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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RoobarbRoobarb - Wikipedia

    Roobarb (also known as Roobarb and Custard) is a British animated children's television series, created by Grange Calveley and originally shown on BBC1 just before the evening news. [1] Each cartoon of the original series, written by Calveley and directed by Bob Godfrey, was about five minutes long. Thirty episodes were made, and it was first ...

    • Animation Children's
  2. Grange Calveley (6 May 1943 – 22 August 2021) [1] was a British writer and artist who was best known as the creator of the BBC's animated television series Roobarb (1974) and Noah and Nelly in... SkylArk (1977). Calveley also wrote and made character drawings for the 2005 revival series, Roobarb and Custard Too.

  3. Apr 6, 2022 · Roobarb (also known as Roobarb and Custard) is a British animated children's television series, created by Grange Calveley originally shown on BBC1 just before the evening news. Each cartoon, written by Calveley and directed by Bob Godfrey, was about five minutes long.

    • 137 min
  4. Roobarb: Created by Grange Calveley. With Richard Briers. Roobarb the green dog's enthusiasm for inventions and harebrained schemes to liven up life in the garden know no bounds.

    • (281)
    • 1974-10-21
    • Animation, Comedy, Family
    • 5
    • What Was It About?
    • Who Was in It?
    • Best Moments?
    • Last seen?

    Roobarb and Custard are the principal characters in Roobarb, a series of short animations for children originally shown on BBC One in 1974. Roobarb was a dog based on creator George Calveley’s own pet pooch of the same name (so-called because the first thing he did when Calveley took possession was to piss on his rhubarb) whose enthusiastic nature ...

    Roobarb was narrated by Richard Briers, who was still a few months away from his breakthrough role as Tom in The Good Life. Giving Roobarb a high-pitched, energetic yelp (reduced to a sad, ears-turned-down groan when things went awry) and Custard the languorous, slightly-sneering tones of a well-fed Tory landowner, Briers created the perfect charac...

    Although the triptych of Caveley’s stories, Godfrey and Green’s animation and Briers’s voiceover was more than enough to give Roobarb a longevity far outstripping its modest roots, what really cemented the programme into television history was Johnny Hawksworth’s instantly recognisable theme music. A loping, distorted clatter interspersed with jaun...

    Having garnered great acclaim from successive generations of viewers across the world, the original series is now firmly entrenched as a cult classic and remains popular with audiences of all ages today. In 2005, more than thirty years after the first episode was shown, a second series was commissioned by Channel Five. Titled Roobarb & Custard Too(...

  5. Jan 22, 2020 · An updated series, titled Roobarb and Custard Too debuted on Five on 8th August 2005. Whilst using modern computer animation it remained true to it’s original form with the same rough animation. Summary. Roobarb is a green dog, and Custard is a pink cat. Roobarb is always involved in some kind of misadventure which he approaches with ...

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  7. Roobarb. Broadcast 21st October 1974. Complete with wobbly-style animation, Roobarb was all about the battles of a green dog (Roobarb) and a pink cat (Custard). The series was narrated by Richard Briers.

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