Pixies Hollow Lagrange

David Hood is a bassist from Muscle Shoals, Alabama. He also plays the trombone. He is a member of the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. — Early life and education — Hood was born in Sheffield, Alabama. — Hood attended the University of North Alabama. — Career — Hood started.

Pixie Hollow Games
Directed byBradley Raymond[1]
StarringMae Whitman
Lucy Liu
Raven-Symoné
Megan Hilty[1]
Angela Bartys
Theme music composerJoel McNeely
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Producer(s)Helen Kalafatic
Running time23 minutes
Production company(s)DisneyToon Studios
DistributorDisney–ABC Domestic Television
Release
Original networkDisney Channel
Original release
  • November 19, 2011
  1. Pixie Hollow Games is a 30-minute television special broadcast on November 19, 2011, on Disney Channel.Based on the Disney Fairies franchise, it was produced by DisneyToon Studios and animated by Prana Studios.
  2. Frolic with Tinker Bell and her fairy friends at this secret forest hideaway in Disneyland Park at the Disneyland Resort in Southern California.

Pixie Hollow Games is a 30-minute television special broadcast on November 19, 2011, on Disney Channel. Based on the Disney Fairies franchise, it was produced by DisneyToon Studios and animated by Prana Studios.[2] It features the voices of Mae Whitman, Lucy Liu, Raven-Symoné, Megan Hilty, Angela Bartys, and others, as Tinker Bell and the other fairies of Pixie Hollow in Never Land, taking part in an Olympic-style competition. It is based loosely on J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan stories, by way of Disney's animated adaptation.

It was originally intended as the last of five feature-length films in the Tinker Bell series of direct-to-DVD 3D animated films, with the title Tinker Bell: Race through the Seasons, and a release date in 2012. However, the movie was rescheduled and retooled as a TV special instead of a film-length movie. Unlike the previous feature films in this series, Tinker Bell is not a central featured character in this special release.

Plot[edit]

Rosetta is busy helping to set up flowers for the big night, when she meets a new garden fairy named Chloe. Chloe announces she has been training for the Pixie Hollow Games and is excited to be competing. Even though the garden fairies have little hope of winning and haven't ever won, Chloe is confident that she and her partner can turn things around and end their losing streak. When it comes time for the team selection, Chloe has already volunteered and Rosetta is selected to be her partner.

On the night of the games, Rosetta wears a fancy gown, certain that she and Chloe will be eliminated after one round. The storm fairies, Rumble and Glimmer, are the heavy favorites to win the competition due to their winning streak and having winners rings for almost every finger. The first event is leapfrogging. Rosetta refuses to get onto the frog, but finally does when the spectators yell in protest, leading to total chaos on the racetrack.

The next day, Rosetta and Chloe continue to compete in a series of games, such as dragonfly water skiing, twig-spheres, and mouse polo, slowly moving up in the standings during each game. The final challenge (a teacup race) arrives. Chloe dives down the chute with no trouble, but Rosetta nervously crawls down the chute, to Chloe's dismay. Rosetta's actions put them in last place, causing Chloe to start doubting her. Meanwhile, other teams start dropping which leaves only the garden and storm fairies.

Rosetta and Chloe take the mudslide mountain shortcut and successfully make it over thanks to Tinker Bell. However, in the last leg of the race, Rumble uses Glimmer's lightning ability to zap one of the wheels causing the girls' cart to crash. Glimmer is appalled. Seeing their cart destroyed, Rosetta and Chloe push their cart over the finish line and finish together. While Rumble celebrates his victory, Queen Clarion announces that the garden fairies are the winners. Rumble protests, until she shows him that Glimmer abandoned him just before the finish line for cheating, giving the victory to the garden fairies. Rosetta and Chloe broke their losing streak and they celebrate with their friends.

Cast[edit]

  • Megan Hilty as Rosetta, a garden fairy and the main protagonist of the film
  • Brenda Song as Chloe, a new garden fairy and Rosetta's partner
  • Jason Dolley as Rumble, a storm fairy and the main antagonist of the film
  • Tiffany Thornton as Glimmer, a storm fairy and Rumble's partner
  • Zendaya as Fern, a garden fairy
  • Mae Whitman as Tinker Bell, a tinker fairy
  • Lucy Liu as Silvermist, a water fairy
  • Raven-Symoné as Iridessa, a light fairy
  • Angela Bartys as Fawn, an animal fairy
  • Pamela Adlon as Vidia, a fast-flying fairy
  • Jeff Bennett as Clank, a large tinker fairy with a booming voice / Fairy Gary, the overseer of the pixie-dust keepers and Terence's partner
  • Rob Paulsen as Bobble, a wispy tinker fairy with large glasses / Buck, a new animal fairy and Fawn's partner
  • Jane Horrocks as Fairy Mary, the overseer of the tinker fairies and Tink's partner
  • Jessica DiCicco as Lilac, a garden fairy / Lumina, a new light fairy and Iridessa's partner
  • Kari Wahlgren as Ivy, a garden fairy
  • Alicyn Packard as Zephyr, a new fast-flying fairy and Vidia's partner
  • Jesse McCartney as Terence, the pixie-dust keeper
  • Dan Curtis Lee as Starter Sparrowman
  • Kraisit Agnew as Tabby
  • Anjelica Huston as Queen Clarion, the queen of all Pixie Hollow

Music[edit]

Pixie Hollow Uk

The score to the special is composed by Joel McNeely, who scored the first three Tinker Bell films. Zendaya sings the theme song (written by Brendan Milburn and Valerie Vigoda of GrooveLily), which is called 'Dig Down Deeper'.[citation needed]Zendaya performed 'Dig Down Deeper' in the 2011 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.In Spain, the main theme was played by Lydia Fairen.

Release[edit]

The special debuted in the United States on The Disney Channel on November 19, 2011.

The special was included as a bonus feature on the Blu-ray releases of Secret of the Wings in 2012.[3] A standalone DVD was released on August 20, 2013.[4]

Sequel[edit]

A fourth full-length Tinker Bell film, Secret of the Wings, was originally announced to be released before the special, but was instead released on October 23, 2012.

References[edit]

  1. ^ abWeisman, Jon (August 16, 2011). 'Disney Channel special 'Pixie Hollow Games' will have John Lasseter on board'. Variety. Retrieved August 16, 2011.
  2. ^Zahed, Ramin (October 7, 2011). 'Extreme Fairies: 'Pixie Hollow Games''. Animation Magazine. Retrieved March 5, 2017.
  3. ^Cyrenne, Randall. 'Animated Views - Secret of the Wings'. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  4. ^'Amazon.com sales page'.

External links[edit]

  • Pixie Hollow Games on IMDb

Pixies Hollow Tinker Bell

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pixie_Hollow_Games&oldid=946156545'
Pixies

Disney Pixies Hollow.com

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    macaque: Macaques live in troops of varying size. The males dominate the troop and live within a clear but shifting dominance rank order. The ranking of females is longer-lasting and depends on their genealogical position. Macaques are somewhat more arboreal than baboons but are equally at home on the…

  • Trooper Peter Halketh of Mashonaland (work by Schreiner)

    Olive Schreiner: …Cecil Rhodes and his associates, Trooper Peter Halkett of Mashonaland (1897), and a widely acclaimed “bible” of the Women’s Movement, Woman and Labour (1911).

  • Trooping the Colour (British military tradition)

    Trooping the Colour, traditional observance of the British monarch’s official birthday with a military ceremony and parade in London. Irrespective of the actual day upon which the sovereign was born, a Saturday in June is annually set aside to celebrate the monarch’s birth with pomp, pageantry, and

  • Tropaeolaceae (plant family)

    Brassicales: Akaniaceae and Tropaeolaceae: Akaniaceae and Tropaeolaceae both have large zygomorphic flowers with eight stamens and an ovary with three compartments, with the ovules at the apex of each. Geographically and morphologically they might otherwise seem an unlikely pair.

  • Tropaeolum (plant, Tropaeolum genus)

    Nasturtium, any of various annual plants of the genus Tropaeolum, in the family Tropaeolaceae, native to Mexico, Central America, and northern South America and introduced into other regions as cultivated garden plants. Nasturtium is also a genus of aquatic herbs of the family Cruciferae (see

  • Tropaeolum majus (plant)

    nasturtium: Tropaeolum majus, the common nasturtium, is also known as Indian cress. The young flower buds and fruit are sometimes used as seasoning. The plant grows 2.4–3.6 metres (8–12 feet) tall, and the flowers are commonly yellow-orange with red spots or stripes. T. minus, the dwarf nasturtium, has flowers…

  • Tropaeolum minus (plant)

    nasturtium: minus, the dwarf nasturtium, has flowers 3 cm (1.2 inches) across or less. T. peltophorum, the shield nasturtium, is a climbing plant with orange-red flowers about 2.5 cm (1 inch) long. T. peregrinum is commonly known as the canary creeper.

  • Tropaeolum peltophorum (plant)

    nasturtium: peltophorum, the shield nasturtium, is a climbing plant with orange-red flowers about 2.5 cm (1 inch) long. T. peregrinum is commonly known as the canary creeper.

  • Tropaeolum peregrinum (plant)

    Canary creeper, (species Tropaeolum peregrinum), annual climbing herb, of the family Tropaeolaceae, native to northwestern South America and introduced to other regions as a cultivated garden plant. It grows to a height of 1.8–3 m (6–10 feet). The leaves are round and deeply five-lobed. The

  • Tropaeum Trajani (monument, Romania)

    Western sculpture: Age of Trajan: …frieze of a great, circular Tropaeum Trajani, set up in the Dobruja (Romania) to commemorate victories over the Dacians, contains a series of metopes (a decoration in a Doric frieze) carved with figure scenes in a naïve, flat, linear style that suggests the hands of army artists of provincial origin.

  • tropaion (ancient Greek memorial)

    Trophy, (from Greek tropaion, from tropē, “rout”), in ancient Greece, memorial of victory set up on the field of battle at the spot where the enemy had been routed. It consisted of captured arms and standards hung upon a tree or stake in the semblance of a man and was inscribed with details of the

  • troparion (vocal music)

    Troparion, short hymn or stanza sung in Greek Orthodox religious services. The word probably derives from a diminutive of the Greek tropos (“something repeated,” “manner,” “fashion”), with a possible analogy to the Italian ritornello (“refrain”; diminutive of ritorno, “return”). Since the 5th

  • trope (rhetoric)

    figure of speech: …simile, and irony, are called tropes.

  • trope (philosophy)

    epistemology: Ancient Skepticism: …issue, are known as “tropes.” The judgment that a tower is round when seen at a distance, for example, is contradicted by the judgment that the tower is square when seen up close. The judgment that Providence cares for all things, which is supported by the orderliness of the…

  • trope (music)

    Trope, in medieval church music, melody, explicatory text, or both added to a plainchant melody. Tropes are of two general types: those adding a new text to a melisma (section of music having one syllable extended over many notes); and those inserting new music, usually with words, between

  • trope nominalism (philosophy)

    universal: Trope nominalism: Other nominalists, so-called “trope” nominalists, follow the American philosopher Donald Cary Williams in positing an extra kind of part for things. Williams held that a round red disk, for example, has parts in addition to its concrete spatial parts, such as its upper…

  • Tropenmuseum (museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands)

    museum: History museums: …Museum in London, and the Tropenmuseum (Museum of the Royal Tropical Institute) in Amsterdam. Restructuring of such collections in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, however, suggested efforts to move away from the self-other dichotomy of colonialism. Specialized ethnography museums are also to be found in provincial cities. Normally,…

  • trophallaxis (zoology)

    hymenopteran: General features: Trophallaxis, or the mutual exchange of food between larvae and adults of bees, ants, and wasps, has been of special interest to hymenopterists. Hyperparasitism—the parasitic habit of one species upon another parasitic species—has also attracted attention. Polyembryony, the development of many individuals (as many as…

  • Trophées, Les (work by Heredia)

    José Maria de Heredia: …longer pieces were published as Les Trophées (1893). These poems capture in verse a fugitive moment of history (usually classical or Renaissance) or else some objet d’art (a vase, a coin, an ornate book binding), usually in one startling image. A selection of his poems in English translation was published…

  • trophic cascade (ecology)

    Trophic cascade, an ecological phenomenon triggered by the addition or removal of top predators and involving reciprocal changes in the relative populations of predator and prey through a food chain, which often results in dramatic changes in ecosystem structure and nutrient cycling. In a

  • trophic factor (biochemistry)

    human nervous system: Neuronal development: …a target cell releases a trophic factor (e.g., nerve growth factor) that is essential for the survival of the neuron synapsing with it. Physical guidance cues are involved in contact guidance, or the migration of immature neurons along a scaffold of glial fibres.

  • trophic hormone (endocrinology)

    hormone: Hormones of the pituitary gland: The action of such tropic hormones can be understood only in the light of the mode of function of the endocrine glands they regulate.

  • trophic level (ecology)

    Trophic level, step in a nutritive series, or food chain, of an ecosystem. The organisms of a chain are classified into these levels on the basis of their feeding behaviour. The first and lowest level contains the producers, green plants. The plants or their products are consumed by the

  • trophic pyramid (ecology)

    Trophic pyramid, the basic structure of interaction in all biological communities characterized by the manner in which food energy is passed from one trophic level to the next along the food chain. The base of the pyramid is composed of species called autotrophs, the primary producers of the

  • trophism (biology)

    human disease: Health versus disease: …(the process is known as hypertrophy). This occurs in certain forms of heart disease, especially in those involving long-standing high blood pressure or structural defects of the heart valves. A large heart, therefore, may be a sign of disease. On the other hand, it is not uncommon for athletes to…

  • trophoblast (embryology)

    blastocyst: …now referred to as the trophoblast. It does not contribute directly to the formation of the embryo but rather serves to establish a connection with the maternal uterus. It is a precursor of the placenta.