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Father of the Pride

Father of the Pride is an American animated sitcom created by Jeffrey Katzenberg and produced by DreamWorks Animation for NBC.

Father of the Pride follows a family of white lions, the patriarch of which stars in a Siegfried & Roy show in Las Vegas. Despite heavy promotion and support, the series was cancelled after one season due to declining ratings. Transmission and production were also delayed by the real-life on-stage injury of Roy Horn in October 2003.

Premise

The show follows the adventures of a family of white lions. The family contains Larry, the bumbling yet well-intentioned star of Siegfried & Roy's show; Kate, a pretty, stay-at-home mother who is a member of a special women's group; Sierra, their teenage daughter who is frequently annoyed by her family; Hunter, their awkward young son, who is a huge fan of The Lord of the Rings; Sarmoti, Kate's father and Sierra and Hunter's grandfather who has a dislike for Larry; and Snack, Larry's mischievous gopher friend.

Recurring characters appear alongside the lion family; these include Larry's friends Roger, Chutney, Vincent, and Nelson; Larry's rival Blake and his wife Victoria; Sarmoti's friends Bernie, Duke, Chaz, and the Snout Brothers; Hi Larious; Kate's friends Foo-Lin, Lily, and Brittany; two lesbian gophers Chimmi and Changa; and Sierra's boyfriend Justin.

Voice cast

Major characters

  • Larry (voiced by John Goodman) is a middle-aged white lion originally from the Bronx Zoo who becomes the star of Siegfried and Roy's show (replacing his father-in-law Sarmoti). At times, Larry tries not to speak his mind, but usually ends up exposing his true feelings. He sometimes lies to his family and friends just to impress them and that usually starts the trouble for the episode, making him feel guilty afterwards. However, Larry does not intend to cause any harm, always hoping for the best.
  • Kate (voiced by Cheryl Hines) is Larry's wife, Sierra and Hunter's mother, and Sarmoti's daughter. Primarily known for her relation to Larry and Sarmoti, Kate is constantly attempting to establish her own individuality.
  • Sierra (voiced by Danielle Harris) is Larry and Kate's rebellious, outgoing 16-year-old daughter, Hunter's older sister, and Sarmoti's granddaughter. Sierra is an activist with left-wing views who likes the latest things and hates doing chores. Sierra can be somewhat sassy at times (even teasing Hunter), but she genuinely loves and cares about her family.
  • Hunter (voiced by Daryl Sabara) is Larry and Kate's friendly, sensitive, somewhat immature 10-year-old son, Sierra's younger brother, and Sarmoti's grandson. Hunter is always shown wearing a plastic Elizabethan collar to stop him from biting himself and is portrayed as slightly mentally deficient.
  • Sarmoti (voiced by Carl Reiner) is Sierra and Hunter's grandfather, Larry's father-in-law, Kate's father, and the former star of Siegfried and Roy's show until Larry replaced him. Sarmoti has a dislike for and is jealous of Larry and is disappointed with Kate for marrying him, thinking she could have done better. is name is an acronym of "Siegfried and Roy, Masters of the Impossible".
  • Snack (voiced by Orlando Jones) is a gopher and Larry's best friend. He is constantly getting into trouble with the other residents of the park. Snack believes that humans can understand him, calling himself "The Human Whisperer".
  • Siegfried & Roy (respectively voiced by Julian Holloway and David Herman) are a performing duo who employ Larry in their shows. The two constantly argue, but still respect each other as friends.

Supporting characters

  • Blake (voiced by John O'Hurley) is a white tiger, Larry's rival, and the Tiger Twins' father. The two groups constantly compete to be the stars of the show. Blake is a glory hound or a self-professed "whore for applause" and will stoop as low as to sabotage his competitors to get the spotlight.
  • Victoria (voiced by Wendie Malick) is Blake's wife and the Tiger Twins' mother. She also competes with the lions to act with her husband in Siegfried and Roy's show. Victoria has a drinking problem and previously received two liver transplants from baboons.
  • Roger (voiced by Brian Stepanek) is a Bornean orangutan and one of Larry's friends. He is a local at the Watering Hole. Roger has something of a short temper as he gets angry easily many times, being happy and cheerful one moment and then angry and disgruntled when he gets offended.
  • Chutney (voiced primarily by Brian George; occasionally voiced by John Ennis) is an Indian elephant and one of Larry's friends. Through the series, the implication that he is in a gay relationship with his turkey "roommate" and that he is otherwise closeted is a running gag.
  • Vincent (voiced by Don Stark) is an Italian-accented greater flamingo who has a sexual interest in sombreros. He acts tough because he is self-conscious about being pink.
  • Nelson (voiced by Andy Richter) is a giant panda and one of Larry's friends. He is extremely nervous about meeting other women as he had never seen other women because he was isolated before brought into captivity by Siegfried and Roy. Initially, Nelson had a crush on Kate as she was the first woman who was kind to him, but after having some sense knocked into him by Larry, Nelson chose to be with Foo-Lin.
  • Bernie (voiced by Garry Marshall) is Sarmoti's best friend and poker buddy. He is a bit of a suck up and acts like Sarmoti's assistant and yesman, constantly calling him "Boss" and agreeing with every single thing he says.
  • Duke (voiced by Dom DeLuise) is an effeminate Indian leopard and one of Sarmoti's poker buddies. He makes subtle but obvious allusions to his homosexuality, to which his buddies are oblivious.
  • Chaz (voiced by Rocky Carroll) is a black panther and one of Sarmoti's poker buddies.
  • The Snout Brothers (voiced by John DiMaggio) are a pair of steroid-abusing common warthogs who are old friends of Sarmoti. They are right winged and homophobic.
  • Hi Larious (voiced by Dana Gould) is a great grey slug comedian who is not very funny (though he tries to be). Whenever he tells jokes, he presses a red button and a beat is heard and the person listening to the joke usually doesn't laugh.
  • Foo-Lin (voiced by Lisa Kudrow) is a giant panda who is one of Kate's friends. She constantly looks to Kate for comfort and finds Sarmoti's jokes about her mental state humorous instead of insulting. She later finds peace with herself and becomes Nelson's girlfriend.
  • Lily (voiced by Jane Lynch) is the leader of a women's empowerment group and one of Kate's friends. She encourages the compound's women to find the goddess within themselves.
  • Brittany (voiced by Julia Sweeney) is a common warthog sow and one of Kate's friends.
  • Tommy (voiced by David Spade) is a wise-cracking northeastern coyote who "guides" Larry and Sarmoti when they meet him in "Road Trip".
  • Emerson (voiced by Danny DeVito) is an activist American lobster who befriends Sierra in "And the Revolution Continues", much to Larry's dismay. He is kind to Sierra, but is mean to Larry. Like Sierra, Emerson is a left-wing activist.
  • Tom (voiced by John DiMaggio) is an Thomson's gazelle who is an alcoholic, verbally abusive adulterer and often tries to pick fights after he has had a few drinks. He has a girlfriend and a son named Anthony, who picks on Hunter. He has a severe drinking problem and is usually seen with a bottle in his hooves.
  • Anthony (voiced by Cheryl Holliday) is a Thompson's gazelle and school bully. He picks on Hunter, though Hunter once stood up to him in "Possession". Like his father, Anthony is mean and selfish. He is only seen picking on Hunter, beating him up and calling him names.
  • Justin (voiced by Pauly Shore) is a Jewish adolescent lion with a mop-top haircut. He is Sierra's boyfriend and an aggressive (but unskilled) poker player.
  • Chimi and Changa (voiced by Tress MacNeille) are a pair of lesbian (or possibly bisexual) "fiesta babe" gophers Snack hires to promote "Larry's Debut All-Night Fiesta".
  • Edna (voiced by Kathryn Joosten) is a lioness with a lisp who is the teacher of the "Gifted And Talented Class" of the compound's school.
  • Donkey (voiced by Eddie Murphy) is a lead character originating from the Shrek franchise. He visits the compound in the episode "Donkey" and is known as a massive star by all of the animals.
  • Kelsey Grammer (voiced by himself) is a stand-up comedian and actor whom Siegfried and Roy take Larry to see in the revised pilot. Siegfried and Roy think that Grammer is a real psychologist, so Roy explains his lifelong problems and hard relationship with his father.

Episodes

Development

More than 200 animators worked on Father of the Pride for two years. Computer animation was produced at Imagi Animation Studios in Hong Kong.

The series employed a small group of seasoned directors, which included Mark Risley, Bret Haaland, Steve Hickner, John Holmquist, John Stevenson, and Mark Baldo. Felix Ip served as creative director for Imagi. For the first season, DreamWorks created 30 principal sets, 500 special props, and about 100 characters. In fact, a typical episode unfolds across all 30 principal sets and features two or three unique locations as well. The lion habitat is inspired by the real Secret Garden in Las Vegas, where the actual Siegfried & Roy lions reside. In Father of the Pride, the Secret Garden encompasses residences for the main characters and their families and public areas ranging from the community bar to a school classroom.

Since Larry and his family drive the story lines for most of the episodes, their residence is the most detailed, comprising separate, contiguous sets for the living room, the kitchen, and the children's bedrooms. Meanwhile, the assets are stored in individual files in order to be loaded into separate layers and assembled modularly.

Production

In 2002, Jeffrey Katzenberg came up with the idea for the series when he visited Siegfried & Roy's show in Las Vegas: "I thought, I wonder what it's like for those lions. What must life be like from their point of view? [They're] living in Las Vegas, trying to raise a family and earn a living. In animation, we look for those things — a way to look at our lives through a fantasy world. It allows us to take on subjects that are too difficult to do with real people. It allows us to be more controversial. Edgier. There can be parody and innuendo and satire. Things can be sophisticated in a way that even our feature films can't be."

According to Katzenberg, the series was created for "an 18- to 49-year-old. It's not about checking to make sure you don't leave the 6-, 7- and 8-year-olds behind. This is purely an adult show."

Each episode cost an estimated $2 million to $2.5 million to produce, making it at the time of its release one of the most expensive half-hour television comedies ever.

Long before its broadcast, the series was nearly cancelled, following the near-death of Roy Horn in October 2003; but after his condition improved, Siegfried & Roy urged NBC to continue production. Katzenberg recalled, "There was a short period of time where we all just rocked out on our heels and couldn't be particularly creative and certainly not very funny. But Siegfried kept saying, every step of the way, that this show meant so much to them. So much to Roy. Then, even more than it ever did."

Opening sequence

The opening sequence starts off with a red sports car, with the Nevada license plate "MAGIC1", being driven by Siegfried and Roy past many of the attractions in Las Vegas. Cast names are presented on the marquees of the Strip hotels that, along with the Mirage, belonged to the MGM / Mirage Group at the time, before the car swerves into the Mirage Hotel. The scene then changes to the lions' house. Larry (voiced by John Goodman) gets woken up by his wife Kate (voiced by Cheryl Hines), late for his performance, on the couch before dashing towards the stage (but not before having a beer given to him by Snack {voiced by Orlando Jones} at the Watering Hole). Larry sings a rendition of Elvis Presley's "Viva Las Vegas" as the background music throughout the title sequence.

Release and reception

The series' debut on NBC on August 31, 2004 attracted 12.3 million viewers, making it the most-watched series of the week on American television. However, the series was expected to improve, especially considering heavy promotion during NBC's coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. Its opening ranked only the 13th of 16 fall comedies that NBC introduced since 1999.

When the series debuted, it was positively received with strong ratings. The ratings continued to show promise through early September 2004 before declining quickly. A few airings were preempted due to the 2004 presidential election. By November 2004, it was pulled from NBC's sweeps line-up. In early December, Jeffrey Katzenberg announced that he did not think the series would be picked up for a second season. A few of the remaining episodes were burned off in late December 2004 and the series was not renewed for a second season.

Father of the Pride received a negative response from television critics, who considered it to be little more than a gimmick and a shill for other NBC and DreamWorks properties (two early episodes extensively featured The Today Shows Matt Lauer and another featured Donkey from the Shrek franchise). Also, many television critics noticed that the series' humor was very similar to South Park (one episode even had a character say, "Screw you guys, I'm goin' home!").

According to Katzenberg, Siegfried & Roy's reactions were more positive: "They laughed. A lot. They kept asking us to create more contradiction. Literally, one's blond and one's dark, and every aspect of their life is as black and white as that. They are always playful with one another, always playing tricks on one another. They encouraged us to have fun with that."

Protest from the Parents Television Council

In October 2004, the Parents Television Council's launched a campaign against Father of the Pride. Reasons cited for their opposition were the use of anthropomorphic animals and the use of "from the creators of Shrek" in their promotions. The film in question was seen by the council as much more family-friendly than this series, which the PTC stated could inadvertently draw the wrong audience based on the way it was promoted by NBC. Their campaign led to over 11,000 complaints to the Federal Communications Commission. In March 2006, the FCC ruled that the show was not indecent.

Awards and nominations

Father of the Pride won an Annie Award in 2005 for Character Design in an Animated Television Production. It was also nominated for a 2005 People's Choice Award in the category Favorite New TV Comedy Series.

Broadcast

Father of the Pride premiered in the United States on August 31, 2004, on NBC.

In the United Kingdom, the series premiered on March 6, 2005 on Sky One.

In Canada, the series premiered on September 5, 2008, on Teletoon Detour.

Home media

Father of the Pride was released on DVD on June 7, 2005. The DVD features the original pilot, an alternate pilot (which draws heavily on the original), a pair of unaired episodes, and one episode that was voice-recorded and not animated (and therefore, remains at the storyboard stage).

The series has previously been available on Netflix from the 2010s to September 2016. Since July 15, 2020, the series became available for free on Peacock with its launch.

See also

References

External links