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An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/xoykDFxJFBgF02W_HRnEzw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

William Tell, was, according to the Fourth Doctor, a "charming man." The Doctor attributed his skill with a crossbow to Tell's tutoring in Switzerland, having fired a bolt that prevented him being lowered into a pit of Horda. (TV: The Face of Evil) The Seventh Doctor once told his companion Ace that he had met Tell, though she believed that he may have been joking. (AUDIO: The Settling) Gioachino Rossini's William Tell Overture was named after him. (AUDIO: Enemy Aliens)

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • William Tell
rdfs:comment
  • William Tell, was, according to the Fourth Doctor, a "charming man." The Doctor attributed his skill with a crossbow to Tell's tutoring in Switzerland, having fired a bolt that prevented him being lowered into a pit of Horda. (TV: The Face of Evil) The Seventh Doctor once told his companion Ace that he had met Tell, though she believed that he may have been joking. (AUDIO: The Settling) Gioachino Rossini's William Tell Overture was named after him. (AUDIO: Enemy Aliens)
  • William Tell is an NPC that...
  • His legend is recorded in a late 15th-century Swiss chronicle.It is set in the period of the original foundation of the Old Swiss Confederacy in the early 14th century. According to the legend, Tell—an expert marksman with the crossbow—assassinated Gessler, a tyrannical reeve of Habsburg Austria positioned in Altdorf, Uri. Along with Arnold Winkelried, Tell is a central figure in Swiss patriotism as it was constructed during the Restoration of the Confederacy after the Napoleonic era.
  • William Tell was a (presumably pseudonymous) nationalist cartoonist who published a series of twelve cartoons entitled "Hints & Hits" in Dublin in 1844, each costing a penny, or tuppence for a hand-coloured copy. The cartoons were in response to the Daniel O'Connell's campaign to repeal the Act of Union, his cancellation of the pro-Repeal "monster meeting" at Clontarf, and his trial on charges of conspiring to undermine the constitution and alienating the armed forces from their allegiance.
  • William Tell (or in the four languages of Switzerland: Wilhelm Tell in German, Guillaume Tell in French, Guglielmo Tell in Italian, and Guglielm Tell in Romansh) was a legendary figure from Switzerland, who was renowned for his ability with a crossbow. The most famous portion of his story derives from a moment in which he failed to show respect to the newly appointed protector of a village. Insulted, the Vogt punished him by forcing him to shoot an apple off the head of his son, Walter, or else they would both face execution.
  • On The Muppet Show the father and son team appear in episode 307 to perform their act. Here, William Tell is a jittery, elderly man; it makes him nervous when Kermit shouts. While the pair is onstage, several arrows make their way backstage to where Alice Cooper is trying to get Kermit to sell his soul, suggesting that Tell has lost his edge. While Alice seems unfazed by the stray arrows, Kermit and Flower-Eating Monster take the threat more seriously. One arrow, defying precision, tacks the satanic contract to a stair post, where it remains for much of the remainder of the show. As William and his son make their way backstage after their act, it is revealed that Walter has been struck through the head with one of his father's arrows. Luckily, it went "in one ear and out the other."
sameAs
dcterms:subject
Row 1 info
  • William Tell
Row 2 info
  • Unknown
Row 1 title
  • Real Name
Row 2 title
  • First Appearance
Row 3 info
  • Unknown
Row 3 title
  • Created by
dbkwik:atlantica/p...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:muppet/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:tardis/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:puppet/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
Box Title
  • William Tell
Type
Caption
  • From Jumbo Comics #37
dbkwik:pdsh/proper...iPageUsesTemplate
Note
  • Teaches Bow Crafting.
Performer
dbkwik:spacequest/...iPageUsesTemplate
Image
  • William-Tell.png
Debut
  • 1978(xsd:integer)
Location
abstract
  • William Tell, was, according to the Fourth Doctor, a "charming man." The Doctor attributed his skill with a crossbow to Tell's tutoring in Switzerland, having fired a bolt that prevented him being lowered into a pit of Horda. (TV: The Face of Evil) The Seventh Doctor once told his companion Ace that he had met Tell, though she believed that he may have been joking. (AUDIO: The Settling) Gioachino Rossini's William Tell Overture was named after him. (AUDIO: Enemy Aliens)
  • William Tell (or in the four languages of Switzerland: Wilhelm Tell in German, Guillaume Tell in French, Guglielmo Tell in Italian, and Guglielm Tell in Romansh) was a legendary figure from Switzerland, who was renowned for his ability with a crossbow. The most famous portion of his story derives from a moment in which he failed to show respect to the newly appointed protector of a village. Insulted, the Vogt punished him by forcing him to shoot an apple off the head of his son, Walter, or else they would both face execution. On The Muppet Show the father and son team appear in episode 307 to perform their act. Here, William Tell is a jittery, elderly man; it makes him nervous when Kermit shouts. While the pair is onstage, several arrows make their way backstage to where Alice Cooper is trying to get Kermit to sell his soul, suggesting that Tell has lost his edge. While Alice seems unfazed by the stray arrows, Kermit and Flower-Eating Monster take the threat more seriously. One arrow, defying precision, tacks the satanic contract to a stair post, where it remains for much of the remainder of the show. As William and his son make their way backstage after their act, it is revealed that Walter has been struck through the head with one of his father's arrows. Luckily, it went "in one ear and out the other." The William Tell puppet was a redress of Marvin Suggs. William Tell was also portrayed by Wilkins in a Wilkins Coffee commercial, with Wontkins in the role of Walter. After Wilkins shoots Wontkins, he shrugs, "We can always use the apple again." And Southern Bread also used the tale for another commercial.
  • William Tell is an NPC that...
  • On The Muppet Show the father and son team appear in episode 307 to perform their act. Here, William Tell is a jittery, elderly man; it makes him nervous when Kermit shouts. While the pair is onstage, several arrows make their way backstage to where Alice Cooper is trying to get Kermit to sell his soul, suggesting that Tell has lost his edge. While Alice seems unfazed by the stray arrows, Kermit and Flower-Eating Monster take the threat more seriously. One arrow, defying precision, tacks the satanic contract to a stair post, where it remains for much of the remainder of the show. As William and his son make their way backstage after their act, it is revealed that Walter has been struck through the head with one of his father's arrows. Luckily, it went "in one ear and out the other." William Tell was also portrayed by Wilkins in a Wilkins Coffee commercial, with Wontkins in the role of Walter. After Wilkins shoots Wontkins, he shrugs, "We can always use the apple again." And Southern Bread also used the tale for another commercial. Wilkins and Wontkins
  • His legend is recorded in a late 15th-century Swiss chronicle.It is set in the period of the original foundation of the Old Swiss Confederacy in the early 14th century. According to the legend, Tell—an expert marksman with the crossbow—assassinated Gessler, a tyrannical reeve of Habsburg Austria positioned in Altdorf, Uri. Along with Arnold Winkelried, Tell is a central figure in Swiss patriotism as it was constructed during the Restoration of the Confederacy after the Napoleonic era.
  • William Tell was a (presumably pseudonymous) nationalist cartoonist who published a series of twelve cartoons entitled "Hints & Hits" in Dublin in 1844, each costing a penny, or tuppence for a hand-coloured copy. The cartoons were in response to the Daniel O'Connell's campaign to repeal the Act of Union, his cancellation of the pro-Repeal "monster meeting" at Clontarf, and his trial on charges of conspiring to undermine the constitution and alienating the armed forces from their allegiance.
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