Trazan Apansson - Julens konung (Partially found Swedish children's TV series; 1976)

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Revision as of 22:59, 10 May 2023 by Windiflax (talk | contribs) (Added an article about the case of the Trazan Apansson series from 1976 that was deleted by mistake in the end of the 70s, and is partially lost since then. This case of lost media is well known in Sweden, as the creators are household names and the remake of the series is also very famous. /Windiflax)
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 Partially Found/Lost

Trazan Apansson - Julens konung was a children's TV series broadcasted on Swedish Television (SVT) TV1 for their Christmas holiday programming 1976. The series consisted of nine one hour long episodes, airing every morning at 9 am for nine days between 24 December 1976 and 1 January 1977.

Background

Article in Swedish TV magazine advertising the series, 1976

The show's creator, Swedish comedian and actor Lasse Åberg, got the charge by Swedish Television to create a show for the 1976 year's Christmas morning programming Jullovsmorgon for children. For this, he wrote and produced Trazan Apansson - julens konung, and the show was the first series starring the characters Trazan and Banarne[1]. The show consisted of sketches and musical numbers by the two main characters mixed with cartoons. The show was well received among the general public, although some instances were unhappy about the Christmas programming missing focus on Christianity and the religious aspects of Christmas[2].

Trazan Apansson is a human character played by Lasse Åberg. Trazan has a monkey named Banarne (played by Klasse Möllberg) as a side-kick, and the series is set in a jungle. The name "Trazan" is a pun based on the famous fictional character Tarzan, as "trasa" is the Swedish word for washcloth, giving the name "Trazan" a comedic sentiment. The name of the show "Julens konung" ("the Christmas king") is a pun based on the Swedish title for Tarzan, "Djurens konung" ("the animal king").

The series is thought to have been reprised once in 1978[1]. When Swedish Television planned to reprise the series once again in 1979, archivists were found to mistakenly have demagnetized and deleted the original copies of all episodes of the series[3]. This was allegedly due to the archivists confusing the tapes with other tapes that were meant to be deleted, marking them with the wrong numbers[4]. Swedish Television tried to investigate if a few working copies (rushes) that existed were sufficient for airing, but they were regarded as being of too low quality[4].

Partial finding

One copy of the second episode of the series is known to exist, a home recording on Betacam made by a private person on 25 December 1976[5]. The Betacam copy has since been digitized and a 20 minute reel (without the cartoons due to copyright) of it has since 2019 been uploaded to YouTube[6].

The other episodes are as of 2023 presumed lost.

The rushes that existed in 1979, and that were of too low quality to be aired, are presumably also lost.

# Air date Status
1 24 December 1976 Lost
2 25 December 1976 Found
3 26 December 1976 Lost
4 27 December 1976 Lost
6 29 December 1976 Lost
5 28 December 1976 Lost
6 29 December 1976 Lost
7 30 December 1976 Lost
8 31 December 1976 Lost
9 1 January 1977 Lost

Legacy

As a response to the mistake by Swedish Television, the second series Trazan & Banarne, was created as a replacement for the first series. The new series was produced in 1980[7], and has been reprised many times on Swedish Television since.

Links

References