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THE
FAIRLY ODDPARENTS WREAK MAGICAL MAYHEM IN NEW NICKTOON COMEDY-FANTASY
SERIES PREMIERING
FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 2001 AT 8:30 P.M.
Ten-Year-Old Timmy Turner Is Touched by the Wand of Odd Fairy Godparents
Pasadena,
CA - January 17, 2001 -- Nickelodeon's new irreverent,
action-packed animated comedy series The Fairly OddParents,
premiering Friday, March 30, 2001 at 8:30 p.m. (ET/PT), follows
the adventures of 10-year-old Timmy Turner and his newly arrived
fairy godparents. Created by Oh Yeah! Cartoons! Butch Hartman,
The Fairly OddParents husband-and-wife sprites Cosmo and
Wanda wreak magical mayhem as they help Timmy conquer typical kid
obstacles by granting him wishes and magically fixing his problems
ranging from a tough homework assignment to a bothersome babysitter.
Despite the wizardry, though, these overly eager oddballs manage
to mess things up every time.
"This show is full of physical comedy and mayhem that results
from a world turned upside down when a 10-year-old boy makes outlandish
wishes," says Cyma Zarghami, Executive Vice President and General
Manager, Nickelodeon. "With Cosmo and Wanda, events always
take a left turn, and end up throwing Timmy one challenging curve
after another."
Once a powerless kid at the mercy of every adult in his life, Timmy
(Tara Strong) figures he finally has the upper hand when Cosmo (Daran
Norris) and Wanda (Susan Blakeslee) appear unexpectedly on the scene.
Fairy godparents help kids in need, and these two see Timmy as a
client who fits the criteria. They constantly practice their craft
on him and delight in playfully punishing his babysitting nemesis,
16-year-old Vicky (Grey Delisle), who turns mean as a snake the
second Timmy's parents leave.
The pair want nothing more than to make their charge happy, but
"Da Rules" (the godparent handbook explaining what they
can and can't do) sometimes thwart the effort. For example, in an
episode titled "The Big Problem," Cosmo and Wanda grant
Timmy's wish to be older and incite a disastrous growth spurt. Unfortunately,
Timmy isn't the buff, heroic young man he thought he'd be. Instead,
he's transformed into a plump bald guy who lands in jail doing things
young Timmy thought would make him cool as an adult. Aggravating
his plight, "Da Rules" dictate that fairy godparents can
only grant wishes to kids, leaving Timmy trapped in his new grown-up
body.
In another episode, Timmy wishes for an alien that he and his pals
Chester ( Frankie Muniz, Malcolm In The Middle) and A.J.
(Ibrahim Muhammed) can play with. When Cosmo and Wanda oblige, he
finds himself face-to-face with a warrior prince from Yugopotamia.
But trouble sets in when the warrior prince becomes smitten with
Vicky and his parents, the King and Queen, set out to retrieve him
and destroy Earth for kidnapping their son.
Throughout his magical misadventures, and while exploring the big
issues of being a kid
-- growing up, gaining independence, fitting in, being respected
and finding the courage to do what's right -- Timmy's eyes are opened
to a couple of axioms: Be careful for what you wish for; and getting
what you want won't necessarily solve all your problems.
Series creator Butch Hartman began his animation career working
as an assistant animator for Don Bluth on "An American Tail"
during his senior year at Cal Arts. Upon graduation, he worked as
a character designer and storyboard artist for Marvel Productions,
and later, Ruby Spears Productions He joined Hanna-Barbera in 1991,
where he did storyboard work, directed cartoons and created his
own shorts for What A Cartoon! He also wrote and directed episodes
of Dexter's Laboratory, Cow & Chicken and Johnny
Bravo. Hartman joined Nickelodeon in 1998 where he created and
produced several cartoon shorts for the Oh Yeah! Cartoons!
series, including The Fairly OddParents.
The Fairly OddParents is a Nicktoons Production and is produced
at the Nickelodeon Animation Studio in Burbank, CA. Hartman and
Fred Seibert are the Executive Producers.
Nickelodeon, now in its 22nd year, is the number-one entertainment
brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting
kids first in everything it does. The company includes television
programming and production in the U.S. and around the world, plus
consumer products, online, recreation, publishing and feature films.
Nickelodeon's U.S. television network is seen in more than 78 million
households and has been the number-one rated cable network for more
than five consecutive years. Nickelodeon and all related titles,
characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom International Inc.
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