The Big Comfy Couch (), is a Canadian children's prop comedy television series about a clown named Loonette and her doll Molly who solve everyday problems on their eponymous couch. It was produced by Cheryl Wagner and Robert Mills, directed by Wayne Moss, Robert Mills and Steve Wright. It premiered on March 2, 1993, in Canada and on January 9, 1995, in the United States on public television stations across the country, airing its final episode on December 29, 2006. The program was also broadcast on Treehouse TV from 1997 to 2011.
As with many children's shows, the series had a number of staple elements. Loonette performs a daily exercise routine she calls the Clock Rug Stretch. She also reads stories to Molly; has unusual encounters with the dust bunnies who live under the couch; sings themed songs; and visits different places in Clowntown.
When visiting Granny Garbanzo's garden, Loonette encounters the cat, Snicklefritz; Major Bedhead, who delivers mail via unicycle; and Granny herself. The conversation with Granny is typically the episode's teachable moment, in which she offers Loonette some wisdom. Major Bedhead often stops by with gifts and messages from Auntie Macassar (in seasons 1âÂÂ5) or Uncle Chester (in seasons 6âÂÂ7).
Loonette is a talented dancer and runs Miss Loonette's Dance Academy, where she dances with dolls and animals. Along with simple lessons and problem-solving, the show also emphasized imaginative play. From season 7, more fixtures of Clowntown are explored: Granny Garbanzo's Cabbage Club Cooking School; Major Bedhead's Clown Chi Dojo and Dancing School; and the Clowndergarten, where Loonette volunteers and helps teach. This imaginative play was also demonstrated through dress-up games and through Loonette's dollhouse, where imaginary sequences play out involving her doll family, the Foleys.
Towards the end of each show, Loonette performs a Ten-Second Tidy to clean up her belongings. All episodes end with Loonette and Molly thanking the viewers and bidding farewell, often with a reminder of the day's lesson, as they settle in for a nap. After Loonette and Molly go to sleep, the sun (from the intro) sets, then a large crescent moon with a clown nose rises above the starry background behind the couch and the credits then roll over a lullaby version of the theme song. The closing credits normally end with Loonette doing an reenactment of Hey Diddle Diddle by saying "And the clown jumped over the moon" with only two exceptions being the episodes "Gesundheit" (where Loonette sneezes ["AH...AH...AH-CHOO!"] instead of saying the line), from season 1 and "Hiccups" (where Loonette hiccups midway in ["And the clown *hiccup* over the moon"] the line), from season 3. After that, production cards show up.
The show was originally produced by Radical Sheep Productions with what would later be known as Owl Television or Owl Communications (the publishers of Owl Magazine), then Canadian children's television network YTV with a run of 65 episodes. They were presented in the United States by Benny Smart, a US children's television production company backed by Ernest creator John Cherry, in conjunction with WITF-TV Harrisburg. In 2001, Tadpole Kids, who purchased the series' U.S. rights from Hollywood Ventures Corporation, commissioned 13 more episodes presented alongside Nashville Public Television. Radical Sheep Productions and Amity Entertainment, in association with Treehouse TV; a sister channel of YTV, and Nashville Public Television, produced 22 additional episodes focusing on preventing childhood obesity, which debuted on public television stations in 2006.
From 1992 to 2002, the show was filmed at Wallace Avenue Studios in Toronto, and in 2006, it was filmed at Toronto's Studio City.
In the U.S., the series was syndicated by American Public Television to public television stations in that country, most of which were affiliated with PBS, starting on January 9, 1995, and ending in February 2007, with reruns airing as late as May 2009 on some stations. In Canada, the series was shown on YTV from 1993 to 1997 and on Treehouse TV from 1997 until it stopped broadcasting on February 27, 2011. The show also airs on BTV in Botswana. As of 2023, all episodes can be viewed and streamed on Amazon Prime, Vudu, Tubi, the FilmRise app, and YouTube. From September 1, 1997, to 2001, the French-language dub was aired on Canal Famille in Quebec and on TF1 in France. In the Middle East, the show was also dubbed in Hebrew (which aired on the Hop! Channel in Israel) and Turkish (which aired on TRT 1 and Yumurcak TV in Turkey). The Spanish-language dub aired on Nickelodeon, MGM Channel, Unicable, Canal 5, and Galavisión in Latin America and La Primera in Spain.
This season was produced in 1992. The episodes were first aired in 1993.
This season was produced in 1993.
Due to Court's pregnancy during production, she was unable to film any new Clock Rug segments. Instead, archival footage from seasons 3-5 was used.
Ramona Gilmour-Darling replaces Court in the role of Loonette.
Time-Life Video was the main home media distributor for the Big Comfy Couch, releasing the series under Time-Life Video's children's label, Time-Life Kids. VHS releases were also released on May 10, 2000, by Goldhil Video.
The Big Comfy Couch has five DVDs featuring Ramona Gilmour-Darling. The DVDs and VHS tapes that feature Alyson Court are now out of print, but can be found on certain websites such as Amazon.com.
On July 30, 2013, TGG Direct released the first two seasons on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time. Seasons 3âÂÂ7 were released on August 6, 2013. Each set comes with a bonus disc featuring a premiere episode of the following season. The Season 7 set, however, has a bonus disc of the premiere episode of the first season.
Throughout the years, several merchandise has been sold under the show's banner such as videotapes, DVDs, books, dolls, toys and puzzles.
Several albums of the original songs written by JP Houston and performed by the cast were released on August 9, 2005, by Time-Life, as well as Naxos Music.
In 2015 and 2016, Radical Sheep, in association with Sticky Brain Studios, released some apps based on the series.
On the October 18, 2016 episode of This Hour Has 22 Minutes, in a segment discussing the 2016 clown sightings, Loonette made an appearance as the show's "clown correspondent." This marked the character's first television appearance in a decade since the show's finale in 2006 and the first time Alyson Court had portrayed Loonette on TV since her departure in 2002.
The Big Comfy Couch has had a few live shows at Londonderry Mall in Edmonton, Alberta and sometimes in Calgary and rarely in Regina, Saskatchewan. There was a tour through South Western Ontario in 2001.
In 2005, a live theatrical production entitled Molly's Fool Moon Festival toured in Canada. The show included Loonette, Molly, Granny Garbanzo, Major Bedhead and others. The show was produced by Koba Entertainment and presented by Paquin Entertainment Group. The production starred a variety of Canadian actors such as Laura Kolisnyk, Andrew Nolan, Daniel J. Craig, Alexandra Herzog, Dawn Johnson, and others.