a regional preparation. The pets fly back to the school and return to their cages as their hats and capes come off, and the Flyboat automatically disassembles upon landing. Ming-Ming is always the first one to get back in her cage, Tuck is the second, and Linny is the last. A musical riff relating to the episode's rescue is played as Linny takes a bite out of the celery in her cage and winks at the camera. Other pets have winked at the camera including Tuck in “Save the Rhino!”, Ming-Ming in “Back to Kalamazoo!” and "In The Land of Oz!", and Ollie in "Ollie to the Rescue!" and "The Amazing Ollie!". Another episode or the end credits then begin.
Episodes
The series debuted on March 3, 2006, on Nickelodeon's Nick Jr. block.Characters
- Linny is a brown guinea pig who is the leader of the Wonder Pets and the oldest of the trio. Linny is the most educated of the group, often providing information about the different animals and environments that the pets encounter. Linny is usually the one to remind the group about teamwork and offer praise. She has the responsibility of starting and driving the Flyboat. Linny's catchphrase is "This calls for some celery!", said at the end of each adventure. She always carries some celery with her and brings it out to celebrate after every successful mission.
- Tuck is a red-eared slider turtle and the middle of the trio. He is very sensitive with an emotional connection to living things and is the center of the group. Tuck is quite empathetic, often wanting to give the rescued animals a hug or keeping them company while Linny and Ming-Ming put their rescue plan into action. He has keen observational skills and can spot things from long distances, which Linny compliments him, "Good eye, Tuck!" He has an older cousin named Buck, whose cool demeanor and many skills make Tuck pretty jealous.
- Ming-Ming is a duckling and the youngest of the trio. Unlike the other Wonder Pets, she can fly and speak "bird", allowing her to connect with other birds that the Wonder Pets encounter. Ming-Ming often provides lots of comic relief in the show and is most likely to use irony and mild sarcasm. Her family, which consists of Marvin, her baby cousin, and their aunt Elenora, comes from a petting zoo in Kalamazoo, Michigan, and she visits them on occasion. She speaks with a prominent rhotacism, pronouncing "r" sounds as "w". She is known for saying "This is sewious!", whenever there is trouble.
Recurring
- Ollie is a gray rabbit who considers himself the fourth Wonder Pet. He is self-centered and often unintentionally annoys the Wonder Pets whenever he visits their classroom. He has his own superhero team, the "Thunder Pets", consisting of himself and his toys. However, unlike the main Wonder Pets, he is a terrible rescuer and invariably needs help from the Wonder Pets whenever he tries to save someone. He lives in a burrow outside of the Wonder Pets' schoolhouse with his mother, sister, and baby brother.
- Ginny is Linny's grandmother who lives in a nursing home with an old white mouse named Bernie. Like Linny, she is self-confident, a natural leader, and loves celery.
- The Visitor is an extraterrestrial being who lives on a faraway planet. He resembles a purple frog-like creature with two antennas and one foot. He knows a few English phrases but can only speak in short fragments. He crash-lands on Earth in "Save the Visitor" and needs the Wonder Pets' help to fly back to space. He becomes a good friend of theirs and invites them to his party in "Save the Visitor's Birthday Party".
- Little Bee and Slug are a pair of bug friends. Little Bee is a young yellow-and-black bumblebee who is learning how to make honey for her hive. Slug is a brownish-green garden slug who wears the top of an acorn as a hat. She and Slug appear as the main characters of "The Adventures of Bee & Slug!" and "Bee & Slug Underground!"
- Baby Dragon and Uni are two mythical creatures who live in a storybook in the Wonder Pets' classroom. Baby Dragon is a wingless dragon, and Uni is his best friend, a unicorn. They first appear in "Save the Unicorn!", in which the Wonder Pets try to help Uni when her horn is stuck in a tree. After freeing Uni, the Wonder Pets try to flee from Baby Dragon, but they discover that he is Uni's best friend. In "Save the Dragon!", the Wonder Pets return to the storybook land to save Baby Dragon after he gets stuck on a cloud.
Production and history
Wonder Pets! was produced by Little Airplane Productions. Before Wonder Pets! started, Little Airplane had only produced live-action works, like Oobi and a short film titled The Time-Out Chair. After Oobi became a breakout success for the studio, its co-founder Josh Selig expressed interest in producing another television show. Little Airplane produced two animated shorts called "Linny the Guinea Pig." The shorts focused on a silent guinea pig who left her classroom to go on fantastic adventures, each set to classical music. Jennifer Oxley, who had joined Little Airplane as an animator, signed on as the director of the two shorts.Josh Selig and Jennifer Oxley first screened the shorts at the wrap party for Oobis second season. The shorts eventually caught the attention of Nickelodeon, who picked up the shorts to air in-between shows and eventually commissioned a full season of 20 long-form episodes. Tuck and Ming-Ming were added to the cast to form a team of superhero pets, and the characters were given voices; the dialogue-free nature of the original shorts did not translate well to half-hour episodes. At first, the show was called The Super Singing Power Pets!, but it was renamed Wonder Pets! because the former name was too long. Many former crew members of Oobi moved onto the show, including writers Chris Nee and Sascha Paladino and composers Larry Hochman and Jeffrey Lesser.
The animation style used to create Wonder Pets! is called "photo-puppetry," and was created for the series to allow animators to manipulate photographs of real animals. It also uses drawn objects, so the total presentation could be considered animated mixed-media. Jennifer Oxley considers this technique her own invention and first used it to create lifelike transitions for Little Airplane's previous works.
A good deal of the dialog is sung, so the show has been likened to operetta or singspiel. A 10-member live orchestra performs each episode, sometimes including other instrumentalists skilled in music from the region to which the pets are traveling during the episode. Completing each episode took thirty-three weeks from script to final delivery.
Broadcast and release
Wonder Pets! premiered on Nickelodeon airing on March 3, 2006, as well as Noggin on the same day.Reception
Pam Gelman of Common Sense Media gave the show four stars out of five, describing as "kid-friendly mini-operas about teamwork and more."Emily Writes of The Spinoff criticized the series' music in 2018, saying: "I’m a vegetarian but the songs on Wonder Pets make me want to eat duck just to shut that lisping bastard up. The desperately inane 'Team Work What’s Gonna Work? Team Work' anthem is surely the worst song to ever exist in the realm of children’s TV tunes."
In other media
Books (''Wonder Pets!'' series)
- Arranged in publication date order.
Soundtrack
In addition to the DVDs and books, the show's self-titled track, Wonder Pets!, was released on April 10, 2007. The soundtrack features songs from the show itself, including the main self-titled theme song.Track listing
All songs are performed by the Wonder Pets unless otherwise noted.- "The Wonder Pets!"
- "Poor Baby Squirrel"
- "The Caterpillar's Song"
- "Oh, Sheep-eee-hooo!"
- "Tickle the Whale"
- "To Be Free!"
- "Hold On, Pigeon!"
- "Fruit Salad"
- "City Garden Rap"
- "Hug a Hedgy"
- "The Oasis"
- "Hola, Hermit Crab!"
- "Wee-Wee, Pee-Pee, Tinkle!"
- "Brown Cow Down"
- "Wonder Pets, We Love You!"
- "The Wonder Pets! Theme"