Gorgish ramblings...
Janice & Mokey's Man said:
...and a mysteriously-located area in the one where Wander McMooch takes Philo and Gunge prisoner and drags them while he rides his bike (can't remember the name o' that one).
I think it was the "Home is Where the Trash Is" episode. And although we don't see them in there, Philo and Gunge go into Outer Space!
Was the castle named Gorgola? I thought that Doc said the sign "La Gorgola" came from a ship. (Did the Gorgs once have some kind of gargantuan viking boats at one time?) In the book "The Radish Day Jubilee", Pa's sword is named "Gorgonzola". Kind of a cheesy name for a sword if you ask me.
Y'know...in the past, I've read and seen where Jim Henson (and other artists) compile a whole lot of notes and write histories for their characters that never make it to the screen (or book). I think of all the legends and extra information about "The Dark Crystal" world of Thra, and how Jim explained "Well,
we need to know what's beyond this world, even though very little of this ends up on the finished screen."
Let's apply this to the Gorgs. Pa is usually preparing for a battle...or reading up on Gorgish myths. The only one we hear in full is the Legend of Sir Hubris. Were more written? Could Jerry Juhl have sat down and wrote down some notes about the Gorgs' past? Why are there only three Gorgs? Are there more...or are they on the brink of extinction? There's a map over the mantlepiece in the Gorgs' castle. Is it of an ancient Gorgish civilization? We know the basics of the Gorgs, but there's a whole history (mostly military) behind them somewhere. They have their own set of legends, and even have some kind of a religion. In "The Trash Heap Doesn't Live Here Anymore", they say a kind of "grace" before they eat.
(They stand)
Pa: "All thanks to the spirit of the great Gorgs, and the generosity of the garden".
All: "Hey nonny, nonny, nonny."
Pa: (takes a drink) "Ha cha cha."
And along this line...could one of Pa's expressions be from some lost human who traveled into the Gorgish realm by mistake thousands of years ago? I'm referring to Pa's cry of "Drat and Deuteronomy!" (Sightings of giants appear in early books of the Bible, and maybe this is what inspired Pa's expression?) I dunno, just throwing some thoughts out there. Perhaps only Jerry Nelson holds the answer to that question.
It would be great if they came out with a great big ol' book exclusively about Fraggle Rock, treating it the same way that Brian Froud treated "The World of 'The Dark Crystal'".
Hope I haven't muffined the thread too far, but this kind of stuff is fun to think (and write) about.
An "in-betweeny place"...I like that!
Convincing John