Sunday, 24 February 2008

very small animal named piglet



A "Very Small Animal" Named Piglet

Piglet, one of the most famous fictional pigs in children's

literature, made his debut in A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh in 1926.

This "Very Small Animal" lived in house in a large beech-tree with an

old, broken sign next to it reading TRESPASSERS W. Throughout these

stories, illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard, Piglet is easily

frightened, but nevertheless continues to try to be courageous. My

favorite adventure of Piglet's in the original book involved his being

trapped in his tree during a flood. As he notes, "It's a little

Anxious to be a Very Small Animal Entirely Surrounded by Water."

The first of the Disney adaptations of Winnie-the-Pooh appeared in

1966. Piglet was absent, replaced by Gopher, which, according to

director Wolfgang Reitherman, was believed to have a "folksy,

all-American, grass-roots image." After protests by fans, Piglet was

reintroduced in 1968's Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day. Disney

still makes film and television programs with Pooh and Piglet, most

recently Piglet's Big Movie (2003). There is a lot of Piglet

merchandise out there, unsurprisingly. You can get a sense of the

ongoing legal battle between the Milne family and Disney from a BBC

article here.

Speaking of children's toys, I still have my childhood Steiff bear,

identical to the growler model that the real Christopher Robin Milne

had (see picture; Piglet is the very small animal in the middle, to

the left of the stack of books). I too called my bear Pooh, although

it hasn't survived in nearly as nice shape as Milne's. You can see the

original toys at the New York Public Library, by the way. I must have

seen the Disney films in the late 1960s, but I've largely forgotten

them. I certainly prefer the original look of Ernest Shepard's Piglet

and his friends.


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