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Big Kids
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| Big Kids | |
|---|---|
Big Kids logo | |
| Genre | Children's television Comedy |
| Created by | Lucy Daniel-Raby |
| Developed by | Elaine Sperber[1] |
| Directed by | Baz Taylor |
| Starring | Imogen Stubbs Duncan Duff Matt Adams Kelly Salmon |
| Composer | Tony Flynn |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom United States[1] |
| Original language | English |
| No. of series | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 13 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer | Cas Lester |
| Producer | Jacinta Peel |
| Editor | Ian Williams |
| Camera setup | Peter Woodley |
| Running time | 24 minutes |
| Original release | |
| Network | BBC One (UK) Noggin (U.S.) |
| Release | 27 September – 20 December 2000 |
Big Kids is a 13-episode children's comedy television series created by Lucy Daniel-Raby. The series is a British-American[1] co-production[2] of the BBC and the American network Noggin.[3] It premiered on CBBC on BBC One on 27 September 2000[4] and on the Noggin channel on 29 January 2001.[3] All 13 episodes were aired on Noggin's sister channel, Nickelodeon, from 9 to 30 March 2001.
History
[edit]According to the show's developer, Elaine Sperber, the writers "had to tread carefully"[1] to make sure that the content was relevant to both UK and U.S. children. She said, "We had a great relationship with Noggin ... but when you co-produce with North Americans, you always run into problems over British accents and language. We couldn’t use terms like 'snogging' in Big Kids because no one in the U.S. would have understood it."[1] The magazine Kidscreen wrote that "children start drinking far earlier in Britain than they do in North America, so a sequence showing booze being consumed at a school dance had to be watered down."[1]
On Noggin, the show was aired as part of a primetime programming block called "The Hubbub," which allowed viewers to submit comments through Noggin's website and see them live on-air.[5] Noggin grouped the final two episodes as an hour-long special, and they aired on 25 March 2001. Leading up to them, Noggin reran a marathon of the entire series, promoted as the Big Kids Big Marathon. From April 2002 to January 2004, Noggin aired reruns of Big Kids during its overnight programming block, The N.[6][7][8]
Plot
[edit]The show follows the lives of the Spiller family: Simon, Kate, and their parents, Sarah, a piano teacher, and Geoff, a doctor. When the family attends a school charity event, a hypnotist and entertainer named Ming the Mind Master uses Sarah and Geoff in a performance. After the show is over, Kate and Simon realize that their parents have never been properly unhypnotized. At seemingly random moments, they black out and begin to act like children.
The two siblings have to deal with keeping their parents under control in their hypnotized state, trying to get their parents to believe what happens when they black out, and trying to discover what triggers the change. Simon tries to keep his parents' hypnosis a secret from his best friend, Jake, who lives across the street and often visits at inopportune times. During trances, Sarah and Geoff engage in behaviour for which they would otherwise scold their children, while Kate and Simon are forced to act like mature adults. According to Noggin, the show was meant to explore "the complex and sometimes chaotic relationship between parent and child."[9]
Eventually, the children convince their parents by showing them filmed footage, and discover that the trigger is "ming", or any word with "ming" in it, just like the hypnotist's name. They finally track down Ming at a fête and convince him to 'unhypnotise' their parents, which appears to restore them to normal. However, their childish behaviour on a carousel leaves the children confused – whether Sarah and Geoff are acting like this deliberately or have fallen back into a state of hypnosis is left ambiguous.
Episode list
[edit]Cast
[edit]- Duncan Duff as Dr. Geoffrey "Geoff" Spiller
- Imogen Stubbs as Sarah Spiller
- Matt Adams as Simon Spiller
- Kelly Salmon as Kate Spiller
- Sam Green as Jake Tyler
- Jasper Britton as Ming the Mind Master
- Amanda Fairbank-Hynes as Becky
- Barnaby Francis as Edward Bagley
Awards and nominations
[edit]At the 23rd Young Artist Awards, held in April 2002 in Studio City, California, both Matt Adams and Kelly Salmon were nominated for their roles.[13] At the ceremony, the series was counted as an American production, and the nominations were received on behalf of Noggin.[13]
| Ceremony | Award | Nominee | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 23rd Young Artist Awards | Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series: Supporting Young Actor | Matt Adams | Nominated |
| Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series: Supporting Young Actress | Kelly Salmon | Nominated |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Clarke, Steve (1 January 2001). "International co-pros: A necessary evil for high-end kids shows". Kidscreen.
Big Kids, billed as 'an educational series' and co-produced with the Nickelodeon- and Sesame Workshop-backed U.S. kids channel Noggin
- ^ Bernstein, Paula (5 November 2000). "Noggin adds new series to its lineup". Variety.
- ^ a b Heffley, Lynne (29 January 2001). "New on Noggin: 'Team,' Yes, 'Big Kids,' No". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Schedule - BBC Programme Index". Archived from the original on 19 October 2014.
- ^ Umstead, R. Thomas (11 June 2001). "Noggin Adds Interactive Series". Multichannel News.
- ^ Connell, Mike (3 January 2002). "Noggin has tween educon on the brain". Kidscreen.
- ^ Heffley, Lynne (1 April 2002). "Noggin Is Enrolling in Junior High". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Sunday, late night". Austin American-Statesman. 25 January 2004.
- ^ "Welcome to Noggin: Noggin Programming". MTV Networks. 2001. Archived from the original on 3 November 2001.
- ^ "Big Kids, episode #6 on NOGGIN". Excite TV. Archived from the original on 7 May 2001.
- ^ "Big Kids, episode #8 on NOGGIN". Excite TV. Archived from the original on 1 July 2001.
- ^ "Big Kids, episode #10 on NOGGIN". Excite TV. Archived from the original on 17 May 2001.
- ^ a b "23rd Annual Young Artist Awards". Young Artist Association. Archived from the original on 23 April 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
Matt Adams, 'Big Kids', Noggin ... Kelly Salmon, 'Big Kids', Noggin
External links
[edit]- Big Kids at BBC Online
- Big Kids at IMDb
Big Kids
View on GrokipediaOverview
Premise
Big Kids is a children's comedy television series centered on the Spiller family, consisting of parents Sarah, a music teacher, and Geoff, a doctor, along with their children, 13-year-old Simon and 11-year-old Kate.[8] The core premise revolves around the parents being accidentally hypnotized during a charity event performance by a stage hypnotist named Ming the Mindmaster, causing them to regress into childlike behavior at unpredictable moments.[3] This regression manifests as playful antics, tantrums, and immaturity, often leading to chaotic disruptions in their everyday suburban life.[1] The hypnosis effect is triggered by the syllable "ming" or any word containing it, such as "swimming," which activates the parents' childish states without their awareness.[9] Upon snapping out of these episodes, Sarah and Geoff have no recollection of their actions and typically blame the resulting messes on Simon and Kate, forcing the siblings to cover up the incidents to maintain family normalcy.[8] This setup highlights the humor in the parents' embarrassing and destructive behaviors, like engaging in silly games or throwing fits in public settings. Throughout the series, Simon and Kate discover the trigger and embark on a quest to locate the original hypnotist, Ming, in hopes of reversing the spell, though it leads to a series of ongoing comedic mishaps as they manage their immature parents.[3] The narrative explores themes of role reversal, where the children must assume adult responsibilities—such as handling household duties and concealing the family's secret—while their parents exhibit traits of carefree playfulness and irresponsibility.[1] This disruption of traditional family power dynamics underscores the show's focus on suburban domesticity turned upside down by the hypnosis-induced immaturity.[8]Format and production basics
Big Kids is a single-season children's comedy series consisting of 13 episodes, each approximately 25 minutes in length.[5] The format follows a standard half-hour structure typical of early 2000s children's programming, designed for quick engagement with short scenes and episodic storylines centered on family mishaps.[5] The series is a live-action comedy targeted at children aged 7-12, incorporating elements of family sitcom dynamics alongside slapstick humor to explore themes of role reversal within a household.[4] This blend appeals to its young audience by emphasizing relatable sibling interactions and exaggerated parental behaviors, often resolved through clever problem-solving by the child protagonists.[4] As a British-American co-production between the BBC in the UK and Noggin (a Nickelodeon venture) in the US, Big Kids was crafted to bridge transatlantic markets, featuring neutral language and cultural adjustments to ensure broad appeal without region-specific idioms.[2] This collaboration allowed for distribution on both CBBC in the UK and Noggin/Nickelodeon in the US, highlighting shared production resources for cost efficiency and wider reach.[2] Production employed a studio-based approach for interior scenes, supplemented by location shoots to depict everyday settings like family homes and schools, fostering an authentic yet controlled environment. The style prioritizes quick-cut editing and vibrant, child-centric visuals to maintain high energy and visual accessibility, aligning with the show's comedic tone and young viewers' attention spans.Development
History
Big Kids was conceived by writer Lucy Daniel-Raby in the late 1990s as an original live-action children's comedy-drama series targeted at viewers aged 6 to 12, centering on a family dynamic with comedic elements of role reversal. The concept was developed under the oversight of Elaine Sperber, who served as head of drama for CBBC at the BBC during this period, positioning it as a family-oriented comedy suitable for broadcast on the children's strand.[10] Around 1999, the project was pitched as a co-production between the BBC and the U.S. network Noggin, aiming to blend British scripting with appeal to an American audience through adjustments to ensure cross-cultural relevance.[2] It received the green light in early 2000, following refinements to the scripts, with production wrapping up in time for a UK premiere later that year.[1] Key adaptations included modifying cultural references, such as differences in school systems, to broaden accessibility while preserving the core British humor.[11] Development faced challenges in harmonizing the understated wit typical of British comedy with the more direct style preferred in U.S. programming, requiring careful calibration to engage child viewers on both sides of the Atlantic; this involved pilot testing to gauge audience reactions.[12] Sperber noted that writers "had to tread carefully" to maintain relevance for UK and U.S. children alike.[13] The series was publicly announced in mid-2000 through BBC press channels, highlighting its unique hypnosis gimmick—where parents regress to childlike behavior—as a central hook to differentiate it in the children's programming landscape.[14] Noggin followed with its own reveal in November 2000, confirming the co-production for a U.S. debut in January 2001.[2]Creative team
Lucy Daniel-Raby created Big Kids and served as the lead writer, scripting 3 episodes and providing overall storyline consultancy to capture the chaos of family role reversals through relatable, humorous scenarios. With over 30 years in children's television, her prior work includes scripting shows like Angelina Ballerina and The Hoobs, which honed her ability to blend comedy with everyday child experiences.[7][15] Elaine Sperber developed the series for its British-American co-production format, guiding adjustments to humor and content for cross-cultural accessibility, such as replacing British slang like "snogging" and softening scenes involving alcohol to align with U.S. norms.[13] Cas Lester acted as executive producer, drawing on her role as head of drama development at CBBC to oversee the project's alignment with British children's programming standards.[16][17] Jacinta Peel served as producer, coordinating the production logistics for the live-action comedy.[18] The series was directed by Baz Taylor, Juliet May, and Dez McCarthy, who shaped its visual style to emphasize the physical comedy of adult childishness. As a co-production between the BBC and Noggin (a Nickelodeon and Sesame Workshop venture), the creative process integrated BBC's emphasis on witty British family dynamics with Noggin's focus on light educational themes embedded in the humor.[19]Cast and characters
Main cast
Duncan Duff portrays Dr. Geoffrey "Geoff" Spiller, the immature father figure whose childlike regressions drive much of the series' humor through physical comedy and bumbling antics.[1] A Scottish-born actor trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1985, Duff had established himself in British television by 2000, with notable roles in comedic and dramatic series such as Hamish Macbeth (1995–1997).[20] His performance in Big Kids highlights his versatility in portraying exaggerated, playful paternal figures, contributing to the show's appeal for both child and adult audiences.[1] Imogen Stubbs plays Sarah Spiller, the mother whose portrayals of childlike behavior add whimsical depth to family dynamics, often through impulsive and naive actions.[1] Trained at RADA after studying English at Oxford, Stubbs brought extensive experience from the Royal Shakespeare Company, where she excelled in roles like Desdemona in Othello (1989), as well as films including Sense and Sensibility (1995).[21] Her theater-honed timing and expressive range enhanced the comedic elements of Sarah's regressions, making the character a central source of relatable family chaos.[22] Matt Adams, aged 12 during filming, stars as Simon Spiller, the responsible 13-year-old son who struggles to manage his regressed parents and maintain household order.[1][5] This role marked Adams' debut as a child actor, born in 1988.[23] His natural performance as the beleaguered older brother anchored the sibling-focused humor.[24] Kelly Salmon, approximately 13 during production, embodies 11-year-old Kate Spiller, the energetic younger daughter whose quick wit and adaptability highlight sibling rivalries and inventive problem-solving.[1][5] Making her first major television role in Big Kids, Salmon's lively depiction of Kate's resourcefulness and playfulness infused the series with youthful vitality, complementing the adults' comedic reversals.[25]Supporting characters
The hypnotist known as Ming the Mindmaster, portrayed by Jasper Britton, serves as a pivotal recurring figure in the series, responsible for initially hypnotizing the Spiller parents during a school performance, causing their intermittent regressions to childish behavior triggered by words containing "ming." His comedic timing and tacky persona amplify the chaos, as the children repeatedly seek him out to reverse the spell, culminating in efforts to track him down across episodes.[3][26] Jake Tyler, played by Sam Green, is Simon Spiller's best friend and next-door neighbor, frequently dropping by unannounced to play video games or stir up mischief, which often exacerbates the family's efforts to conceal the parents' condition and introduces external complications to the household dynamics.[15] Other school friends, such as Becky (Amanda Fairbank-Hynes) and Edward Bagley (Barnaby Francis), appear in various episodes to highlight Kate and Simon's social lives, contributing to subplots involving peer pressure, school events, and the challenges of maintaining normalcy amid the role reversals at home.[27][15] Family relatives like Great Aunt Muriel, enacted by Lynda Baron, make occasional visits that test the children's management skills, as her stern demeanor and unexpected arrivals force the family to navigate the parents' regressions in heightened comedic tension, underscoring themes of generational expectations and hidden family secrets.[28] Authority figures, including teachers and minor school staff, recur in educational settings to contrast the Spillers' domestic upheaval with structured adult oversight, often unwittingly drawing attention to the parents' erratic behavior.[29] Guest stars enhance the episodic humor through one-off roles, such as charity event participants or quirky acquaintances like the Carousel Man (Glen Davies), who interact briefly with the family to propel plot twists and amplify the absurdity of the role reversal premise without altering the core narrative arc.[26]Broadcast and episodes
Release history
Big Kids premiered in the United Kingdom on BBC One as part of the CBBC programming slot on 27 September 2000, with the first episode airing weekly thereafter until the series concluded on 20 December 2000.[30] The show occupied a standard afternoon time slot suitable for family viewing during the CBBC block, which targeted children and families in the post-school hours. Over the course of three months, all 13 episodes were broadcast without any reported scheduling interruptions or changes to accommodate broader audience access.[30] In the United States, the series debuted on the Noggin network on 29 January 2001 at 7:00 p.m. ET, integrated into the channel's new interactive primetime block titled "The Hubbub," which aired on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays to engage young viewers through web submissions.[4] Noggin, a co-producer alongside the BBC, completed airing the full 13-episode run by March 2001.[31] Reruns of Big Kids subsequently appeared on Noggin's overnight teen-oriented block, The N, from April 2002 through January 2004, extending its availability to older audiences during late-night hours.[11] Distribution of Big Kids remained primarily confined to the UK and US markets following its initial broadcasts, with no significant international airings or adaptations reported beyond these regions.[32] As of 2025, the series is not available on major streaming platforms, reflecting its limited post-2004 visibility and the absence of renewal for additional seasons after the original 13-episode order.[32]Episode list
The series consists of a single season with 13 episodes, which aired weekly on BBC One in the United Kingdom from September 27 to December 20, 2000.[33] In the United States, all episodes were broadcast on Nickelodeon from March 9 to 30, 2001, following an earlier premiere on Noggin on January 29, 2001.[11] The episodes build on the central hypnosis arc, progressing from the family's initial discovery of the parents' childlike regressions to their efforts in gathering evidence, identifying the trigger word, and ultimately seeking a resolution from the hypnotist.| Episode | Title | UK Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Performance by Hypnotist | September 27, 2000 | The Spiller family attends a hypnotist performance where Simon mocks the act, inadvertently causing his parents, Geoff and Sarah, to be hypnotized. Later, the parents begin behaving like children, leading to embarrassing situations for siblings Simon and Kate as they try to manage the chaos. The kids initially blame each other for the strange occurrences.[30] |
| 2 | Kate Avoids Friends | October 4, 2000 | Simon finally believes Kate's claims about their parents' odd behavior after witnessing it himself. Kate struggles to keep her mother's childish antics hidden from her friends during a social outing. Meanwhile, Simon faces trouble at school, prompting his parents to issue strict orders despite their own regressions.[30] |
| 3 | Videotaping Mum and Dad | October 11, 2000 | Desperate to prove the hypnotic effects to others, Simon and Kate decide to secretly film their parents' childlike behaviors around the house. The recording session leads to comedic mishaps as the parents remain oblivious. The siblings review the footage, confirming the ongoing curse but unsure how to proceed.[30] |
| 4 | Library/Shopping | October 18, 2000 | The parents attempt to research the hypnotist's curse at the local library in hopes of finding a solution. While there, Kate goes shopping with friends but gets distracted by the unfolding family drama. Simon hatches a secret plan, only to be sidetracked by peer influences.[30] |
| 5 | Restaurant | October 25, 2000 | Kate declares herself a vegetarian, complicating family dynamics, while Simon frets over impressing his crush Melanie with a good story. The hypnosis strikes during a family dinner at a restaurant, turning the outing into a public embarrassment as the parents regress. The kids scramble to contain the situation without drawing attention.[30] |
| 6 | New Car/Concert | November 1, 2000 | Kate faces disappointment when she is banned from attending a concert she desperately wants to see. Sarah encounters sexism at a car dealership while shopping for a new vehicle, but her regression complicates negotiations. Simon seizes the opportunity to attend the gig amid the family turmoil.[30] |
| 7 | Museum | November 8, 2000 | Sarah organizes a family trip to the museum over a bank holiday to spend quality time together. The curse activates unexpectedly during the visit, forcing Simon and Kate to corral their parents' immature antics among exhibits and visitors. The day highlights the siblings' growing frustration with the unresolved hypnosis.[30] |
| 8 | Aunt Muriel | November 15, 2000 | The family's Aunt Muriel arrives for a visit, providing a temporary distraction from the curse. The parents regress into teenage-like behavior around her, while she unwittingly helps Kate with a school project. Simon eavesdrops on a phone call, hoping it might benefit his own schemes.[30] |
| 9 | Chicken Pox | November 22, 2000 | Kate contracts chickenpox, requiring extra care at home, just as Geoff regresses during what should be a routine medical check. The parents' childlike states exacerbate the family's issues, leaving Simon to handle responsibilities. Kate's illness forces the siblings to confront the curse's impact more directly.[30] |
| 10 | Puppy | November 29, 2000 | Kate campaigns for a family puppy to add some normalcy to their lives. When Sarah regresses again, she runs off impulsively and returns with an unexpected surprise. The incident underscores the parents' unpredictable behavior and strains the household further.[30] |
| 11 | Simon Pursues Melanie | December 6, 2000 | Simon musters courage to ask Melanie to a school disco, but his parents' teenage regressions disrupt a planned lunch. Kate continues her search for the hypnosis trigger word amid the chaos. The party preparations go awry as the family's secret threatens to spill over.[30] |
| 12 | Trigger Revealed | December 13, 2000 | Kate finally uncovers the trigger word that activates the hypnosis, offering hope for control. The parents face comedic challenges at a school quiz and event while regressed. Simon and Kate test the discovery cautiously, building toward a potential fix.[30] |
| 13 | Finding Hypnotist | December 20, 2000 | A mishap leaves Mum injured, prompting a hospital visit that heightens the urgency to end the curse. The family tracks down the hypnotist, Mr. Ming, at a fun fair for reversal. In the series finale, the Spillers confront the source of their troubles, resolving the hypnotic arc.[30] |
