Bob and Margaret
Bob and Margaret | |
---|---|
Genre | Adult animation Romance Sitcom |
Created by | |
Based on | Bob's Birthday by David Fine Alison Snowden |
Starring |
|
Composer | Patrick Godfrey |
Country of origin | United Kingdom (seasons 1-2) Canada Philippines (seasons 3–4) |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 52 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Producer | Tom McGillis (S3-4) |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production companies | Nelvana Snowden Fine Animation SilverLight Productions (season 2) Philippines Animation Studios (season 3-4) National Film Board of Canada |
Original release | |
Network | Global Television Network (Canada) Channel 4 (United Kingdom) |
Release | 3 December 1998 29 November 2001 | –
Related | |
Ricky Sprocket: Showbiz Boy O Canada |
Bob and Margaret is an adult animated sitcom created by David Fine and Alison Snowden and co-produced by Nelvana and Channel 4 as a collaboration, both financial and artistic, between the United Kingdom and Canada.[1] The last two seasons were produced without Channel 4 (i.e. Nelvana and Philippine Animators Group Inc.) but with continuing British involvement in the animation, cast, and screenwriting. The series was based on the Academy Award-winning short film Bob's Birthday, featuring the same main characters, which won the Best Animated Short Film Oscar in 1994.[2] In Canada, it was the highest-rated Canadian-made animated series ever when it aired in primetime on Global.
The show revolves around a married English couple named Bob and Margaret Fish. They are a middle-class professional working couple of forty-ish with no children and two dogs named William and Elizabeth, who often serve as surrogates for children and are considered to be characters with personalities in their own right.[3] Bob is a dentist and Margaret is a chiropodist.
Premise
[edit]Bob and Margaret struggle with everyday issues and mid-life crises. Stories often revolve around the mundane, but in a way that is eminently relatable, from the trials of shopping to dealing with friends who annoy them but owe them a dinner. They are often seen enjoying various takeaways – curries, various Chinese dishes, and especially pizza - as they navigate their lazy, sedentary homelives.
In the first two seasons, Bob and Margaret live in England, in the South London community of Balham. For the third and fourth seasons, they move to Toronto, Ontario, Canada, allowing the writers to explore the humour of the culture clash. The move was mandated by the realities of funding after Channel 4 backed out, with certain Canadian grants and tax benefits being dependent on stories being physically based in Canada. As such, the transition was necessary to finance the show's continued production. Fine and Snowden chose to take an executive role on these latter two seasons, reviewing scripts and consulting, but not involved in as granular detail as they were for the first two seasons. Snowden continued to provide Margaret's voice, but Brian George replaced Andy Hamilton as Bob's voice.
Characters
[edit]Main characters
[edit]- Bob Fish (voiced by Andy Hamilton in Season 1 and 2, Brian George in Season 3 and 4): is an English dentist working in South London in the district of Clapham. He is the husband of Margaret and his parents are Daisy and Cesal Fish. Bob's brother Peter is a successful world-class television chef, and his sister Susan is a recent divorcée and single mother. His father is deceased and only appears in flashbacks. His mother is still alive and very mean-spirited toward Bob but showers admiration and adoration on Peter. Throughout the series Bob is portrayed as the kindest, most understanding member of his family, but there are times he is arrogant and ignorant. in Season 3, he is forced to emigrate with Margaret to Toronto in order to secure legal custody of their dogs William and Elizabeth. He later becomes the primary dentist at the Inner City Dental clinic.
- Margaret Fish (voiced by Alison Snowden): Bob's wife Margaret is portrayed as an English chiropodist working in South London. Her parents, Tony and Maureen Heslop, greatly adore her husband Bob but show little to no respect for their own daughter Margaret, who resents them for it but silently. Throughout the series she was portrayed as caring and very passive, which leads other people to take advantage of her, but she learns to stand up for herself when the occasion calls for it. At one time she was accidentally classified as a terrorist by the London police department, who even attempted to assassinate her until they were informed that she was innocent. in Season 3, she is forced to emigrate to Toronto with Bob where she becomes the lead podiatrist at the Women's Clinic. Margaret has appeared in every episode with Bob.
Canadian-based characters
[edit]- Melvin and Cookie Fish (Melvin voiced by Wayne Robson and Cookie voiced by Jayne Eastwood): Melvin and Cookie Fish are Bob's friendly Canadian cousins from the Toronto suburb of Mississauga; they both have carefree attitudes and always have a positive, humorous view of life. The series depicts them as being proud Canadians who always need to compare Toronto to London (and once to New York City, in "Stranded in Toronto") with Toronto always coming out far ahead. They love and adore Bob and Margaret but unknowingly annoy them on numerous occasions, for example playing their vacation videos about their visits to London, which turn up all the hilarious, humiliating moments of their taping Bob and Margaret at their worst times. The couple have two aggressive cats named Buster and Bailey. They first appeared in the episode "The Discomfort of Strangers" in Season 1 and return as minors in Seasons 3 and 4.
- Heather (voiced by Vickie Papavs): Heather is a secretary at the Inner City Dental Clinic working in Bob's dental office in Toronto and has similar attributes to Penny in terms of facial expression but is kinder and less judgmental with a carefree attitude.
- Ed, Patel, and Audra: Ed and Patel are two other dentists working at the Inner City Dental Clinic with Bob. Ed is a defined as a Canadian woodsman; Patel is an Indian hygienist who encourages Bob to take on challenges for success. In one episode, Ed and Patel fight when they and Bob head out on a camping adventure. Audra is Bob's other dental hygienist who works in his Toronto dental clinic.
- Robin (voiced by Yanna McIntosh): is a reflexologist working at the women's clinic in Toronto, who employs Margaret as the clinic's podiatrist. She appears to be of Jamaican descent.
- Guinevere Long (voiced by Tracey Hoyt): Guinevere is chiropractic intern at women's clinic in Toronto, seen as calm and friendly to Margaret.
- Trevor and Joyce: (Trevor voiced by Dwayne Hill and Joyce voiced by Robin Duke later Jayne Eastwood): Trevor and Joyce are Bob and Margaret's next-door neighbours in Toronto. Trevor is a lazy, alcoholic couch potato, and his wife Joyce is a hardworking smoker. The couple is mostly seen quarreling.
- Dr Yosselhifer (voiced by Harvey Atkin): is the president of the Council of Canadian Dentistry. He is seen as ruthless, egotistic, and insecure towards Bob.
- Dr Klein (voiced by Benedict Campbell): is a plastic surgeon who helps remove a questionable skin mole for Margaret.
- Ray and Tiffany (Ray voiced by Christian Potenza): Tiffany is Cousin Melvin's goddaughter, and Ray was her fiancé in "The Wedding."
- Gary: Trevor and Joyce's son, a former army cadet who has a crush on Bob's secretary Heather.
- Alice and Lyle: a former married couple whose photograph package is accidentally mixed up with Bob's at the pharmacy.
- Angie and Cheryl: two youth delinquents and offenders who are sentenced to serve out their community service with Margaret.
- Mickey Musselman: is a business owner of furniture store and political candidate running for Alderman in Ward 9, he runs against Jimmy the Clown, Carl Schultz and Margaret in a local byelection. He is loosely inspired by former Toronto Mayor Mel Lastman.
- Elizabeth Roth: was a former candidate for Alderman in Ward 9. She relapses due to alcoholism prompting Margaret to takeover her campaign.
- Tanya (voiced by Terri Hawkes): is a member of book club in which Margaret joins, she appears in the episode (Book club). Hawkes also voices multiple roles in other episodes including (The Getaway), (The Candidate) and (Mastermind).
- TV announcer (voiced by Mark Dailey)
British-based characters
[edit]- Daisy: Bob's mother.
- Peter (voiced by Steve Coogan): Bob's brother, a successful television chef.
- Neil and Moira (Neil voiced by Jamie Watson and Moira voiced by Doon Mackichan): Appears in season 1 ("Friends for Dinner").
- Dorothy (voiced by Doon Mackichan): Appears in season 1 ("A Tale of Two Dentists").
- Dr. Stanway (voiced by Steve Coogan): Appears in "A Tale of Two Dentists".
- Gerald and Charlotte (both voiced by Lily Snowden): Peter's children who appear in the episode ("For Pete's Sake") in season 1.
- Beany and Boney (Beany was voiced by Steve Brody): Two burglars from London.
- Bernard Wiggins (Voiced by Steve Coogan): Appears in season 1 ("The Dental Convention").
- Kitty and Larry (Kitty voiced by Alison Snowden and Larry voiced by Jamie Watson): Appears in season 1 ("Neighbours").
- Cathy and Ken (Ken voiced by Steve Brody): Cathy and Ken are an overbearing couple who were friends with Margaret back in London, but Bob despises them. Cathy often becomes annoyed by Ken's antics and becomes regretful whenever something bad happens to him. They first appeared in the episode ("Blood, Sweat, and Tears") in season 1.
- Eden (voiced by Doon Mackichan): Eden (Edie) is Margaret's former secretary at her London chiropody clinic.
- Penny (voiced by Doon Mackichan): After the arrest of "Dorothy" (who was suspected to have been an accomplice in patient molestations), Bob's secretary at his former dental office in London, Penny becomes her replacement. She is characterised as a lazy, irresponsible and neglectful employee with an attitude problem. Penny (at her boyfriend's urging) was actually responsible for Bob and Margaret having death threats hurled at them from violent protesters and being forced to flee London when word got out that their dogs were being neglected.
- Mr. Perkins: Howard Perkins owns a flower shop and briefly hires Penny away from Bob.
- Rachel: Dr. Rachel Turbull is a clinical therapist and a former friend of Margaret. Her partner is Matt who runs an Alcoholic Anonymous meeting to whom Bob makes all to lose their sobriety due to his depressing stories.
Series overview
[edit]Season | Episodes | Originally aired | DVD and Blu-ray release date | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season premiere | Season finale | Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
1 | 13 | December 3, 1998 | February 25, 1999 | 16 February 2010 [4] | — | — | |
2 | 13 | August 19, 1999 | November 18, 1999 | 25 September 2005 [5] | 17 July 2006 [6] | — | |
3 | 13 | May 30, 2001 | August 22, 2001 | — | — | — | |
4 | 13 | September 13, 2001 | November 29, 2001 | — | — | — |
Episodes
[edit]Season 1 (1998-1999)
[edit]- All episodes in Season 1 are directed by Jamie Whitney, Andrew Young and Jason Groh
No. in series | Title | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "A Tale of Two Dentists" | David Fine | December 3, 1998 |
A new dentist opens a practice right across the road from Bob's and steals all his customers. His receptionist also defects, so Bob hires Penny. But things are not as they seem. | |||
2 | "A Night In" | David Fine | December 10, 1998 |
A quiet night at home...unfortunately it falls on a night when there's absolutely nothing to watch on TV. | |||
3 | "Blood, Sweat, and Tears" | Alison Snowden | December 17, 1998 |
Bob and Margaret decide to get fit and, after fruitless attempts at aerobics and workouts, they decide on a friendly game of badminton against Cathy and her latest boyfriend, Ken. | |||
4 | "Burglary" | Alison Snowden and David Fine | December 24, 1998 |
After Bob and Margaret's home is robbed, they file a police report and an insurance claim. Bob tries to get Margaret to lie on the insurance claim so they can get bigger/newer/flashier/fancier high-tech replacements. Margaret feels that this is dishonest and leads to high insurance premiums; she'd rather get comparable replacements and install a home security system. Meanwhile, the thieves watch for empty shipping boxes left for the trash collector. | |||
5 | "Shopping" | David Fine | December 31, 1998 |
After realizing they spend too much on take out meals and expensive local shops, Bob and Margaret decide to shop at a new discount grocery store out of town, but the expedition is anything but easy and cheap. | |||
6 | "The Holiday" | Alison Snowden | January 7, 1999 |
7 | "For Pete's Sake" | Alison Snowden | January 14, 1999 |
Bob and Margaret
are stuck babysitting their niece and nephew after Bob's brother, a professional TV chef, and his producer wife are going out of the country for a new reality show. | |||
8 | "Friends for Dinner" | David Fine | January 21, 1999 |
9 | "Love's Labors Lost" | Alison Snowden | January 28, 1999 |
10 | "The Dental Convention" | Peter Baynham | February 4, 1999 |
11 | "Discomfort of Strangers" | David Fine and Alison Snowden | February 11, 1999 |
12 | "Trick of Treat" | David Fine and Alison Snowden | February 18, 1999 |
13 | "Neighbors" | Peter Baynham | February 25, 1999 |
Season 2 (1999)
[edit]No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
14 | "Bob Gets Wired" | Doug Thoms, Karen Lessman, Jamie Whitney, and Harold Harris | Jeremy Hardy | August 19, 1999 |
After Margaret is arrested for shoplifting a bag of sprinkles she mistakenly put in her pocket, Bob wears a wire to exonerate her when the police think she is connected to an arson. | ||||
15 | "No Trouble" | Doug Thoms | Peter Baynham | August 26, 1999 |
16 | "The Trouble with Mummy" | Jamie Whitney | Jamie Whitney, David Fine, and Alison Snowden | September 2, 1999 |
After his mother's best friend passes away, Bob's siblings think she needs to move to a nursing home so they can sell her house and split the proceeds. | ||||
17 | "The Fly on the Wall" | Doug Thoms | Tim Fountain | September 9, 1999 |
18 | "Problems" | Jamie Whitney | Jeremy Hardy | September 16, 1999 |
19 | "A Patient Dies in Bob's Chair" | Doug Thoms | Andy Riley and Kevin Cecil | September 23, 1999 |
Bob loses his job after a patient dies of natural causes during a checkup and the media embellish the story. | ||||
20 | "Cuckoo in the Nest" | Karen Lessmann and Jamie Whitney | Tim Fountain | October 7, 1999 |
21 | "A New Life" | Doug Thoms | Peter Baynham | October 14, 1999 |
Bob becomes enchanted by the prospect of moving into a new planned community but it's Margaret who is coveted by the community. | ||||
22 | "Animal Behavior" | Karen Lessmann and Jamie Whitney | Rosie Shuster | October 21, 1999 |
23 | "Party Politics" | Doug Thoms | Sarah Smith | October 28, 1999 |
24 | "Going Dutch" | Karen Lessmann | Sally Phillips | November 4, 1999 |
25 | "My Foot Hurts" | Karen Lessmann | Andy Riley and Kevin Cecil | November 11, 1999 |
26 | "A Bob or Two" | Karen Lessmann | Tim Fountain and David Fine | November 18, 1999 |
Bob and Margaret disagree on what to do when they purchases a painting from a neighbor's rummage sale and is shocked to learn that it may be worth a fortune. |
Season 3 (2001)
[edit]No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
27 | "Stranded in Toronto" | Julian Harris | Rosalind Shuster | May 31, 2001 |
Bob and Margaret plan a vacation to New York but bad weather forces a layover in Toronto while their dogs are left in the care of Bob's assistant Penny, who promptly leaves them for an outing with her boyfriend. | ||||
28 | "Strangers in a Strange Land" | Dan Poitras | Valri Blomfield | June 7, 2001 |
Bob and Margaret become pariahs in London after they are accused of leaving their dogs unattended while they are stuck in Toronto. | ||||
29 | "Margaret Gets a Job" | Julian Harris | Rosalind Shuster and David Cole | June 14, 2001 |
Margaret, after she and Bob immigrated to Toronto to retain custody of their dogs, struggles to find work while Bob already has one. | ||||
30 | "'Til Death Do Us Part" | Dan Poitras | Heather Conkie | June 21, 2001 |
Bob is tricked into buying a cemetery plot for him and Margaret as an anniversary present. | ||||
31 | "The Wedding" | Julian Harris | David Cole | June 28, 2001 |
32 | "Fish at the Bat" | Dan Poitras | Matthew Cope | July 5, 2001 |
33 | "Over-Exposed" | Dan Poitras | Valri Blomfield and David Cole Story idea by: Andrew Nicholls and Darrell Vickers |
July 12, 2001 |
34 | "Age Before Beauty" | Julian Harris | Leila Basen and David Preston | July 19, 2001 |
35 | "Book Club" | Julian Harris | Heather Conkie | July 26, 2001 |
36 | "On Location" | Julian Harris | Valri Bromfield | August 2, 2001 |
When a movie is being shot right next door, Bob and Margaret both find themselves involved with the production. | ||||
37 | "Cottage Country" | Dan Poitras | Terry Saltsman | August 9, 2001 |
38 | "Driving Bob" | Julian Harris | Valri Bromfield | August 16, 2001 |
39 | "Undefined Border" | Julian Harris | David Cole | August 23, 2001 |
Season 4 (2001)
[edit]No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
40 | "New Lease on Life" | David Thomas | Matthew Cope and David Cole | September 6, 2001 |
41 | "Jury Duty" | David Thomas | David Cole | September 13, 2001 |
42 | "The Player" | Harold Harris | Chas Lawther and Gail Kerbel | September 20, 2001 |
43 | "The Getaway" | David Thomas | Matthew Cope and David Cole | September 27, 2001 |
44 | "Mummy's Boy" | David Thomas | Julie Lacey | October 4, 2001 |
45 | "Gone to Seed" | David Thomas | Terry Saltsman | October 11, 2001 |
46 | "The Candidate" | Julian Harris | Terry Saltsman | October 18, 2001 |
47 | "Life Saver" | Julian Harris | Jennifer Cowan | October 25, 2001 |
48 | "I, Bob" | Julian Harris | David Cole | November 1, 2001 |
49 | "Mastermind" | Julian Harris | David Cole | November 8, 2001 |
50 | "Outward Bound" | David Thomas | David Fine and David Cole | November 15, 2001 |
51 | "Gary" | David Thomas | Chas Lawther and Gail Kerbel | November 22, 2001 |
52 | "A Very Fishy Christmas" | David Thomas | David Fine | November 29, 2001 |
Telecast and home media
[edit]The programme was shown in the United Kingdom on Channel 4 and Ftn, in the U.S. on Comedy Central, and in Germany and France on Arte. Comedy Central only showed the two "London" seasons. The third and fourth "Toronto" seasons were eventually shown (almost two years after Comedy Central showed the last second-season episode) on Showtime.
Bob and Margaret formerly aired on Locomotion, and Adult Swim Latin America. Cartoon Network Brazil aired its four seasons on the Adult Swim block. The London seasons also get shown in the United Kingdom, currently on Channel 4. It also had a brief run years later on the Canadian YTV. In December 2013, biTe started to air this series (until the rebrand to Makeful on August 24, 2015).
VHS and DVD
[edit]United Kingdom
[edit]Two VHS tapes of the series containing three Series 1 episodes each were released in 1999 by Video Collection International under their Channel 4 Video imprint.
The entirety of Series 2 was released on DVD in July 2006 by Maverick Entertainment.
US/Canada
[edit]In 1999, Season 1 was released on six VHS volumes by Paramount Home Entertainment containing two episodes each.
In Canada, the series has seen DVD releases. Series 2 was released in 2005 by Kaboom! Entertainment and Phase 4 Films, and Season 1 was released in February 2010 by Phase 4 Films/Kaboom!. Both releases are two-disc sets containing all 13 episodes of each season.
See also
[edit]- O Canada (TV series), Cartoon Network series that featured "Bob's Birthday"
- Ricky Sprocket: Showbiz Boy
References
[edit]- ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-1538103739.
- ^ Gates, Anita (21 June 1998). "TELEVISION; Unassertive, Unexciting And Loverly". New York Times. Archived from the original on 4 August 2017. Retrieved 12 August 2010.
- ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 149. ISBN 978-1476665993.
- ^ "Bob & Margaret Series 1 Amazon Link (Region 1)". Amazon UK. Archived from the original on 21 April 2024. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
- ^ "Bob & Margaret Series 2 Amazon Link(Region 1)". Amazon. Archived from the original on 21 April 2024. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
- ^ "Bob & Margaret Series 2 Amazon Link (Region 2)". Amazon UK. Archived from the original on 21 April 2024. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
External links
[edit]- Bob and Margaret at IMDb
- SnowdenFine.com — the creators' website
- 1990s British adult animated television series
- 1990s British animated comedy television series
- 1990s British medical television series
- 1990s Canadian adult animated television series
- 1990s Canadian animated comedy television series
- 1990s Canadian medical television series
- 1998 British television series debuts
- 1998 Canadian television series debuts
- 2000s British adult animated television series
- 2000s British animated comedy television series
- 2000s British medical television series
- 2000s Canadian adult animated television series
- 2000s Canadian animated comedy television series
- 2000s Canadian medical television series
- 2001 British television series endings
- 2001 Canadian television series endings
- British adult animated comedy television series
- British English-language television shows
- Canadian adult animated comedy television series
- Channel 4 animated television series
- Channel 4 sitcoms
- Channel 4 original programming
- Cultural depictions of dentists
- Fictional married couples
- Global Television Network original programming
- Television series about couples
- Television series by Nelvana
- Television series created by David Fine and Alison Snowden
- YTV (Canadian TV channel) original programming