A06x02 - The Queen/Perfume/Mirrors/The Olden Days/Mr. Bull in a China Shop
Posted: 11/23/23 07:51
- ♪
- I'm Peppa Pig. [oinks]
This is my little brother George.
- GEORGE: [oinking]
- This is Mummy Pig. - MUMMY: [oinks]
- And his is Daddy Pig. - DADDY: [huge oink]
- ALL: [laughing]
- Peppa Pig.[oinks]
- ♪
- MALE NARRATING: Peppa and her family are watching television.
- PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- MAN ON TV: And now a special message from the Queen.
- The Queen! The Queen! - GEORGE: [oinking]
- [trumpet fanfare]
- MAN ON TV: This is the Queen.
- Hello, to you all.
- Hello, Queen!
- Today, I have decided to give an award
to the hardest-working person in the country.
- I wonder who that will be?
- It certainly won't be you, darling.
- The hardest-working person in the country is...
Miss Rabbit. - ALL: Oh?
- NARRATOR: Miss Rabbit runs the ice cream store,
the recycling center... - [metal thuds]
- NARRATOR: ...the library. - Shhh!
- NARRATOR: She drives the train...
- [train chugging]
- NARRATOR: the fire engine... - [siren wailing]
- NARRATOR: flies a rescue helicopter...
and works the supermarket checkout.
- [window covers whirring] - Whew.
What a long day. - ALL: Surprise!
- Ah! What are you lot doing here?
- Miss Rabbit, I have a very special letter for you.
- PEPPA: Open it. [oinks]
- [reading] "Miss Rabbit, please come to my palace
"to get a medal for all your hard work.
Bring friends. All the best, the Queen."
- ALL: Ooohh! - [heavy thud]
- NARRATOR: Miss Rabbit has fainted.
- I can't visit the Queen!
I've got too much work to do.
- Relax. No one will be working that day.
- The Queen has made it a holiday.
- ALL: Hooray!
- NARRATOR: It is the day Miss Rabbit visits the Queen.
Peppa and her friends are going, too.
- ♪ We're off to see the Queen ♪
♪ We're off to see the Queen
♪ E-i-happy-o
♪ We're off to see the Queen [giggling]
- MISS RABBIT: Here we are.
- NARRATOR: This is the Queen's palace.
- [trumpet fanfare]
- Hello? Is anybody there?
- Look at all that fancy stuff.
- Don't touch anything.
- [vase rattling] - Oops.
- What a big house.
- Lots of room for a Queen to kick a ball about.
- Where is the Queen?
- Queen? Queen? Where are you?
- [knitting needles clicking]
- Hello, have you seen the Queen today?
- She's an old lady with a crown on her head.
- I am the Queen. - [heavy thud]
- NARRATOR: Miss Rabbit has fainted again.
- Hello, Mrs. Queen. - Baaaa!
Why aren't you wearing a crown?
- I don't wear it much because it's very heavy.
- Are you the boss of all the world?
- Not quite.
- Do you tell people what to do?
- Sometimes.
- Can you make teachers disappear?
- Oh, too many questions.
- The children are very excited to meet you, Your Majesty.
- I'm excited to meet all of you.
And now for Miss Rabbit's medal.
- CHILDREN: Ooooh!
- This is the Queen's Award for Industry.
- Thank you.
- Keep up the good work.
Three cheers for Miss Rabbit. Hip hip...
- CHILDREN: Hooray!
- QUEEN: Hip hip... - CHILDREN: Hooray!
- QUEEN: Hip hip hip... - CHILDREN: Hooray!
[giggling]
- Now for the party. To the garden.
- ♪
- You've got a lovely big garden, Your Majesty.
- Do you play in it all the time?
- I don't have much time for playing, no.
- That's sad.
- Oh, dear, a muddy puddle.
Never mind. We can walk around it.
- You can't walk around a muddy puddle.
- No? - No.
You have to jump in it.
[giggling]
- Oh, I say, that does look fun.
Here one goes, then.
- Stop!
- CHILDREN: [gasping]
- If you jump in muddy puddles, you must wear your boots...
Your Majesty.
- NARRATOR: Oh, dear, the Queen is not wearing her boots.
- Wheeee!
- BOTH: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: The Queen loves jumping
up and down in muddy puddles.
Everyone loves jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- [birds tweeting]
- NARRATOR: Peppa and George are visiting
Granny and Grandpa's house.
Peppa is watching Granny Pig at her dressing table.
- You smell nice, Granny.
- Thank you, Peppa.
It's my perfume de lavender.
- [sniffing] It smells like your garden.
- That's because perfume is made of flowers.
- [perfume sloshing] - Hm...
Granny, I've got a very good idea.
- Really? - Yes.
First, I need some water.
- Here's your water. - Right.
Now I'm going to put flowers in it and make perfume.
- That's nice, dear.
But only pick flowers from the grass, not from the flower bed.
Okay? - Okay.
[giggling]
Hello, flowers.
Who wants to be in my perfume?
I'm going to put you in my beaker of water.
[giggling]
Hello, butterfly.
I'm making perfume.
It's going to be the prettiest, smelliest perfume ever.
[sniffing] Lovely!
- NARRATOR: Here is George.
- Stand back, George. I'm making perfume.
Do you want to watch? - [oinking]
- First, I pick a smelly flower. [sniffing]
Very flowery.
Then I put it in my beaker.
No, George.
You can't put grass in my perfume.
It needs the smell of flowers.
Smell. - [sniffing]
Yuck!
- NARRATOR: George does not like smelly flowers.
Grandpa Pig is in his herb garden.
- Grandpa! Grandpa! Smell this.
- [sniffing]
Woo-ee. It smells like pond water.
- It's my special perfume.
I made it with flowers from the garden.
- [sniffing]
Oh, yes, it's the most beautiful perfume in the world.
- Yes. - Do you like it, George?
- No.
- George doesn't like the smell of flowers.
- Take this bucket, George.
You can make perfume out of something else.
I have got lots of lovely smelly things in my herb garden.
This is "Rosemary." I like to use it in my cooking.
- [sniffing] Mm, it smells interesting.
- [sniffing, coughing]
- This is "Mint."
- [sniffing] Ooh, that smells very...minty.
- [sniffing] Ugh.
- And this is "Lavender."
- [sniffing]
Ooh, that smells like Granny Pig's perfume.
- [sniffing]
Wow, that's a strong smell of lavender.
Ah, Granny Pig, you smell nice.
- Thank you, Grandpa Pig.
- Granny! Granny! Smell this.
- [sniffing] Oh!
What is it? - It's my perfume.
- Oh, yes, it's lovely.
Has George made some perfume, too?
- No, Granny.
He doesn't like the smell of anything.
- There must be something you like the smell of.
- GEORGE: [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George has found a muddy puddle.
- GEORGE: [giggling] [oinking]
- Ah, George.
What have you got there?
- Have you made some perfume?
[sniffing]
Actually, that smells quite nice.
- [sniffing] It smells lovely.
- [sniffing] I say--that is delightful.
What did you put in it, George? - [oinking]
- George's perfume is made out of muddy puddles.
- ALL: [sniffing] Ahhhh...
- Perfume de muddy puddle.
- PEPPA: Whee!
- ALL: [laughing]
- [oinks]
Granny Pig, you smell even nicer than you did before.
- Yes, you should use perfume de muddy puddle more often.
- ALL: [laughing]
- Daddy, why are you wearing that funny hat?
- Oh, ho, ho, this is my beret.
It puts me in the mood for painting pictures.
- NARRATOR: Mummy Pig is fixing a big mirror
onto the bathroom wall.
- Lovely. - [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George thinks there is
another little piggy in the bathroom.
- MUMMY: It's a mirror, George.
Mirrors are shiny. That's why you can see yourself.
- [blowing raspberry]
[giggling]
- George, what are you doing?
- George is looking at himself in the big shiny mirror.
- [oinks] It is very shiny.
[oinks]
Come on, George, let's find some more shiny things.
- [giggling]
- Daddy? [oinks]
We're looking for shiny things to see ourselves in.
- Have a look in a spoon.
- BOTH: Oooh.
- NARRATOR: Peppa and George can see their faces
in the shiny spoons.
- [giggling] Our faces look funny.
- DADDY: Now turn the spoon around.
- I'm upside down.
- DADDY: And turn it around again.
- Now I'm the right way up.
How does that work, Daddy?
- It's simple, Peppa.
Concave surfaces reflect light waves
inversely to their origin and--
- Is it magic?
- Uh, yes, it's magic.
- [doorbell ringing]
- NARRATOR: Suzy Sheep has come to play with Peppa.
- Hello, Peppa and George.
- Hello, Suzy.
Look at that.
- Baaaa! It's a spoon.
- PEPPA: It's a shiny spoon.
Look, I can make you go upside down.
[giggling] - Ooooh.
How does that work?
- It's magic. My daddy says so.
- Ah, let's find some more magic shiny things--in the garden.
- ALL: [giggling]
- [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George has found a muddy puddle.
- Ooh, it's shiny enough to see our faces.
- I can see the sky. There's a cloud. Baaaa!
- NARRATOR: Here are Pedro Pony and Danny Dog.
- PEDRO & DANNY: Hello, everyone.
- Did you drop something in that puddle?
- No, we're looking at the sky.
- But the sky is in the sky.
- PEPPA: [oinks] Look at this spoon.
- That's my face. It looks funny.
Whoa! Now I'm upside down.
How does that work?
- It's a funny magic mirror spoon. Baaaa!
- Woof. Woof. I know where there's some big funny mirrors.
- Really?
- Wobbly mirrors in a tent.
- Where are these wobbly mirrors?
- At the fair.
- NARRATOR: The parents have brought
the children to the fair.
- Roll up! Roll up! See my amazing wobbly mirrors.
- CHILDREN: [giggling]
- NARRATOR: The tent is full of big wobbly mirrors.
- Ooh, what happened to my body? [giggling]
- [giggling] You're a wobbly jelly. Baaaa!
- BOTH: [giggling]
- Wobble. Wobble. Wobble.[oinks]
How does it do that, Daddy?
- It's very simple.
Illusions of optical differentials
by convex and concave surfaces generate patterns that--
- So, it's magic. - Uh...
Yes, it's magic.
- Look at me. [giggling]
I've gone all squishy.
- [giggling, roaring]
- I've got a long neck-- like a giraffe. [giggling]
- This mirror looks normal to me. [oinks]
- Daddy, where's your big tummy gone?
- What tummy? - CHILDREN: [giggling]
- NARRATOR: It is Mummy Rabbit
with her baby twins, Rosie and Robbie.
- Hello, sister. How are you today?
- Very good, sister.
Mustn't chat for long, though.
I've got customers inside the tent.
- Aren't the mirrors amazing, Daddy Pig?
- Wow, I can see two of you.
- What do you mean?
- I can see you in the mirror, but there's no mirror.
Is it...magic?
- Silly Daddy. It's Miss Rabbit and Mummy Rabbit.
- DADDY: Oh.
- I suppose we do look a bit the same.
- Well... - BOTH: ...we are sisters.
- ALL: [laughing]
- Wow, I like these glasses.
- Yes, Peppa, you look fantastic.
- [oinks] I look fantastic.
- BOTH: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Suzy Sheep has come to play at Peppa's house.
- [oinks] Hello, Suzy.
- Hello, Peppa. Baaaa!
I've got something to show you.
Look!
- What is it?
- It's a photograph.
Who do you think it is?
- PEPPA: [gasping] It's a baby sheep.
- It's me! Baaaa!
- You're not a baby. [oinks]
- It's an old photo when I was a baby.
- Don't be silly, Suzy.
- In the olden days, you were a baby, too, Peppa.
- No, I wasn't.
- Yes, you were.
Ask your mummy.
- NARRATOR: Mummy Pig is working on the computer.
- [oinks] Mummy?
- Hello, Peppa.
- Suzy is talking nonsense.
- No, I'm not.
- She said in the olden days, I was a baby. [oinks]
- Well, you were, Peppa.
Look, here are some photos on the computer.
Who do you think that is?
- PEPPA: It's Baby Alexander.
- NARRATOR: Baby Alexander is Peppa's cousin.
- No, that's you as a baby, Peppa.
- Baby Peppa. - SUZY & PEPPA: [giggling]
- Somebody sounds like they're having fun.
- Look, Daddy, that's a picture of me as a baby.
- I remember it well.
It was taken on our first day in this house.
- What do you mean?
- When you were little, we moved into this house.
We brought all our things on top of our car.
- [hammering nail]
- DADDY: Mummy Pig put some pictures up.
- MUMMY: Daddy Pig put up a shelf.
- [vase smashing]
- MUMMY: And Grandpa Pig made us a lovely flower garden.
- Where's Grandpa's lovely flower garden now?
- Daddy Pig looked after it.
- Uh, we had the wrong kind of soil for flowers.
- SUZY & PEPPA: Oh?
- And, anyway, you needed somewhere to play.
- You and Suzy loved to play in the garden.
- [oinks] Was Suzy my friend in the olden days?
- DADDY: Yes, you and Suzy have always been best friends.
- BOTH: [blowing raspberries]
[giggling]
- [oinking] - [baaa'ing]
- In the olden days,
did Suzy and me jump up and down in muddy puddles?
- No, Peppa. You were babies.
You couldn't even walk.
- Oh. - What did we do?
- BOTH: [crying] - MUMMY: You cried.
- BOTH: [burping] - MUMMY: You burped.
- BOTH: [giggling] - MUMMY: And you laughed.
- Baaaa! We were babies.
- Baby Suzy. - Baby Peppa.
- BOTH: [giggling]
- Goo goo, gah gah. Goo goo, gah gah.
- BOTH: [giggling]
- MUMMY: Soon after that, you were toddlers.
- [oinking] - [baaa'ing]
- PEPPA: And where was George?
- He was a baby-- in my tummy.
- [oinking] Yes, you were in my tummy, George.
- You've got a big tummy, Daddy.
Is there a baby in there?
- Oh, ho, ho, no, Peppa.
This tummy is pure muscle.
- ALL: [laughing]
- MUMMY: And so George was born.
- BABY GEORGE: Goo goo, gah gah.
- And Granny and Grandpa gave George a very special present.
Can you guess what it was?
- PEPPA: Mr. Dinosaur!
- MUMMY: That's right.
- BABY GEORGE: [giggling]
Grrr! [giggling]
- DADDY: And you and Suzy were running and jumping around.
- BOTH: [giggling]
- MUMMY: Then, one day, you saw something amazing.
- Muddy puddle! [giggling]
- Peppa, if you jump in muddy puddles,
you must wear your boots.
- [giggling, oinking]
- You loved jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- I still do!
- CHILDREN: [giggling]
- Let's take a photo now.
- [flashbulb popping]
- NARRATOR: Peppa loves jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- ALL: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Peppa has always loved
jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- ALL: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Peppa and her family are going for a drive.
- PEPPA: [giggling] I love our car.
- Oh, ho, and our car loves us, too, don't you?
- [car horn tooting]
- Stop! - [brakes screeching]
- NARRATOR: It is Mr. Bull and his friends.
- Digger. Digger. [giggling]
- NARRATOR: George likes diggers.
- Hello, Mr. Bull. What's up?
- We're digging up the road.
- Will it take long?
- It will take as long as it takes.
[straining]
- [metal pipe clanging]
- Lads, let's smash up this old pipe.
- [heavy thud]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull is good at smashing things.
- BOTH: Wow!
- [bell ringing] - Tea break!
- Oh, dear, now we'll have to wait even longer.
- Why don't you join us, Mummy Pig?
Plenty of tea to go around.
- That sounds lovely. Thank you, Mr. Bull.
- PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- That's a nice tea pot, Mr. Bull.
- Yes, Peppa. It's made of delicate china.
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull likes delicate china.
- You have to be very, very careful with china.
- Why?
- Because china can break very easily.
[coughing]
That's why I always... - [tea pot thuds]
- PEPPA: [gasping]
- NARRATOR: Oh, dear, Mr. Bull
has smashed the tea pot to pieces.
- PEPPA: Oh, no.
- I put it down too hard.
I don't know my own strength.
- Maybe we can fix it, boss. I've got cement.
- I've got a rivet g*n.
- It's not gonna work, lads.
- I know. Miss Rabbit has a china shop.
She could mend it.
- Good idea, Mummy Pig.
We'll go right now.
- Can I come, too?
- We'll all go! - PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- [engine starting]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull is going to the china shop.
This is Miss Rabbit's china shop.
- There we are. - [wire cable creaking]
- [door bells jangling] - Hello? Can I help you?
- Moo! - MISS RABBIT: [screaming]
A bull in a china shop! - [footsteps pounding]
- Hello, Miss Rabbit. - [china chattering]
- I have broken my china tea pot.
- Oh, dear. - Can you fix it?
- Let's have a look.
Hm, that's very broken.
- I've smashed it to bits.
- Yes, but I think I can fix it.
- Oh, goody.
Can we help? - GEORGE: [oinking]
- Of course, Peppa. - PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- Oh, these two pieces fit together.
- NARRATOR: Fixing the tea pot
is a bit like doing a jigsaw puzzle.
- MISS RABBIT: Well done, Peppa.
I'll glue those bits together.
- [giggling] - [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George has also found two pieces that fit.
- MISS RABBIT: Well done, George.
- [giggling]
- MISS RABBIT: Nearly finished.
That's the lid.
There's just this funny shaped bit left.
Where does that go?
- [giggling]
That's the tea pot's handle, Miss Rabbit.
- Oh, so it is.
I don't know much about china tea pots.
- It's as good as new!
- Be careful not to smash it again.
- Oh, ho, I am very good at smashing things.
- [vase rattling] - ALL: [gasping]
- [rattling stops] - ALL: Whew!
- Well done, Peppa.
- Thank you for mending my tea pot, Miss Rabbit.
- No trouble, Mr. Bull. - [pounding footsteps]
- [door bells jangling] - Whew.
- Look, boss, a pothole.
- NARRATOR: There is a small hole in the road.
- And it's right outside Miss Rabbit's shop.
- What do you think, lads?
Can we have a hole outside Miss Rabbit's shop?
- BOTH: No.
- You fixed my tea pot. I'll fix your road.
- Uh, it's not my road.
- PEPPA: Mr. Bull?
How are you going to mend the hole?
- We'll dig up the road!
- [jackhammer pounding]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull is digging up the road.
- MR. BULL: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull likes digging up the road.
Everybody likes digging up the road.
- ♪
- ♪ Peppa Pig
[oinks]
[giggling]
[oinking]
♪ Peppa Pig
[oinking]
[laughing]
♪ Peppa Pig ♪
[oinks]
- I'm Peppa Pig. [oinks]
This is my little brother George.
- GEORGE: [oinking]
- This is Mummy Pig. - MUMMY: [oinks]
- And his is Daddy Pig. - DADDY: [huge oink]
- ALL: [laughing]
- Peppa Pig.[oinks]
- ♪
- MALE NARRATING: Peppa and her family are watching television.
- PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- MAN ON TV: And now a special message from the Queen.
- The Queen! The Queen! - GEORGE: [oinking]
- [trumpet fanfare]
- MAN ON TV: This is the Queen.
- Hello, to you all.
- Hello, Queen!
- Today, I have decided to give an award
to the hardest-working person in the country.
- I wonder who that will be?
- It certainly won't be you, darling.
- The hardest-working person in the country is...
Miss Rabbit. - ALL: Oh?
- NARRATOR: Miss Rabbit runs the ice cream store,
the recycling center... - [metal thuds]
- NARRATOR: ...the library. - Shhh!
- NARRATOR: She drives the train...
- [train chugging]
- NARRATOR: the fire engine... - [siren wailing]
- NARRATOR: flies a rescue helicopter...
and works the supermarket checkout.
- [window covers whirring] - Whew.
What a long day. - ALL: Surprise!
- Ah! What are you lot doing here?
- Miss Rabbit, I have a very special letter for you.
- PEPPA: Open it. [oinks]
- [reading] "Miss Rabbit, please come to my palace
"to get a medal for all your hard work.
Bring friends. All the best, the Queen."
- ALL: Ooohh! - [heavy thud]
- NARRATOR: Miss Rabbit has fainted.
- I can't visit the Queen!
I've got too much work to do.
- Relax. No one will be working that day.
- The Queen has made it a holiday.
- ALL: Hooray!
- NARRATOR: It is the day Miss Rabbit visits the Queen.
Peppa and her friends are going, too.
- ♪ We're off to see the Queen ♪
♪ We're off to see the Queen
♪ E-i-happy-o
♪ We're off to see the Queen [giggling]
- MISS RABBIT: Here we are.
- NARRATOR: This is the Queen's palace.
- [trumpet fanfare]
- Hello? Is anybody there?
- Look at all that fancy stuff.
- Don't touch anything.
- [vase rattling] - Oops.
- What a big house.
- Lots of room for a Queen to kick a ball about.
- Where is the Queen?
- Queen? Queen? Where are you?
- [knitting needles clicking]
- Hello, have you seen the Queen today?
- She's an old lady with a crown on her head.
- I am the Queen. - [heavy thud]
- NARRATOR: Miss Rabbit has fainted again.
- Hello, Mrs. Queen. - Baaaa!
Why aren't you wearing a crown?
- I don't wear it much because it's very heavy.
- Are you the boss of all the world?
- Not quite.
- Do you tell people what to do?
- Sometimes.
- Can you make teachers disappear?
- Oh, too many questions.
- The children are very excited to meet you, Your Majesty.
- I'm excited to meet all of you.
And now for Miss Rabbit's medal.
- CHILDREN: Ooooh!
- This is the Queen's Award for Industry.
- Thank you.
- Keep up the good work.
Three cheers for Miss Rabbit. Hip hip...
- CHILDREN: Hooray!
- QUEEN: Hip hip... - CHILDREN: Hooray!
- QUEEN: Hip hip hip... - CHILDREN: Hooray!
[giggling]
- Now for the party. To the garden.
- ♪
- You've got a lovely big garden, Your Majesty.
- Do you play in it all the time?
- I don't have much time for playing, no.
- That's sad.
- Oh, dear, a muddy puddle.
Never mind. We can walk around it.
- You can't walk around a muddy puddle.
- No? - No.
You have to jump in it.
[giggling]
- Oh, I say, that does look fun.
Here one goes, then.
- Stop!
- CHILDREN: [gasping]
- If you jump in muddy puddles, you must wear your boots...
Your Majesty.
- NARRATOR: Oh, dear, the Queen is not wearing her boots.
- Wheeee!
- BOTH: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: The Queen loves jumping
up and down in muddy puddles.
Everyone loves jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- [birds tweeting]
- NARRATOR: Peppa and George are visiting
Granny and Grandpa's house.
Peppa is watching Granny Pig at her dressing table.
- You smell nice, Granny.
- Thank you, Peppa.
It's my perfume de lavender.
- [sniffing] It smells like your garden.
- That's because perfume is made of flowers.
- [perfume sloshing] - Hm...
Granny, I've got a very good idea.
- Really? - Yes.
First, I need some water.
- Here's your water. - Right.
Now I'm going to put flowers in it and make perfume.
- That's nice, dear.
But only pick flowers from the grass, not from the flower bed.
Okay? - Okay.
[giggling]
Hello, flowers.
Who wants to be in my perfume?
I'm going to put you in my beaker of water.
[giggling]
Hello, butterfly.
I'm making perfume.
It's going to be the prettiest, smelliest perfume ever.
[sniffing] Lovely!
- NARRATOR: Here is George.
- Stand back, George. I'm making perfume.
Do you want to watch? - [oinking]
- First, I pick a smelly flower. [sniffing]
Very flowery.
Then I put it in my beaker.
No, George.
You can't put grass in my perfume.
It needs the smell of flowers.
Smell. - [sniffing]
Yuck!
- NARRATOR: George does not like smelly flowers.
Grandpa Pig is in his herb garden.
- Grandpa! Grandpa! Smell this.
- [sniffing]
Woo-ee. It smells like pond water.
- It's my special perfume.
I made it with flowers from the garden.
- [sniffing]
Oh, yes, it's the most beautiful perfume in the world.
- Yes. - Do you like it, George?
- No.
- George doesn't like the smell of flowers.
- Take this bucket, George.
You can make perfume out of something else.
I have got lots of lovely smelly things in my herb garden.
This is "Rosemary." I like to use it in my cooking.
- [sniffing] Mm, it smells interesting.
- [sniffing, coughing]
- This is "Mint."
- [sniffing] Ooh, that smells very...minty.
- [sniffing] Ugh.
- And this is "Lavender."
- [sniffing]
Ooh, that smells like Granny Pig's perfume.
- [sniffing]
Wow, that's a strong smell of lavender.
Ah, Granny Pig, you smell nice.
- Thank you, Grandpa Pig.
- Granny! Granny! Smell this.
- [sniffing] Oh!
What is it? - It's my perfume.
- Oh, yes, it's lovely.
Has George made some perfume, too?
- No, Granny.
He doesn't like the smell of anything.
- There must be something you like the smell of.
- GEORGE: [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George has found a muddy puddle.
- GEORGE: [giggling] [oinking]
- Ah, George.
What have you got there?
- Have you made some perfume?
[sniffing]
Actually, that smells quite nice.
- [sniffing] It smells lovely.
- [sniffing] I say--that is delightful.
What did you put in it, George? - [oinking]
- George's perfume is made out of muddy puddles.
- ALL: [sniffing] Ahhhh...
- Perfume de muddy puddle.
- PEPPA: Whee!
- ALL: [laughing]
- [oinks]
Granny Pig, you smell even nicer than you did before.
- Yes, you should use perfume de muddy puddle more often.
- ALL: [laughing]
- Daddy, why are you wearing that funny hat?
- Oh, ho, ho, this is my beret.
It puts me in the mood for painting pictures.
- NARRATOR: Mummy Pig is fixing a big mirror
onto the bathroom wall.
- Lovely. - [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George thinks there is
another little piggy in the bathroom.
- MUMMY: It's a mirror, George.
Mirrors are shiny. That's why you can see yourself.
- [blowing raspberry]
[giggling]
- George, what are you doing?
- George is looking at himself in the big shiny mirror.
- [oinks] It is very shiny.
[oinks]
Come on, George, let's find some more shiny things.
- [giggling]
- Daddy? [oinks]
We're looking for shiny things to see ourselves in.
- Have a look in a spoon.
- BOTH: Oooh.
- NARRATOR: Peppa and George can see their faces
in the shiny spoons.
- [giggling] Our faces look funny.
- DADDY: Now turn the spoon around.
- I'm upside down.
- DADDY: And turn it around again.
- Now I'm the right way up.
How does that work, Daddy?
- It's simple, Peppa.
Concave surfaces reflect light waves
inversely to their origin and--
- Is it magic?
- Uh, yes, it's magic.
- [doorbell ringing]
- NARRATOR: Suzy Sheep has come to play with Peppa.
- Hello, Peppa and George.
- Hello, Suzy.
Look at that.
- Baaaa! It's a spoon.
- PEPPA: It's a shiny spoon.
Look, I can make you go upside down.
[giggling] - Ooooh.
How does that work?
- It's magic. My daddy says so.
- Ah, let's find some more magic shiny things--in the garden.
- ALL: [giggling]
- [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George has found a muddy puddle.
- Ooh, it's shiny enough to see our faces.
- I can see the sky. There's a cloud. Baaaa!
- NARRATOR: Here are Pedro Pony and Danny Dog.
- PEDRO & DANNY: Hello, everyone.
- Did you drop something in that puddle?
- No, we're looking at the sky.
- But the sky is in the sky.
- PEPPA: [oinks] Look at this spoon.
- That's my face. It looks funny.
Whoa! Now I'm upside down.
How does that work?
- It's a funny magic mirror spoon. Baaaa!
- Woof. Woof. I know where there's some big funny mirrors.
- Really?
- Wobbly mirrors in a tent.
- Where are these wobbly mirrors?
- At the fair.
- NARRATOR: The parents have brought
the children to the fair.
- Roll up! Roll up! See my amazing wobbly mirrors.
- CHILDREN: [giggling]
- NARRATOR: The tent is full of big wobbly mirrors.
- Ooh, what happened to my body? [giggling]
- [giggling] You're a wobbly jelly. Baaaa!
- BOTH: [giggling]
- Wobble. Wobble. Wobble.[oinks]
How does it do that, Daddy?
- It's very simple.
Illusions of optical differentials
by convex and concave surfaces generate patterns that--
- So, it's magic. - Uh...
Yes, it's magic.
- Look at me. [giggling]
I've gone all squishy.
- [giggling, roaring]
- I've got a long neck-- like a giraffe. [giggling]
- This mirror looks normal to me. [oinks]
- Daddy, where's your big tummy gone?
- What tummy? - CHILDREN: [giggling]
- NARRATOR: It is Mummy Rabbit
with her baby twins, Rosie and Robbie.
- Hello, sister. How are you today?
- Very good, sister.
Mustn't chat for long, though.
I've got customers inside the tent.
- Aren't the mirrors amazing, Daddy Pig?
- Wow, I can see two of you.
- What do you mean?
- I can see you in the mirror, but there's no mirror.
Is it...magic?
- Silly Daddy. It's Miss Rabbit and Mummy Rabbit.
- DADDY: Oh.
- I suppose we do look a bit the same.
- Well... - BOTH: ...we are sisters.
- ALL: [laughing]
- Wow, I like these glasses.
- Yes, Peppa, you look fantastic.
- [oinks] I look fantastic.
- BOTH: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Suzy Sheep has come to play at Peppa's house.
- [oinks] Hello, Suzy.
- Hello, Peppa. Baaaa!
I've got something to show you.
Look!
- What is it?
- It's a photograph.
Who do you think it is?
- PEPPA: [gasping] It's a baby sheep.
- It's me! Baaaa!
- You're not a baby. [oinks]
- It's an old photo when I was a baby.
- Don't be silly, Suzy.
- In the olden days, you were a baby, too, Peppa.
- No, I wasn't.
- Yes, you were.
Ask your mummy.
- NARRATOR: Mummy Pig is working on the computer.
- [oinks] Mummy?
- Hello, Peppa.
- Suzy is talking nonsense.
- No, I'm not.
- She said in the olden days, I was a baby. [oinks]
- Well, you were, Peppa.
Look, here are some photos on the computer.
Who do you think that is?
- PEPPA: It's Baby Alexander.
- NARRATOR: Baby Alexander is Peppa's cousin.
- No, that's you as a baby, Peppa.
- Baby Peppa. - SUZY & PEPPA: [giggling]
- Somebody sounds like they're having fun.
- Look, Daddy, that's a picture of me as a baby.
- I remember it well.
It was taken on our first day in this house.
- What do you mean?
- When you were little, we moved into this house.
We brought all our things on top of our car.
- [hammering nail]
- DADDY: Mummy Pig put some pictures up.
- MUMMY: Daddy Pig put up a shelf.
- [vase smashing]
- MUMMY: And Grandpa Pig made us a lovely flower garden.
- Where's Grandpa's lovely flower garden now?
- Daddy Pig looked after it.
- Uh, we had the wrong kind of soil for flowers.
- SUZY & PEPPA: Oh?
- And, anyway, you needed somewhere to play.
- You and Suzy loved to play in the garden.
- [oinks] Was Suzy my friend in the olden days?
- DADDY: Yes, you and Suzy have always been best friends.
- BOTH: [blowing raspberries]
[giggling]
- [oinking] - [baaa'ing]
- In the olden days,
did Suzy and me jump up and down in muddy puddles?
- No, Peppa. You were babies.
You couldn't even walk.
- Oh. - What did we do?
- BOTH: [crying] - MUMMY: You cried.
- BOTH: [burping] - MUMMY: You burped.
- BOTH: [giggling] - MUMMY: And you laughed.
- Baaaa! We were babies.
- Baby Suzy. - Baby Peppa.
- BOTH: [giggling]
- Goo goo, gah gah. Goo goo, gah gah.
- BOTH: [giggling]
- MUMMY: Soon after that, you were toddlers.
- [oinking] - [baaa'ing]
- PEPPA: And where was George?
- He was a baby-- in my tummy.
- [oinking] Yes, you were in my tummy, George.
- You've got a big tummy, Daddy.
Is there a baby in there?
- Oh, ho, ho, no, Peppa.
This tummy is pure muscle.
- ALL: [laughing]
- MUMMY: And so George was born.
- BABY GEORGE: Goo goo, gah gah.
- And Granny and Grandpa gave George a very special present.
Can you guess what it was?
- PEPPA: Mr. Dinosaur!
- MUMMY: That's right.
- BABY GEORGE: [giggling]
Grrr! [giggling]
- DADDY: And you and Suzy were running and jumping around.
- BOTH: [giggling]
- MUMMY: Then, one day, you saw something amazing.
- Muddy puddle! [giggling]
- Peppa, if you jump in muddy puddles,
you must wear your boots.
- [giggling, oinking]
- You loved jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- I still do!
- CHILDREN: [giggling]
- Let's take a photo now.
- [flashbulb popping]
- NARRATOR: Peppa loves jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- ALL: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Peppa has always loved
jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
- ALL: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Peppa and her family are going for a drive.
- PEPPA: [giggling] I love our car.
- Oh, ho, and our car loves us, too, don't you?
- [car horn tooting]
- Stop! - [brakes screeching]
- NARRATOR: It is Mr. Bull and his friends.
- Digger. Digger. [giggling]
- NARRATOR: George likes diggers.
- Hello, Mr. Bull. What's up?
- We're digging up the road.
- Will it take long?
- It will take as long as it takes.
[straining]
- [metal pipe clanging]
- Lads, let's smash up this old pipe.
- [heavy thud]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull is good at smashing things.
- BOTH: Wow!
- [bell ringing] - Tea break!
- Oh, dear, now we'll have to wait even longer.
- Why don't you join us, Mummy Pig?
Plenty of tea to go around.
- That sounds lovely. Thank you, Mr. Bull.
- PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- That's a nice tea pot, Mr. Bull.
- Yes, Peppa. It's made of delicate china.
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull likes delicate china.
- You have to be very, very careful with china.
- Why?
- Because china can break very easily.
[coughing]
That's why I always... - [tea pot thuds]
- PEPPA: [gasping]
- NARRATOR: Oh, dear, Mr. Bull
has smashed the tea pot to pieces.
- PEPPA: Oh, no.
- I put it down too hard.
I don't know my own strength.
- Maybe we can fix it, boss. I've got cement.
- I've got a rivet g*n.
- It's not gonna work, lads.
- I know. Miss Rabbit has a china shop.
She could mend it.
- Good idea, Mummy Pig.
We'll go right now.
- Can I come, too?
- We'll all go! - PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- [engine starting]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull is going to the china shop.
This is Miss Rabbit's china shop.
- There we are. - [wire cable creaking]
- [door bells jangling] - Hello? Can I help you?
- Moo! - MISS RABBIT: [screaming]
A bull in a china shop! - [footsteps pounding]
- Hello, Miss Rabbit. - [china chattering]
- I have broken my china tea pot.
- Oh, dear. - Can you fix it?
- Let's have a look.
Hm, that's very broken.
- I've smashed it to bits.
- Yes, but I think I can fix it.
- Oh, goody.
Can we help? - GEORGE: [oinking]
- Of course, Peppa. - PEPPA & GEORGE: [giggling]
- Oh, these two pieces fit together.
- NARRATOR: Fixing the tea pot
is a bit like doing a jigsaw puzzle.
- MISS RABBIT: Well done, Peppa.
I'll glue those bits together.
- [giggling] - [oinking]
- NARRATOR: George has also found two pieces that fit.
- MISS RABBIT: Well done, George.
- [giggling]
- MISS RABBIT: Nearly finished.
That's the lid.
There's just this funny shaped bit left.
Where does that go?
- [giggling]
That's the tea pot's handle, Miss Rabbit.
- Oh, so it is.
I don't know much about china tea pots.
- It's as good as new!
- Be careful not to smash it again.
- Oh, ho, I am very good at smashing things.
- [vase rattling] - ALL: [gasping]
- [rattling stops] - ALL: Whew!
- Well done, Peppa.
- Thank you for mending my tea pot, Miss Rabbit.
- No trouble, Mr. Bull. - [pounding footsteps]
- [door bells jangling] - Whew.
- Look, boss, a pothole.
- NARRATOR: There is a small hole in the road.
- And it's right outside Miss Rabbit's shop.
- What do you think, lads?
Can we have a hole outside Miss Rabbit's shop?
- BOTH: No.
- You fixed my tea pot. I'll fix your road.
- Uh, it's not my road.
- PEPPA: Mr. Bull?
How are you going to mend the hole?
- We'll dig up the road!
- [jackhammer pounding]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull is digging up the road.
- MR. BULL: [laughing]
- NARRATOR: Mr. Bull likes digging up the road.
Everybody likes digging up the road.
- ♪
- ♪ Peppa Pig
[oinks]
[giggling]
[oinking]
♪ Peppa Pig
[oinking]
[laughing]
♪ Peppa Pig ♪
[oinks]