Tales from Fat Tulip's Garden (TV Series 1985–1987) Poster

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9/10
Trippin' with Tony at Tulip's place
Chip_douglas22 August 2005
Created by drama school chums Tony Robinson and Deborah Gates, Tales from Fat Tulip's Garden was a hilariously bizarre children's show featuring the Labour candidate known as Baldrick crawling around a garden for ten minutes while explaining in great detail the strange things that went down above the grass. Tony took telling tales to the tenth degree while producing some truly unique television.

Although it filled the four o'clock slot on Children's ITV normally reserved for safe, childproof fare like "Rainbow" and "Tickle on the Tum", this show did not talk down at it's audience and spread an air of strangeness that made older viewers sit up and notice. Here was one guy playing every character, using just his voice, his body and anything he found lying about the garden. There were no animations, no puppets and perhaps most surprising of all, no fake garden set. Viewers had to fill in the blanks using their imagination, but Robinson's infectious performance made that very simple.

From the moment that Kevin Stoney's wonderfully weird theme tune started that seemed to be made up of dew drops, rustling leaves and chirping crickets (it was probably a synthesizer but let's not spoil it), up until Tony's final uttering of "Pwop" after the end credits, you could never tell where the story was headed (staying within the confines of the garden and the cottage naturally). The first story was about a frog called Ernie getting stuck in a washing machine while his friend Sylvie tried to find help. The next week the frogs were still present, but the main action switched to another the owner of the garden, Fat Tulip. While these three characters were the constants, there were joined by a multitude of characters (insects, animals and humans) that were all brought to life with great ease by Tony. They included: A dog called Dorian, Wayne Newt, Thin Tim, Anwar Rabbit, Farouk the Greenfly, Fred the Baddie, Norman the Schrew and Tracy Bee.

One of the best thing about eighties television was that the children of the sixties were producing a lot of it, providing the next generation with at least a couple of seeds of flower power. Of course I was too young at the time to understand where Costello the Sparrow got his name, or a cockle called Jim Morrison, or the significance of three fat toads called Peter, Paul and Mary. Like Spike Milligan, Robinson would make one strange concept flow down that garden path into another, especially since he liked to do a bit of improvising while rolling around in the soil. He occasionally got up to some pretty disgusting things, stuffing food down his shoes and putting non edibles in his mouth that could probably not be broadcast during the daytime in some countries.

A second series broadcast in 1987 called 'Fat Fulip Too' took the characters out of the garden and into such places as a local swimming pool and even a seaside holiday for Fat Tulip and Police Inspector Challenor (this is where the aforementioned Cockle turned up). The final Tale was a 1987 Christmas special with a running time twice as long as normal (20 whole minutes!) called 'Fat Tulip's Fat Christmas. In early 1988, producer Deborah Gates and director Jeremy McCracken devised a new show, "Revolting Animals" in which several different young writers got to perform their own material. Meanwhile, over on the BBC Tony Robinson revived his patented concept of storytelling a few years later. This time, instead of writing original material he took ancient literature and made it accessible and funny for young viewers (Odysseus, The Greatest Story Ever Told). While these series were educationally sound and very entertaining, they did not inspire a bunch of groupies (sometimes mistakingly called "Fat Heads") to form like Tulip's tales did in the summer of '86.

9 out of 7 washing machines
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This Show Was SOOOOO Cooooool
bigdraz-124 March 2005
I was thinking about all the good shows that the ABC in Australia used to play in the early 90's when i was growing up, one of my favorites was Tales from Fat Tulip's Garden from what i can remember for the 30mins it was on i was glued to the TV and couldn't move away,Tony Robinson played Fat Tulip and i think also he played another guy in a house very well it was a bit of a change from his Black Adder's Character Baldrick but very entertaining, I'm wondering now if he wrote the series?? With the funny stories it was such a great watch.... pity they haven't released it on DVD yet id love to see that show again fingers crossed !!!
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10/10
Fat Tulip Facts
davebrancusi29 June 2007
Tales From Fat Tulip's Garden ,written by Debbie Gates, broadcast by ITV in May and June, 1985. This series won prizes at the Chicago International Festival of Children's Films and the Children's Program at the San Francisco International Film Festival. It was followed by the sequel Fat Tulip Too (thirteen episodes shown during the summer of 1987) and then a Christmas special on December 25, 1987. All the programmes were shot on location in Hertfordshire and Southend for the seaside scenes, the only animation was the opening and closing titles.

The Fat Tulip stories were told and co-written by Tony Robinson and included characters such as Thin Tim, Fred the Baddie, Gilbert Harding Sheep, Bunting Tadpole, Anwar and Amita Rabbit, Tracey Bee, a cockle called Jim Morrison, and the Terrible Stinkers - Peter, Paul and Mary. Spin-off books were also published in 1985: Meet a Dog Called Dorian and Never Eat a Tortoise in picture book format, and Tales from Fat Tulip's Garden as a paperback.

Having worked on the production of the series you had to be careful what you said and did, because you noticed any weird characteristic you exhibited or odd story you told would get included by Debbie Gates in a Fat Tulip story. At first the stories were taken around the local schools where Tony would tell them to a class and Debbie would watch the responses to see what intrigued them most and what made them laugh.
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