- published: 30 Sep 2015
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Peter & the Wolf (Polish: Piotruś i wilk, also known as Sergei Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf) is a short Polish-British-Norwegian-Mexican model animation film released in 2006. It was written and directed by Suzie Templeton, scenography - Marek Skrobecki, made in Se-ma-for Studios in Łódź, and has been shown both in cinemas and with live musical accompaniment.
The film is based on the story of Peter and the Wolf and is set to the music Sergei Prokofiev wrote for the story in 1936. In common with other animated shorts such as The Snowman the film has no vocals but relies on music and action to tell the story.
A new recording of Prokofiev's music was made to accompany the cinema and television release. The recording was made by the Philharmonia Orchestra and conducted by Mark Stephenson.
On the edge of the vast forests of Russia, where wolves still roam, lies a little cottage surrounded by a big, high fence. This is where Peter lives with his grumpy Grandfather. Grandfather will not let Peter go out into the forest. Peter has a friend, the lovable Ducky (a runner duck in this version), with whom he hangs around Grandfather's yard. A Bird (a hooded crow in this version) with a broken wing arrives in the yard. Bird is very impatient with Peter and signals to go into the forest. His heart beating fast, Peter tiptoes into the cottage and reaches over his sleeping Grandfather and his snoring, fat cat. Ever so carefully Peter takes the keys to the gate.
On DVD and Blu-ray: http://arthaus-musik.com/ Oscar winning Short Film (Animated) by Suzie Templeton
The 2008 Academy Award winning film "Peter and the Wolf" is not your Disney-fed father's P&tW.; Filmed with a brilliant combination of stop-action photography, puppetry, and CGI, this version of Prokofiev's classic will surprise you with unexpected twists in both character and story. Keep an eye out for it on PBS, or buy the DVD. PBS posted portions of the "Making of..." extras, but never posted a trailer... so here it is from the film-maker's site. To see the original QuickTime, point your browser here: http://www.breakthrufilms.co.uk/peterandthewolffilm/trailer.html
"Peter & the Wolf" 2006 version by Suzie Templeton which won an Academy Award in 2008 for best animated short film. In the US, it can be purchased at the iTunes Store for $1.99 USD at this link: http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewMovie?id=273879632&s;=143441 Amazon & other retailers: http://tinyurl.com/cww3c6
First official Peter and the Wolf music video. Directed and edited by Bill Baird of Sound Team. Bill has another project called {{{sunset}}} and a website blondebill.com. Learn more about Peter and the Wolf by visiting myspace.com/whiskeyandapples.
2014 - Episode 6 Peter and the Wolf is a great 30 minute film which I would highly recommend anyone to go see! Heres the link to the film: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kYeeXav6bA
LET'S CEE Film Festival The best films from Central and Eastern Europe in Vienna Save the Date: October 1-11, 2015 LET'S CEE Young Generation: PETER & THE WOLF ( UK | Poland | Norway | Mexico 2006) Homepage: www.letsceefilmfestival.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/LetsCEE Twitter: www.twitter.com/LETS_CEE_FF YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/LETSCEETV
Recorded Live at Club DaDa, Dallas, TX 11/21/06 with Red Hunter and Dana Falconberry
Fiaba musicale in italiano. Registrazione del dicembre 2006 presso il Teatro Dal Verme di Milano
The mischievious little shepherd called Peter was watching out for her sheeps and he got bored. One idea came up to him that he can fool the villlagers by . Three Little Kittens (Lorenzo, Peter and Noah) get up to mischief in this cute and wonderful story and nursery rhyme - Children will love this cute interpretation of . Presenting SHORT STORY for CHILDREN, a collection of 13 Moral Stories by Kids Hut. Here in this video you may enjoy 13 best SHORT STORIES for . All your favorites are back for another Amazing Fairy Tale video!! Liberty and Legacy, Joseph and Lorenzo, Peter and Noah, and little Zion!! Also appearing are .
+~+Subscribe Peter and the Wolf +~+ http://stream.filmcomplethd.club/play.php?movie=0124052 ++++
Today I am reading “Walt Disney's Peter and the Wolf”. It was written by Disney Book Club. Walt Disney's Peter and the Wolf http://amzn.to/2c1Bjz8 Other Places To Find Us: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/tamisclock?ty=h Tami’s Snapchat: tamisclock Tami’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/tamisclock Tami’s Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/tamisclock/ Tami’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tamisclock/ Tami’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tamidunnyoutube Tami’s Google+: https://plus.google.com/+TamiDunn/posts Kevin’s Lunchtime Review: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRU50hACLwgux7IVeKDvhzQ Kevin’s Gaming & Lecturing Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGgxZBi_Z5gY12ZKTJp0AlQ Kevin’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/moviehq/ Kevin’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/MovieHQ ...
* The Skeleton Dance: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vOGhAV-84iI *Remix by DJ SLAM!
A delightful DVD http://bit.ly/2ck50ea of Prokofiev's universally beloved and popular "musical tale," brought to life by human actors in a fairytale world inhabited by Muppet-like characters. Pop star Sting (The Police) lends his voice to a Sting puppet for the witty, enlightening commentary that guides the viewer through this charming suite.
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)
Sergey Prokofiev - Seven pieces from "Peter and the Wolf" for Piano Four Hands Viktoria Vassilenko and Valeria Vassilenko 24.09.2015 - Concert Hall of the National School of Music "Lyubomir Pipkov”.
To commemorate the 70th anniversary of Disney's animated package feature, "Make Mine Music," the Big Bad Wolf decides to put on for us the 1968 read-along book-and-audio adaptation of the "Peter and the Wolf" segment from the film, which is probably the most unique of the early read-along titles, as it has the music score backing Robie Lester's narration, and no page-turning signals. Plus it has a pretty cool wolf in it! And yes, I just added whiskers to my Big Bad Wolf fursuit head. Put 'em in this morning! You can hear the original record HERE: http://www.mousevinyl.com/content/walt-disney-presents-peter-and-wolf-disneyland-records
http://www.cbcmusic.ca The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra's music director Bramwell Tovey does double duty as conductor and narrator in this delightfully entertaining performance. It's the final work on a program that introduces listeners young and old to the various instruments and sections of the orchestra. Also featured are popular favourites from Star Wars, the Nutcracker Suite and Pictures at an Exhibition.
25 years ago, when my children were young, we would sit and listen to this recording of Peter and the Wolf and look at the book from where all the images in the video are from. I created this video for them as a Christmas gift in 2013. The music is from a recording by the Israel Philharmonic conducted by Zubin Mehta. The Narrator is Itzhak Perlman. The images are from the book we always read along with while listening to the CD. Publisher: Poegsma - A children's book publisher in the Netherlands Text by: Loriot Illustrations by: Jorg Muller
This 2004 performance features Carlos Carvajal's ballet Peter and the Wolf with music by Prokofiev.
Prokofiev. Peter and the Wolf, Op. 67. Leopold Stokowski conducting the All American Orchestra. Narrated by Basil Rathbone Recorded July, 1941. Audio restoration by Bob Varney Illustrated by Jeffry S. Hepple
Peter and the Wolf [Sergei Prokofiev] by the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and the Spitting Image Workshop. Copied from an old VHS tape recording, enjoy!
TV Special from the 90s based on the iconic Prokofiev masterpiece.
Peter and the Wolf, Op. 67, is a composition written by Sergei Prokofiev in 1936 in the USSR. It is a children's story (with both music and text by Prokofiev), spoken by a narrator accompanied by the orchestra. In 1936, Sergei Prokofiev was commissioned by Natalya Sats and the Central Children's Theatre in Moscow to write a new musical symphony for children. The intent was to cultivate "musical tastes in children from the first years of school". Intrigued by the invitation, Prokofiev completed Peter and the Wolf in just four days. The debut on 2 May 1936 was, in the composer's words, inauspicious at best: "...[attendance] was poor and failed to attract much attention". Peter and the Wolf is scored for the following orchestra: Brass: 3 horns in F, a trumpet in B♭ and a trombone Percussio...
Boris Karloff (1887-1969) narrates in this 1950s-era recording of Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf," Op. 67. The Vienna State Opera Orchestra is conducted by Mario Rossi. Issued on the Vanguard label, serial number VSD 2010. (I am not sure where the Tiblisi Symphony Orchestra- at right, came from.) This studio recording appeared originally as a 78 rpm single from Mercury's "Childcraft" label. Note: I have uploaded this performance previously, but in two separate sections.
you like our channel - please subscribe. weekly new clips, fairytales and songs for children Sergei Prokofiev himself calls "Peter and the Wolf" a "musical fairy tale for children." In an understandable way Leonard Bernstein combines the various protagonists with an instrument which s timbre characterizes its way of acting.
Hello, Boys and Girls.
This is a story that I like to call, ''Peter and the Wolf''.
Are you sitting comfortably?
Are you!?
Good, then let's begin....
Each character is represented by a different instrument of the synthesized
orchestra.
For instance, the part of Billy the Bird is played by a flute, like this...
The part of Bruce the Duck is played by an oboe...
Louie the Cat is a clarinet. All right, he's not really a
clarinet. He's just --- you know, he's represented by a clarinet....
The part of the Grandfather will be played by Don Amiche.
He... what?
Can't make it? Oh. Huh.
Okay, um, hmm, in that case, the part of the Grandfather will be played by,
huh, a bassoon....
Three French horns play the part of... uhm... three French horns... uh...
(The Wolf! It's the Wolf!) Right! The Wolf. Seymore the Wolf....
The kettle drum and bass drum represent the sub-machine-gun fire of the
hunters...
And, of course, as always, the part of Bob the Janitor is played by the
accordion.
Well, that's it for the introductions. And now, the story.
A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away... uh.... Oh, excuse me...
Once upon a time --- I think it was last Thursday --- a boy named Peter
opened the gate and went out into the big green meadow.
On the branch of a big tree sat a little bird.
''All is quiet'', said the bird.
''Holy cow! A talking bird!'', thought Peter.
Just then, Bruce the Duck came waddling by. Bruce was very happy that Peter
hadn't closed gate and he decided to check out the deep pond in the meadow.
Billy the Bird saw the Duck, so he decided to fly down and pick an argument
with him.
''What kind of bird are you if you can't fly?'', he said; to which the Duck
cleverly replied, ''I'm a duck! Stupid!''
They argued and argued. The Duck swimming in the pond. The little bird
skipping along the shore. (Scratch) Sorry.
Suddenly, something caught Peter's eye --- and you know how painful that
can be. It was Louie the Cat crawling through the grass.
Louie the Cat thought, ''If the Bird is busy arguing, I'll just grab him''.
So quietly, Louie crept towards him on his velvet paws. Well, his paws
weren't really velvet... they were, you know, kind of like velvet. It's
a, what d'ya call it? Uh, a 'metaphor'. It's a metaphor, get it?
''Look out! Look out! Look out! Look out! Look out! Look out! Look
out! Look out! Look out!'', advised Peter.
The bird immediately flew up into the tree... while Bruce the Duck quacked
at Louie the Cat... from the middle of the pond.
Louie the Cat walked around the tree and thought, ''Is it worth climbing up
so high, or should I just send out for pizza?''
Grandfather came out. He was all bent out of shape because Peter had gone
into the meadow.
''It's a dangerous place. If a Wolf should come out of the forest, then what
would you do, huh?''
Peter did not answer, because after all, it was a rhetorical question.
Boys like Peter are afraid of a lot of things, like Nuclear annihilation and
flunking algebra, but they're not afraid of Wolves.
But Grandfather got Peter in a headlock and dragged him home, telling him
that he was grounded and that he couldn't watch any cartoons for three weeks.
Just then, as luck would have it, a big, mean, hairy, ferocious, snarling,
carnivorous Wolf, huh, did come out of the forest!
But I guess we all knew that was coming. I mean, the story is called,
'Peter and the Wolf'. We couldn't very well call it, 'Peter and the Wolf'
if there wasn't any wolf, could we?
Huh, that would be really stupid.
The Cat was up the tree in a twinkling; which is about, oh, 2.3 seconds.
Bruce the Duck quacked so hard that he propelled himself backwards
and up onto dry land.
For those of you taking notes, this is a fine practical example of Newton's
First Law of Motion, which clearly states that for every action there is
an equal and opposite reaction.
But no matter how quickly Bruce tried to waddle away, he couldn't escape
Seymore the Wolf who was wearing his best pair of tennis shoes.
The Wolf was closing in on the Duck. It was getting closer and closer
and closer and then and then....
He got 'em! He got 'em! Oh no! Oh, it was terrible!
Oh, oh I can't believe it! Oh!
The humanity! The humanity! Oh my God! Ahh-hoh, oh, huh.
And then with one big gulp, Seymore 'wolfed' him down. (Burp)
Um, let me recap the story briefly in case you just walked into the room:
Louie the Cat was sitting on one branch. Billy the Bird was on another
branch, not too close to Louie, and Bob the Janitor was at home defrosting
his refrigerator.
The Wolf walked around the tree so many times that he made a small trench.
Meanwhile, Peter was standing behind the closed gate, videotaping everything
that was going on.
Suddenly Peter got an idea. He ran home and got a big spool of his
grandfather's unwaxed dental floss.
One of the branches of the tree that the Wolf was circling was conveniently
stretched out over a high stone wall.
Peter scaled the wall, lickity-split, which is even faster than a twinkling.
Then he grabbed the branch and climbed onto the tree.
Peter said to Billy the Bird, ''I want you to fly down and circle around the
Wolf's head to distract him, but be very careful he doesn't catch you and
bash your skull in and tear out your lungs and chew you up into itsy-bitsy
teeny-tiny little pieces.''
''Okay'', said the bird.
Billy the Bird almost touched the Wolf's head with his wings while the Wolf
snapped angrily at him. ''Go ahead'', said the Wolf, ''make my day''.
''Come on, cut it out'', snarled the Wolf, ''you're askin' for trouble,
Punk''. But Billy the Bird just kept on harassing him.
Meanwhile, Peter made a lasso out of the dental floss and, carefully letting
it down, caught the Wolf by the tail and pulled with all his might.
Feeling himself caught, the Wolf got really ticked off and started jerking back
and forth.
Peter tied the other end of the dental floss to the tree and left the Wolf
dangling in mid-air.
''Hey, Big Bad Wolf'', said Peter, ''why don't you come up here and get
us now?''
''I would'', said the Wolf, ''but, well, I'm kinda tied up right now.''
Just then, some members of the National Rifle Association came out of the
woods, firing their magnums, uzis and bazookas.
But Peter yelled, ''Don't shoot. Billy the Bird and I have caught the Wolf.
Now, let's take him to the Zoo''.
''Great idea!'', said the hunters, ''and if he likes that, next week we'll
take him to Disneyland!''
Just imagine the victory parade. Peter was at the head. (Flush)
But after a few minutes he was through and then the parade began with Peter
at the very front.
After him, the hunters leading Seymore the Wolf.
Then Grandfather, and Louie the Cat, and finally, Bob the janitor who had to
sweep up the whole mess.
Grandfather shook his head discontentedly, ''Well, Peter, what if you hadn't
caught the Wolf? What then?''
''Well'', said Peter, ''he probably would have ripped out my intestines with
his teeth.''
''(Cough/gag/choke)'', said Grandfather, ''I know that, you idiot.
It was a rhetorical question.''
Above them, Billy the Bird chirped proudly. ''Yeah, that's right. We bad.
We bad''.
Granfather decided that he'd had enough of the pond and the meadow and the
whole stinking scene, so he ran off to Los Angeles and joined a Heavy Metal
band.
And what about Bruce the Duck?
Well, the Wolf had been in such a hurry that he swallowed him... alive!
which means the gastric juices slowly disolved his body and he died a long,
painful death.
However, you'll be happy to hear that just a few years later he was reincarnated
as Shirley MacLaine.
And the moral of the story is... oral hygiene is very important. Make sure you
see your dentist at least twice a year