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・ Captain Billy
・ Captain Birdseye
・ Captain Black
・ Captain Black (Captain Scarlet)
・ Captain Black (tobacco brand)
・ Captain Blomet
・ Captain Blood
・ Captain Blood (1924 film)
・ Captain Blood (1935 film)
・ Captain Blood (1960 film)
・ Captain Blood (film)
・ Captain Blood (novel)
・ Captain Blood (video game)
・ Captain Blue
・ Captain Blue (Captain Scarlet)
Captain Bluebear
・ Captain Bodgit
・ Captain Bogg and Salty
・ Captain Boomerang
・ Captain Boycott (film)
・ Captain Brassbound's Conversion
・ Captain Britain
・ Captain Britain and MI13
・ Captain Britain Corps
・ Captain Brown (disambiguation)
・ Captain Buckles
・ Captain Butler
・ Captain Calamity
・ Captain Calamity (film)
・ Captain Calvin and Pamela Hale House


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Captain Bluebear : ウィキペディア英語版
Captain Bluebear

Captain Bluebear (German: ''Käpt'n Blaubär'') is a fictional character created by novelist and comic artist Walter Moers. Bluebear, an anthropomorphic talking bear with blue fur who originally appeared in the German children's television program ''Die Sendung mit der Maus'', has since then appeared in a film, a novel, a stage musical and various other media, all of which chronicle the character's life as a sailor and adventurer. Outside of Germany, Captain Bluebear is best known for being the protagonist of Moers' novel ''The 13½ Lives of Captain Bluebear''.
The name pokes fun at the relative homophony between the German vowel "e" and umlaut "ä", when pronounced in a more colloquial, everyday style of language. In a compound noun the suffix "e" from "-beere" (Erdbeere/strawberry, Himbeere/raspberry, etc.) would very often not be pronounced at all:
Bär/Beer(e) - 'bear/berry' ... 'bluebear/blueberry'
== ''Die Sendung mit der Maus'' ==
Captain Bluebear originally appeared in ''Käpt'n Blaubärs Seemannsgarn'' (“Captain Bluebear's Sailor's Yarn”), a regular segment in the educational children's television series ''Die Sendung mit der Maus''. Other regular characters of the ''Seemannsgarn'' episodes are Bluebear's sailor companion Hein Blöd (an anthropomorphic rat whose name translates as “Harry Dim”) and his three grandchildren (little bears who have yellow, green and pink fur, respectively), all of which live with Bluebear in a ship stranded on a cliff. One episode would usually consist of Bluebear telling a cock-and-bull story to his grandchildren, with the frame narrative being made with animated puppets and Bluebear's story itself being a traditionally animated short film. The stories always take the form of a tall tale and usually have Captain Bluebear overcome some unbelievable obstacle or a seemingly all-powerful adversary who threatens to sink the Captain's ship. The little bears habitually doubt the veracity of their grandfather's tales, while Hein Blöd acts as a buffoon character.
The episodes sometimes contained allusions to other popular characters of German children's television like the Sandmännchen, and also to other aspects of Walter Moers' work, e.g. in some episodes one of the little bears wears a pin-back button of Moers' adult comic character Little Asshole. Bluebear, Hein Blöd and the three little bears later became part of other children's TV shows as well, such as ''Käpt’n Blaubär Club'' and ''Blaubär und Blöd''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Captain Bluebear」の詳細全文を読む



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