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The Jackson 5ive (TV series)

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Theme music composer
  
The Jackson 5

First episode date
  
11 September 1971

6.9/10
IMDb

Composer(s)
  
Maury Laws

Final episode date
  
14 October 1972

The Jackson 5ive (TV series) httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesMM

Written by
  
Romeo Muller William J. Keenan Hal Hackady Lou Silverstone Susan Milburn

Directed by
  
Arthur Rankin Jr. Jules Bass

Voices of
  
The Jackson 5 Paul Frees (Berry Gordy/Additional voices) Donald Fullilove (Michael) Edmund Sylvers (Marlon) Joel Cooper (Jermaine) Mike Martinez (Tito) Craig Grandy (Jackie) Diana Ross (Diana)

Country of origin
  
United States United Kingdom

Network
  
American Broadcasting Company

Cast
  
Diana Ross, Donald Fullilove, Edmund Sylvers, Craig Grandy, Paul Frees

The Jackson 5ive was a Saturday morning cartoon series produced by Rankin/Bass and Motown Productions on ABC from September 11, 1971 to October 14, 1972; a fictionalized portrayal of the careers of Motown recording group The Jackson 5. The series was rebroadcast in syndication through during the 1984–1985 Saturday morning season, during a period when Michael Jackson was riding a major wave of popularity as a solo artist. The series was animated mainly in London at the studios of Halas and Batchelor, and some animation done at Estudios Moro, Barcelona, Spain and Topcraft, Japan. The director was Spanish-American Robert Balser.

Contents

Overview

Due to high demands on the group, the roles of Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon, and Michael were played by voice actors, with records of the group's songs being used for the musical tracks of the show. The group did make some contribution to the cartoon in the form of live photographs of each member morphing into a cartoon which was shown in the title screen medley. Although the musical scenes of the cartoon were chiefly animation, an occasional live-action footage of a concert or music video of the Jackson 5 would be spliced into the cartoon series. The actual Jackson 5 also contributed to the show by posing for pictures prior to the cartoon's debut which were used as posters, newspaper clips and TV Guide spots advertising the forthcoming TV series.

Though Berry Gordy did not provide the original voice (his character was voiced by Paul Frees) nor advertised his name, his character was frequently involved as the "adult figure" to the group. R&B/Pop singer Diana Ross contributed to voice her fictionalized self in the debut episode. The premise of the show is that the Jackson Five would have adventures similar to Josie and the Pussycats, Alvin & the Chipmunks or The Partridge Family, with the unique addition being that Berry Gordy, the manager of the band in the show's universe, would come up with an idea for publicity for the band, such as having to do farm work or play a concert for the President of the United States. The series was followed by The Jacksons, a live action show, in 1976.

Music

A specially recorded medley of five Jackson 5 #1 hits—"I Want You Back", "The Love You Save", "ABC", "I'll Be There", and "Mama's Pearl"—served as the show's theme song. Each episode would feature 2 songs by the Jackson 5. The songs were derived from their albums Diana Ross Presents The Jackson 5, ABC, Maybe Tomorrow, and Third Album. In the newer episodes, from 1972–73, eight songs were derived from Michael Jackson's album Got to Be There and two songs from the Jackson 5 album Lookin' Through the Windows.

Pets

Because Michael Jackson owned many pets in real life, a few pets were added as extra characters to the cartoon. They included Michael's pet rats, Ray and Charles (alluding to singer Ray Charles), and his pet snake Rosey 'The Crusher' (who is male). Other than the mice chirping, the pets never spoke, but usually either attributed to assistance, mischief or joining the Jackson Brothers in performances on the show.

Laugh track

Like most 1970s-era Saturday morning cartoon series, The Jackson 5ive contained an adult laugh track. Rankin-Bass experimented with creating their own laugh track, a practice Hanna-Barbera had implemented in 1971. This was done to avoid paying large fees to Charley Douglass, who edited laugh tracks onto the majority of network television shows at the time. Like Hanna-Barbera, Rankin/Bass isolated several snippets of canned chuckles from Douglass’ library, and inserted them onto the soundtrack. The laughs initially consisted of only loud eruptions; mild jokes received unnatural bouts of laughter, while other times, the laughter would erupt mid-sentence. The studio had improved the process by the second season, using more modulated laughs culled from Douglass's 1971-1972 library. Laughs did not erupt mid-sentence like the first season and were better timed by Rankin/Bass sound engineers. Unlike Hanna-Barbera's laugh track, Rankin/Bass provided a larger variety of laughs.

Rankin/Bass ceased using laugh tracks after The Jackson 5ive ended its original run in 1973.

Season 2 (1972)

This season is billed as The New Jackson 5ive Show.

DVD release

On January 15, 2013, DreamWorks Classics released The Jackson 5ive: The Complete Animated Series on DVD and Blu-ray in Region 1 for the very first time. The 2-disc set features all 23 episodes of the series. For the remastered print (The Jackson 5ive: The Complete Animated Series), the mono soundtrack was replaced by the 5.1 stereo surround soundtrack in the song, the rest of scene was kept the mono soundtrack.

References

The Jackson 5ive (TV series) Wikipedia