Fix & Foxi and Friends
Fix & Foxi and Friends | |
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Genre | Cartoon series |
Created by | Rolf Kauka |
Directed by | Antoni D'Ocón |
Voices of |
David Turba Michael Wiesner Claudio Maniscalco Helmut Krauss Hermann Ebeling Anne Helm Barbara Ratthay |
Theme music composer | Rolf Kauka |
Opening theme | "I am a friend, you know" |
Ending theme | "I am a friend, you know" |
Composer(s) | Matthias Raue |
Country of origin |
Australia Germany Spain |
Original language(s) |
English German Spanish |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 52 |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Wolfgang Heidrich Peter Hille Antoni d'Ocon |
Editor(s) | Xavi Zapata |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Production company(s) | Energee Entertainment |
Release | |
Original network | ARD (Germany), KiKa (Germany) |
Original release | February 26, 2000 |
Fix & Foxi and Friends is an animated adaption of Rolf Kauka's comic series Fix and Foxi. In February 2000, Fix & Foxi first aired in Germany. 52 episodes were produced. Each episode consists of four segments, three of which stars the title characters and one or more of their friends and the last segment stars a family of anthropomorphic dogs called the Peppercorn Family. In addition small snippets starring Makiki appear in between segments.
Characters
Fix & Foxi segments
- Fix and Foxi - Twin fox brothers, who get busy and have fun throughout their time. Fix wears yellow overalls and has a tuft on his head while Foxi wears blue overalls.
- Lupo - A wolf and one of the twins' friends. He lives in a tower. Usually he is lazy, self-centered and has a love for Eusebia's cakes.
- Professor Knox - A raven and an absent-minded scientist. Half of his inventions go wrong, but his work greatly interests the twins.
- Uncle Fax - The twins' uncle, whom they live with. Quite tolerant to the twins' antics but full of opportunities to keep them content.
- Olma Eusebia - An elderly wolf who enjoys the twins' and her granddaughter's company. She is very good at making cakes and preventing Lupo from getting them.
- Lupini - Eusebia's granddaughter a good friend of the twins but sometimes is good at outsmarting them.
- Stinky and Limpy - Recurring thieves or smugglers who commit crime only to be thwarted each time by the twins. Stinky is by namesake smelly which bothers his partner Limpy.
Peppercorn Family segments
- Papa - The father of the family. Very reckless and making hasty decisions and very miserly, he is not good at making a good impression with his family and often the first to pick a fight with Snotty.
- Mama - The mother of the family. Has good common sense and often Papa's voice of reason and does more than her fair share of work in the house.
- Pip and Pep - Twins and the younger children of the family. They are quite mischievous and look for opportunities to pull pranks for their own means.
- Lucky - The adolescent of the family. He tries to be independent but always gets involved with family matters, but he sometimes enjoys the company of his younger siblings.
- Makiki - The family pet. A yellow monkey-like creature with dog-like behaviour.
- Snotty - A frog. The Peppercorns' unfriendly neighbour and the town mayor who lives just opposite their house and accuses visitors of being 'Trespassers'. As his name implies he is snobbish, rude and he doesn't like the Peppercorns, but very occasionally he works with them to solve his bigger problems.
- Lizard - A lizard who has various occupations in his work line. He solves various odd jobs for the Peppercorns when hired.
Voice cast
Character | English | German | Spanish |
---|---|---|---|
Fix | Sonja Ball | David Turba | |
Foxi | Sonja Ball | Michael Wiesner | |
Lupo | John Stocker | Claudio Maniscalco | |
Professor Knox | Norm Berketa | Hermann Ebeling | |
Uncle Fax | Helmut Krauss | ||
Olma Eusebia | Barbara Ratthey | ||
Lupini | Sonja Ball | Anne Helm | |
Stinky | |||
Limpy | |||
Papa | John Stocker | ||
Mama | |||
Pip | Sonja Ball | ||
Pep | Norm Berketa | ||
Lucky | Sonja Ball | ||
Makiki | |||
Snotty | |||
Lizard |
Episodes
No. | Cartoons | Original airdate |
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1 | "Episode 1" | February 26, 2000 |
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2 | "Episode 2" | TBA |
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3 | "Episode 3" | TBA |
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4 | "Episode 4" | TBA |
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5 | "Episode 5" | TBA |
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6 | "Episode 6" | TBA |
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7 | "Episode 7" | TBA |
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8 | "Episode 8" | TBA |
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9 | "Episode 9" | TBA |
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10 | "Episode 10" | TBA |
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11 | "Episode 11" | TBA |
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12 | "Episode 12" | TBA |
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13 | "Episode 13" | TBA |
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14 | "Episode 14" | TBA |
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15 | "Episode 15" | TBA |
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16 | "Episode 16" | TBA |
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17 | "Episode 17" | TBA |
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18 | "Episode 18" | TBA |
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19 | "Episode 19" | TBA |
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20 | "Episode 20" | TBA |
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21 | "Episode 21" | TBA |
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22 | "Episode 22" | TBA |
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23 | "Episode 23" | TBA |
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24 | "Episode 24" | TBA |
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25 | "Episode 25" | TBA |
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26 | "Episode 26" | TBA |
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27 | "Episode 27" | TBA |
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28 | "Episode 28" | TBA |
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29 | "Episode 29" | TBA |
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30 | "Episode 30" | TBA |
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31 | "Episode 31" | TBA |
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32 | "Episode 32" | TBA |
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33 | "Episode 33" | TBA |
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34 | "Episode 34" | TBA |
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35 | "Episode 35" | TBA |
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36 | "Episode 36" | TBA |
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37 | "Episode 37" | TBA |
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38 | "Episode 38" | TBA |
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39 | "Episode 39" | TBA |
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40 | "Episode 40" | TBA |
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41 | "Episode 41" | TBA |
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42 | "Episode 42" | TBA |
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43 | "Episode 43" | TBA |
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44 | "Episode 44" | TBA |
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45 | "Episode 45" | TBA |
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46 | "Episode 46" | TBA |
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47 | "Episode 47" | TBA |
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48 | "Episode 48" | TBA |
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49 | "Episode 49" | TBA |
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50 | "Episode 50" | TBA |
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51 | "Episode 51" | TBA |
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52 | "Episode 52" | TBA |
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References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.