Kimboo is a Franco-Ivorian animated television series which originally aired on France's FR3 during 1989–1990. Created by the Côte d'Ivoire's then-First LadyMarie-Thérèse Houphouët-Boigny, its title character—an Ivorian boy who journeys from his home village with a sister and a pet parrot—was designated as an ambassador for Africa's children and culture. Consisting of 48 five-minute episodes, the series was accompanied by a tie-in magazine and book series and also exported abroad. Kimboo and Kids, a 30-minute U.S. version featuring market-exclusive live-action segments, was the first animated program to air on the Black Entertainment Television (BET) network during 1991–1992, receiving a Parents' Choice Award after its run ended.
Synopsis
Kimboo, a 10-year-old boy, lives in the Côte d'Ivoire village of Yampoupou[a] with his sister Kita and pet parrot Ako. He daydreams of travelling around the world someday, but his grandfather insists he begin exploring his home country first. After winning a local singing contest, he sets off with Kita and Ako on an adventure that takes them to Abidjan, Benin, Senegal, Timbuktu, Tunisia, Marseille, Paris, and New York City.[2]
Taken from Planète Jeunesse. Original French titles only.[2]
Kimboo blues
Du feu dans la brousse
Kimboo photographe
Les échasses
La grande course
La légende de l'hippopotame
Kimboo détective
Kidnapping
L'anniversaire de Kita
L'oncle Théodore
La case de l'oncle Ted
On a volé le taxi-brousse
Kita fait du cinéma
Les braconniers de la maraque
Kimboo reporter
Le concours de musique
Le départ
Nuit d'angoisse
Les bûcherons
Croco-killer Joe
La vengeance du crocodile blanc
Pas de panique
Le trésor du pirate
Le gros cousin
Les affaires sont les affaires
Oeil pour oeil
La cabane bambou
Mystères sur l'hippocampe
Escale à Abomey
Dans la fourmilière
Le roi des fourmis
Les mamas Benz
Course contre la mort
Ako mène l'enquête
Le bois d'ébène
Les vaches
Le forgeron de Tombouctou
Naufragés du désert
Touareg's tour
Jambe de bois
Ako se marie
Paris beur
Up hold
Pirates de l'air
Le révérend Thomas
Retrouver Kita
Tous les enfants du monde!
Le concert du siècle
Development
Kimboo was the first animated series to feature a native African main character. It was created by Marie-Thérèse Houphouët-Boigny, the First Lady of the Côte d'Ivoire at the time.[1] Since African children wanted an animated character they could relate to instead of what they saw in Western-produced fare,[1] Houphouët-Boigny set out to produce a show whose title character would serve as an ambassador for the continent's children and culture;[8] "carry a message of hope" to that demographic; and "help create the foundations of true international brotherhood".[1] Her project was an effort to combat dated perceptions and depictions of African culture in media.[1] She spent one year developing the series,[1] which cost ₣12 million overall with support from France.[4] Among the series' crew were French filmmaker Alain Jaspard[5] and "Soul Makossa" composer Manu Dibango.[3]
Broadcast and marketing
Kimboo was first broadcast on 23 October 1989 on FR3 as a five-minute program, running for 48 episodes until 1990.[2] It premiered on Ivorian television in December 1989 as Houphouët-Boigny's "Christmas gift" to local young viewers, and was also exported within and outside the African market.[1] An eponymous tie-in magazine from Editions Magnans, which launched that November[8] and ran for five or six issues,[6] was illustrated by designer and Magnans owner Frédéric Beltran.[6] Around the same time, the show became the basis of Les aventures de Kimboo, a children's book series from EDICEF[8] with Ivorian distribution by CEDA.[6] Its first title, Boubou et Ako, was written by Caya Makhélé [fr] and illustrated by Laurent Lalo (Maïga).[6]
In late July 1990, Black Entertainment Television (BET) picked up the U.S. broadcast rights.[9] Although announced for January 1991,[10] the first tapings of their eventual version, Kimboo and Kids, did not occur until that March.[7] Airing as a half-hour Saturday-morning program and featuring hosted live-action wraparounds exclusive to the U.S. market,[7][11]Kimboo and Kids premiered on 20 April 1991[12] and ran until the following September.[13] The first animated series to air on BET, it preceded their in-house production Hey Monie! by 12 years.[14] In late November 1992, this version won a Parents' Choice Award in the National Television category alongside Lamb Chop's Play-Along, The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, and Nickelodeon Special Edition: A Conversation with Magic.[15]
Legacy
In 2005, media historian Hal Erickson lamented Kimboo's obscurity and absence from the U.S. airwaves despite its landmark status for animation and BET:
It seems incredible that an animated series [from around] the early 1990s could have vanished as though the earth had completely swallowed it, but such seems to be the case with the half-hour [U.S. version].... Even BET seems to have forgotten all about Kimboo.[14]
See also
Kirikou, a French animated franchise set in Africa
^ abcdefghijNizou (9 June 2020) [2005-05-05]. "Kimboo". Planète Jeunesse (in French). Archived from the original on 15 June 2024. Retrieved 11 June 2024.