Eureeka's Castle Theme Song

American children's television series

Eureeka's Castle
Eureekas.jpg

Title card

Genre Children's
Fantasy
Created by Judy Katschke
Written by R. L. Stine (head writer)
Creative director Eli Noyes
Starring
  • Cheryl Blaylock
  • Noel MacNeal
  • Jim Kroupa
  • Pam Arciero
  • Lynn Hippen
  • Brian Muehl
Composer Peter Lurye
Country of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 142
Production
Executive producer Kit Laybourne
Producers
  • Kathleen Minton
  • Michael Holman (1989–1991)
Production location Nickelodeon Studios (1990–1991)
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time
  • 51 minutes
  • 25–27 minutes (season 3)
Production company Noyes & Laybourne Enterprises
Distributor MTV Networks
Release
Original network Nickelodeon
Original release September 4, 1989 (1989-09-04) –
November 10, 1991 (1991-11-10)

Eureeka's Castle is an American children's television series which aired on Nick Jr. from September 4, 1989 to November 10, 1991. The program featured various puppet characters who live in a giant's wind-up music box. The show was a joint development by Nickelodeon, animators Kit Laybourne and Eli Noyes of Noyes & Laybourne Enterprises, and the puppeteers at 3/Design Studio.[1] R. L. Stine developed the characters and was the head writer for the episodes.

Synopsis [edit]

The show follows various puppet characters (in the style of Sesame Street), including Eureeka, a sorceress-in-training. Eureeka and her friends live in a wind-up castle music box owned by a friendly giant. Other characters include Magellan the dragon, twin moat dwellers Bogge and Quagmire, Batly the bat, and Mr. Knack the handyman. There are also various appearing creatures such as mice, singing fish statues called the Fishtones, Magellan's pets Cooey and the Slurms, and Batly's pet spider Webster.

Halfway through the episode, an animated short based on a children's book (usually acquired from Children's Circle) was shown. Also featured were shorter animated and live-action short films, and European imports such as Animal Fair, Roobarb, The Shoe People, Towser, James the Cat, Le Piaf, Plonsters, Philipp, and Gran.

Characters [edit]

  • Eureeka (performed by Cheryl Blaylock) – The title character and protagonist. Eureeka is a friendly sorceress-in-training. Her spells are not successful most of the time, but she keeps trying until she gets it right. Aside from her magic, she usually helps solve her friends' problems.
  • Magellan (performed by Noel MacNeal) – A large green baby dragon with a tail that has a mind of its own. He doesn't always understand new concepts. Magellan tends to make great big sneezes that can shake the whole castle whenever he gets upset. He has a mother-son relationship with Eureeka. According to Eureeka, Magellan will do anything to try and stay awake past bedtime. One talent that Magellan can do is blow bubbles from his mouth.
    • Cooey (performed by Lynn Hippen) – Magellan's pet of indeterminate species. He has yellow fur and can only say "Coo!"
    • Slurms (a portmanteau of slugs and worms) – Magellan's pet worm hybrids. They were animated using clay animation.
    • Blanketeers - living blue dots on Magellan's blanket.
  • Batly (performed by Jim Kroupa) – An egotistical clumsy blue bat who wears glasses due to being near-sighted. Despite being different in every way, he and Magellan are good friends. His flying usually ends with a crash landing prompting him to say "I meant to do that." Batly spends most of his time in the belfry and has a large bug collection. In a 2016 Reddit AMA, Stine said that Batly's face was modeled after his own son, Matt.
    • Webster (performed by Noel MacNeal) – Batly's intimidating pet spider.
    • Fred - Batly's lightning bug whom he sleeps with.
  • Bogge and Quagmire (performed by Brian Muehl and Pam Arciero) – The Moat Twins are two mischievous, squabbling siblings who spend most of their time swimming in the castle moat, eating peanut butter sandwiches, and playing in the basement. Bogge is orange while Quagmire is pink. They tend to argue with each other, but work together when it comes to causing trouble. Bogge and Quagmire constantly try to steal Magellan's peanut butter sandwiches, but never succeed.
  • Mr. Knack (performed by Brian Muehl) – The castle's handyman and tinkerer. He uses many unconventional methods for fixing things around the castle. He also loves to barter when he sells some of his inventions that he has made from his pushcart. Mr. Knack always gets some postcards which he reads to the viewers. His first name is "Nick", giving him the name Nick Knack.
  • Sir Klank (performed by Jim Kroupa) – A blue mouse with a long gray beard who resides in a suit of armor.
  • Kate (performed by Lynn Hippen) – A pink mouse who frequently reports on what happens in the castle.
  • Emma (performed by Pam Arciero) – An obese orange mouse who loves to eat.
  • Fishtones – A trio of singing fish in the form of a stone fountain who spray water when they're not singing.
  • The Giant (performed by Jim Kroupa) – A friendly full-bodied giant with a big nose and a long, orange beard who owns the wind-up castle music box where the show takes place.

Puppeteers [edit]

Main [edit]

  • Pam Arciero as Quagmire, Emma
  • Cheryl Blaylock as Eureeka
  • Lynn Hippen as Cooey, Kate
  • Jim Kroupa as Batley, Sir Klank, Giant
  • Noel MacNeal as Magellan, Webster
  • Brian Muehl as Bogge, Mr. Knack

Additional [edit]

  • Rob Gardner
  • John Kennedy
  • Joey Mazzarino

Production [edit]

Eureeka's Castle's ending credits state the show comes from an original concept by Debby Beece and Judy Katschke. In 1988, development of the show began by staff members at Nickelodeon and animator Eli Noyes and his partner Kit Laybourne, whose wife Geraldine Laybourne was the Head of Programming for Nickelodeon.[1] "Jovial Bob Stine", best known for his children's horror novels written under the pen name R. L. Stine, was hired as the head writer to develop the concept, characters and episode scripts.[2] The puppet design and construction for the characters were done at 3/Design Studio where the puppets were built by Jim Kroupa, John Orberg, Kip Rathke and Matt Stoddart.[3]

Nickelodeon ordered 65 episodes of Eureeka's Castle, and Beece called it "the most ambitious program for preschoolers since the premiere of Sesame Street 20 years ago".[4] The first episode of Eureeka's Castle premiered during Nickelodeon's Special Delivery block on August 27, 1989, before debuting on Nick Jr. on September 4. In May 1990, Eureeka's Castle was renewed for a 35-episode second season (later reduced to 22 episodes).

From 1990 to 1991, Nickelodeon created 52 half-hour episodes of Eureeka's Castle entirely out of clips from the first two seasons for their participation in the Cable in the Classroom service. The half-hour episodes were designed for international distribution and later replaced the original hour-long episodes in reruns starting in 1994. Production on Eureeka's Castle ended in 1991; some of the show's crew later worked on Gullah Gullah Island.

Episodes [edit]

Series overview [edit]

Season 1 (1989) [edit]

Season 2 (1990) [edit]

Season 3 (1991) [edit]

Specials (1990–1991) [edit]

Broadcast [edit]

The series premiered on September 4, 1989 on Nick Jr. Reruns of the show continued airing on Nick Jr. until September 6, 1996,[5] and again from November 16, 1998, to February 5, 1999, and on Noggin from 1999 to 2002.

Home video [edit]

Two Eureeka's Castle direct-to-video specials ("Sing Along with Eureeka" and "Wide Awake at Eureeka's Castle", both produced in 1990) and the "Christmas at Eureeka's Castle" special were released by Hi-Tops Video in 1990, Sony Wonder in 1995, and Paramount Home Video in 1997. While some episodes were released on VHS, the series has not been released on DVD or Blu-ray.

On April 21, 2021, 26 episodes of the show were added to Paramount+.[6] This marks the first time the series had been legally available to watch in 19 years.

Awards [edit]

In 1990, Eureeka's Castle won an Ace Award for best children's program.[7] [8] [9]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Lipson, Eden Ross (September 3, 1989). "'Eureeka's Castle': New Niche for Preschoolers". New York Times. p. Television. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  2. ^ Eakin, Marah (November 8, 2013). "Eureeka's Castle co-creator R.L. Stine on the show's inception, success, and ultimate demise". Interview. avclub.com. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  3. ^ stated in Eureeka's Castle's ending credits
  4. ^ "Bullish outlook in cable-land" (page 43) from Television/Radio Age
  5. ^ Pecora, Norma Odom (November 14, 1997). The Business of Children's Entertainment . The Guilford Press. pp. 94–98. ISBN9781572302808.
  6. ^ "Eureeka's Castle". Paramount+ . Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  7. ^ Hedegaard, Erik (1990-09-07). "Hand-to-Hand Comedy". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved 2012-04-06 .
  8. ^ "Eureeka's Castle: Sing Along with Eureeka". Retrieved 2012-04-06 .
  9. ^ Stein, R.L. "I'm R.L. Stine and it's my job to terrify kids. Ask me anything!". Reddit. Reddit. Retrieved 31 October 2016.

External links [edit]

  • Eureeka's Castle at IMDb
  • Eureeka's Castle at Paramount Plus

Eureeka's Castle Theme Song

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eureeka%27s_Castle

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