The Teddy Bears’ Picnic
Clifford Berryman's cartoon, Washington Post, November 16th, 1902
Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
The music for The Teddy Bears’ Picnic was written by American composer John Walter Bratton in 1907. It started life as the ‘Teddy Bear Two-Step’ and was often used to accompany circus acts. The words, by Irish songwriter Jimmy Kennedy, were written in 1932 and the Two-Step was renamed The Teddy Bears’ Picnic.
In the same year, Henry Hall and his orchestra recorded the song with the singer Val Rosing. The recording was of such high quality that it was used by BBC sound engineers until the early 1980s to assess audio equipment.If you go down in the woods today, you're sure of a big surprise
If you go down in the woods today, you'd better go in disguise
For every bear that ever there was
Will gather there for certain because
Today's the day the teddy bears have their picnic
Every teddy bear who's been good is sure of a treat today
There's lots of marvelous things to eat and wonderful games to play
Beneath the trees where nobody sees
They'll hide and seek as long as they please
That's the way the teddy bears have their picnic
Picnic time for teddy bears
The little teddy bears are having a lovely time today
Watch them, catch them unawares
And see them picnic on their holiday
See them gaily gad about
They love to play and shout
They never have any cares
At six o'clock their mummies and daddies
Will take them back home to bed
'Cause they're tired little teddy bears
If you go down in the woods today, you'd better not go alone
It's lovely down in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
For every bear that ever there was
Will gather there for certain because
Today's the day the teddy bears have their picnic
Some critics have claimed that the lyrics are grim and menacing and not at all suitable for children. Not everyone likes the song. I think it’s rather charming and I really like teddy bears!
The 1992 illustrations in my board book version are by Michael Hague, an American illustrator who has created drawings for many books, mainly children’s.
I love the song and I love teddy bears. They don't seem to be in favour these days though with children having different soft toys. I've thought about getting teddies for the twins, but they have so many other toys already, I may just buy them the book instead.
ReplyDeleteIt's true there are so many soft toys available, but you can't beat a teddy bear.
DeleteMe too. l love teddy bears and I remember the words and music fondly. But killing bears for pleasure was and is disgusting.
ReplyDelete.
I agree - killing animals for sport is appalling.
DeleteThe illustrations are charming and I've always been fond of the song. I had a lovely old fashioned music box that played it, sadly lost (with all else) when our house burned to the ground in 2009. Living more or less in the midst of Redwood National Park, we sometimes see black bears in our yard. They come for the apples and plums as well as blackberries. This results in many broken branches but it's always fascinating to see them so close.
ReplyDeleteHow sad to lose everything.
DeleteI envy you your close encounters of the black bear kind - it must be wonderful to see them. I imagine they make quite a lot of noise, crashing through the trees?
They do crash about but are also amazingly stealthy for the most part.
DeleteIt always surprises me when large animals move quietly.
DeleteI've never thought of the song as being dark; quite the opposite, it seems sweet to me, and charming as you said. I love the illustrations too. But as hels said, killing bears (or anything else) for "sporting fun" is something I've never understood and don't think I ever will.
ReplyDeleteI agree - killing for sport is deplorable.
DeleteI've got a little book of the song too, impossible to read to the children without singing
ReplyDeleteIt's such a catchy tune and always makes me smile.
DeleteNow you know I’ll be singing that tune all day now lol! B x
ReplyDeleteSorry about that :-)
DeleteI'm not embarrassed to admit I still love my two childhood teddy bears. Having been brought up in a traditional nuclear family structure, I named them Mr and Mrs Teddy. I'm wondering what a child of the 2020s might chose for names. LGBT and Non-binary Teddy perhaps!
ReplyDeleteCheers, Gail.
Woke teddy bears? Spare me!
ReplyDeleteJust per curiosity I read the German Wikipedia what they say about the Teddy Bear. What you wrote was the American version a little different because the bear to shoot by Roosevelt was a baby and that's why he refused. Then there is the German version, far less romantic !
ReplyDeleteA short translation : Finally, it was noticed in the window of a shop by the secretary of US President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt, a passionate bear hunter, who bought it as a decoration for Roosevelt’s daughter’s birthday table. She was so impressed with the bear that she named him “Teddy” after her father.
The bear became increasingly popular, so much so that an American representative at the Leipzig Trade Fair in 1903 ordered 3,000 teddy bears from the Steiff company, which, according to another version of the story, were used as table decorations on a presidential table, whereupon one of the guests is said to have exclaimed: “ Those are Teddy’s bears!”
In my childhood I had almost all Steiff animals but NO teddy ! I am traumatized !
That's an interesting variation on the story. I expect many people jumped on the bandwagon!
DeleteDid you keep your Steiff toys? They'd be worth a fortune now.
I kept them but then Dario has "played" with them and they landed in the garbage !
DeleteAww, what a shame. However, toys are for playing . . .
DeleteI did'nt have a teddy as a boy...I had a Golly~Wog...
ReplyDeleteooooop's sorry...Jolly Golly..must get it right l
suppose..though, it's still a Golly~Wog to me...!
And..l still have it...minus it's afro, which l cut off
as a toddler, and has never grown back..! :O).
A teddy bear applies for a job at a building site...
The foreman is a bit surprised, but the teddy bear
is quite insistent, so Monday rolls around and the
teddy bear is put on the payroll, and issued with a
hard hat, a safety jacket, a pick and shovel...
The teddy bear works hard all day, and the foreman
is pleasantly surprised..
In the evening, the teddy bear clocks off, and leaves
his tools in the site shed..
The next morning the teddy bear is back at work bright
and early, but almost as soon as he arrives he goes up
to the foreman..
"Sir, I've got a problem. I left my kit here overnight, and
someone has taken the pick.
I've still got the shovel and the hard hat and the safety
jacket, but the pick's gone."
The foreman thinks for a moment, then slaps his head
and looks at the calendar, then says...
"Of course, today's Tuesday..
Sorry, I should have warned you... Today's the day the
teddy bears have their picks nicked." :O).
✨🍑✨ ✨ ✨🍑✨ ✨ ✨🍑✨ ✨ ✨🍑✨ ✨
Ha ha ha! I never thought of golliwogs as anything other than lovely toys. I loved mine.
DeleteI know about Theodore Roosevelt and his hunting. Back then all game was destroyed without thought. I like to just think of toy bears as fun plush. I never had a bear toy, just rabbits and french poodles! We have enough bad to think on that all sweet simple toys should be appreciated as that.
ReplyDeleteWe're far too 'politically correct' now and simple pleasures and toys have become battlegrounds. It's usually a minority that creates the greatest fuss. (Ducks as stones are thrown . . . )
DeleteMy nephew and his wife live in a place where bears are regular visitors and gardens, compost etc need to be carefully thought out and designed with bear exclusion in mind. They also have a creek that runs past the house and my NZ niece was staying with them in summer, playing with their very young son, doors open because it was a hot day and looked up to see a bear casually strolling into the house from the creek. Without thinking (no previous encounters with bears) she went into what she later described as 'angry aunty' mode and was fortunate to have the bear think better of it and leave.
ReplyDeleteThat is an encounter not to be forgotten!
ReplyDeleteI'd never heard of the song before.
ReplyDeleteI hope you enjoyed it:-)
ReplyDeleteThank you for the earworm, Janice. I'm sure it will be around for weeks! xxx
ReplyDeleteIt was going through my head all last night and I couldn't sleep! x x x
DeleteIt is slightly menacing, but to those of us reared on Grimm's Fairy Tales, not too bad. Re your previous post, my daughter first heard the word "boudin" in France when she, a vegetarian, was offered some boudin by her landlady. On enquiring what boudin was, she was told "eh bien, c'est un boudin", which wasn't very helpful. It didn't look veggie, so she politely declined.
ReplyDeleteMy middle daughter is vegetarian and I know her reactions so I can imagine your daughter's.
ReplyDelete