PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Paddington Bear
  • Paddington bear
rdfs:comment
  • Paddington appears in "American Dream Factory" at The Gift Shop, a store where the owner falls in love with Stan's Father's Day bears and gleefully awaits his 4th of July bears. When the owner places a huge order, Stan can't resist rubbing it in the face of a shelf full of stuffed Paddington Bears.
  • Paddington Bear was the second television adaptation of the children's animated series and made by Hanna-Barbera in association with Central Independent Television. It was part of The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera in 1989 and lasted 13 episodes.
  • Paddington Bear is a character from the Paddington Bear Books by Michael Bond.
  • Paddington is an anthropomorphised bear. He is always polite—addressing people as "Mr", "Mrs", and "Miss" and rarely by first names—and well-meaning, though he inflicts hard stares on those who incur his disapproval. He has an endless capacity for getting into trouble, but he is known to "try so hard to get things right." He was discovered in Paddington Station, London by the (human) Brown family who adopted him, and thus he gives his full name as "Paddington Brown."
  • You can use the box below to create new pages for this mini-wiki. preload=Paddington Bear/preload editintro=Paddington Bear/editintro width=25 Paddington Bear is the main character of the British book and television series of the same name by Michael Bond.
  • When this version of Paddington Bear was released on videocassettes by Castle Vision in the United Kingdom, the opening titles and ending credits were removed after each episode.
  • �� Michael Bond's books about the little bear from Darkest Peru starred in this � memorable tv adaptation from FilmFair, back in the 1970s. Paddington himself was � a splendid 3D model interacting with distinct cut-out people and environments, � presented predominantly in black and white, with limited dabs of colour. The very � polite star of the show stowed away on a ship's lifeboat after his dear Aunt Lucy � had to go into a home for retired bears. He was found at and named after Paddington � Station by Mary and Henry Brown, who took him home with them to No. 32 Windsor � Gardens. Paddington's chief antagonist was the Brown's rambunctious neighbour � Mr Curry. He would also encounter the housekeeper Mrs Bird, and Mr Gruber a � friendly antiques dealer. Paddington especially liked
  • Paddington is the title character and protagonist of thirteen humorous novels for children which Bond wrote; A Bear Called Paddington (1958), More About Paddington (1959), Paddington Helps Out (1960), Paddington Abroad (1961), Paddington at Large (1962), Paddington Marches On (1964), Paddington at Work (1966), Paddington Goes to Town (1968), Paddington Takes the Air (1970), Paddington on Top (1974), Paddington Takes the Test (1979), Paddington Here and Now (2008), Paddington Races Ahead (2013) and Love from Paddington (2014). For several years from 1965 onwards, Michael Bond also wrote a short story about Paddington each year for publication in the Blue Peter Annual the book which came out each Christmas to accompany the BBC children's TV program Blue Peter. The stories were collected toge
  • Paddington Bear is a fictional character in children's literature. He first appeared in 1958 and was subsequently featured in several books written by Michael Bond and first illustrated by Peggy Fortnum. The polite immigrant bear from Darkest Peru, with his old bush hat, battered suitcase and marmalade sandwiches has become a classic English children's literature icon. Paddington books have been translated into thirty languages across seventy titles and sold more than 30 million copies worldwide.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
dbkwik:christmas-specials/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:scratch-pad/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:scratchpad/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:simpsons/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Voiced by
  • Non speaking
Appearance
  • "The Fat and the Furriest"
Hair
  • Yellowish Brown Fur
Name
  • Paddington Bear
dbkwik:hanna-barbera/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:hero/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Paddington appears in "American Dream Factory" at The Gift Shop, a store where the owner falls in love with Stan's Father's Day bears and gleefully awaits his 4th of July bears. When the owner places a huge order, Stan can't resist rubbing it in the face of a shelf full of stuffed Paddington Bears.
  • Paddington Bear was the second television adaptation of the children's animated series and made by Hanna-Barbera in association with Central Independent Television. It was part of The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera in 1989 and lasted 13 episodes.
  • Paddington Bear is a character from the Paddington Bear Books by Michael Bond.
  • Paddington Bear is a fictional character in children's literature. He first appeared in 1958 and was subsequently featured in several books written by Michael Bond and first illustrated by Peggy Fortnum. The polite immigrant bear from Darkest Peru, with his old bush hat, battered suitcase and marmalade sandwiches has become a classic English children's literature icon. Paddington books have been translated into thirty languages across seventy titles and sold more than 30 million copies worldwide. Paddington is an anthropomorphised bear. He is always polite (always addressing people as "Mr.", "Mrs." and "Miss" and very rarely by first names) and well-meaning (though he inflicts hard stares on those who incur his disapproval), likes marmalade sandwiches and cocoa, and has an endless capacity for getting into trouble. However, he is known to "try so hard to get things right".
  • Paddington is an anthropomorphised bear. He is always polite—addressing people as "Mr", "Mrs", and "Miss" and rarely by first names—and well-meaning, though he inflicts hard stares on those who incur his disapproval. He has an endless capacity for getting into trouble, but he is known to "try so hard to get things right." He was discovered in Paddington Station, London by the (human) Brown family who adopted him, and thus he gives his full name as "Paddington Brown."
  • You can use the box below to create new pages for this mini-wiki. preload=Paddington Bear/preload editintro=Paddington Bear/editintro width=25 Paddington Bear is the main character of the British book and television series of the same name by Michael Bond.
  • Paddington is the title character and protagonist of thirteen humorous novels for children which Bond wrote; A Bear Called Paddington (1958), More About Paddington (1959), Paddington Helps Out (1960), Paddington Abroad (1961), Paddington at Large (1962), Paddington Marches On (1964), Paddington at Work (1966), Paddington Goes to Town (1968), Paddington Takes the Air (1970), Paddington on Top (1974), Paddington Takes the Test (1979), Paddington Here and Now (2008), Paddington Races Ahead (2013) and Love from Paddington (2014). For several years from 1965 onwards, Michael Bond also wrote a short story about Paddington each year for publication in the Blue Peter Annual the book which came out each Christmas to accompany the BBC children's TV program Blue Peter. The stories were collected together in a volume called Paddington's Blue Peter Story Book which was published in 1973. Bond also wrote a number of picture books for younger children which were adapted from chapters of his novels. Books about Paddington have been translated into thirty languages and have sold more than thirty million copies worldwide. In addition to the books about him, Paddington has also appeared in three different animated TV series; the 1975 British series Paddington, the scripts for all thirty-three episodes of which were written by Michael Bond himself, adapted (sometimes very loosely) from chapters of his novels, the 1989 American-British series Paddington Bear and the 1997 French-Canadian series The Adventures of Paddington Bear. The first feature-length film about Paddington, which combines live-action and CGI animation, was released on November 28, 2014 in the United Kingdom and on January 16, 2015 in North America. There has also been a great deal of branding and merchandise which has featured the character.
  • �� Michael Bond's books about the little bear from Darkest Peru starred in this � memorable tv adaptation from FilmFair, back in the 1970s. Paddington himself was � a splendid 3D model interacting with distinct cut-out people and environments, � presented predominantly in black and white, with limited dabs of colour. The very � polite star of the show stowed away on a ship's lifeboat after his dear Aunt Lucy � had to go into a home for retired bears. He was found at and named after Paddington � Station by Mary and Henry Brown, who took him home with them to No. 32 Windsor � Gardens. Paddington's chief antagonist was the Brown's rambunctious neighbour � Mr Curry. He would also encounter the housekeeper Mrs Bird, and Mr Gruber a � friendly antiques dealer. Paddington especially liked the company of Brown's � children, daughter Judy and son Jonathon. Mr and Mrs Brown's first encounter � with the bear is depicted in the very first episode, called "Please Look After This Bear". � A splendidly gentle series this, embellished by the soothing narration of the � late Sir Michael Hordern. The package captured much of the droll humour from � the original books. From Paddington's perspective, everything he does makes � complete sense, and such a polite little bear could never, ever do anything � wrong... � Er, could he...? List of English Vintage Classic Paddington bear episodes from The 80's Cult Kids Classic Please Look After This Bear � � � Padding Hits the jackpot � A Bear in Hot Water � � � � � � �Paddington Hits out � Paddington Goes Underground � � �A Visit to the Hospital � A Shopping Expedition � � � � � � Paddington Recommended � Paddington and the Old Master � � Fortune Telling � A Spot of Decorating � � � � � � An Unexpected Party � A Family Group � � � � � � � � � Paddington in Court � Paddington Makes a Bid � � � � � Paddington Bakes a Cake � Do-It-Yourself � � � � � � � � � A Picnic on the River � A Disappearing Trick � � � � � � �Paddington's Patch � Something Nasty in the Kitchen � �In and Out of Trouble � Trouble at the Launderette � � � �Paddington at the Tower � Paddington and � � � � � � � � �A Visit to the Bank � the Christmas Shopping � � � � � Paddington Clears the Coach � Too Much Off the Top � � � � � � Picture Trouble � A Visit to the Dentist � � � � � � Paddington in the Hot Seat � Paddington Cleans Up � � � � � �Paddington Weighs In � Trouble at No.32 � � � � � � � Paddington Takes a Snip � Mr Curry Takes a Bath � � � � � �A Visit to the Theatre � Paddington Turns Detective � � � Paddington Buys a Share � Paddington and the Cold Snap � � Trouble in the Bargain Basement � Trouble at the Wax Works � � � � Paddington in Touch � Paddington Makes a Clean Sweep �Comings and Goings at No.32 � A Sticky Time � � � � � � � � � Paddington Dines Out � Paddington's Christmas Parodies * Paddington bear/Thomas * Paddington bear/TUGS * Paddington bear/Theodore Tugboat * Paddington bear/Mr. Men * Paddington bear/Sonic * Paddington bear/Garfield * Paddington bear/Superted * Paddington bear/The further adventures of superted * Paddington bear/Bananaman * Paddington bear/Disney * Paddington bear/Shining time station * Paddington bear/Thomas and the magic railroad
  • When this version of Paddington Bear was released on videocassettes by Castle Vision in the United Kingdom, the opening titles and ending credits were removed after each episode.
is Series of