Sunday fairy tale

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Television broadcast
Country of production Germany
Year (s) since 1997
Broadcasting
cycle
Sundays at 12 noon
genre TV series with fairy tale films
First broadcast 1997 on KiKA

The Sunday fairy tale is a broadcast by KiKA .

history

In 1997, the Sunday fairy tale was broadcast for the first time with the start of KiKA . Since then, a fairytale film has been shown every Sunday at 12:00 p.m. as part of the television program.

Intro

In the course of time, the intro of the Sunday fairy tale changed : At the beginning, a moderator introduced the respective fairy tale. Then a fairytale castle was faded in from bottom to top. All fairy tale characters were recognized. A fairy "conjured up" the title Sunday fairy tale with her magic wand . Starting in 2012, a row of flowers bloomed and at the end of the row the word Sunday fairy tale appears . A magic cauldron is currently flying up at an animated castle, allusions to fairy tales appear . Then Sunday fairy tale is written in ornate gold letters on a blue background.

Fairy tale films

Mostly DEFA fairy tale films , remakes of the Six in One Stroke series ( ARD ) and the Märchenperlen series ( ZDF ) as well as Czechoslovakian films are broadcast. Czech and Soviet fairy tale films and fairy tale films from the Federal Republic of Germany are less common.

Some of the films have been and are shown several times. Such was Snow White and Rose Red (1979) next Three Wishes for Cinderella to see (1973) most often.

List of Sunday fairy tales

This list only includes fairy tale films that were broadcast in the Sunday fairy tale.

Federal Republic of Germany (1949–1989)

Fairy tale film by DEFA and DFF

German fairy tale film since 1990

Czechoslovak fairy tale film

Czech fairy tale film

Soviet fairy tale film

Radio plays

There is a series of radio plays for this program . Hans Paetsch reads well-known fairy tales by the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen . The radio plays appeared on CD in 2005.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Children's channel Sonntagsmärchen (1999) in: YouTube from September 1, 2011.
  2. ^ Children's channel Sonntagsmärchen (2005) in: YouTube from September 1, 2011.
  3. ^ Children's channel Sonntagsmärchen (2012) in: YouTube from July 9, 2012.
  4. The broadcast dates were taken from the Prismas television archive .