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Pippi Longstocking is 75 years old. An ode to snot, the scare of all educators. Today, Pippi would have to wear long socks (probably) for the ADHD test and the KESB would be on.
If I had to bake a birthday cake for Pippilotta Viktualia Rollgardina Peppermint Efraim daughter Longstocking, then a rainbow colored one with lots of sugar and a unicorn on top. The main thing is unusual and colorful, as magical as herself. I’d dig up all my baking skills to give her, my childhood heroine, a successful birthday surprise.
Because Pippi Longstocking celebrates her 75th birthday this year and has entertained millions of children around the world with her extraordinary, sometimes weird, anecdotes.
So many wonderful memories: Who didn’t want to live in Villa Kunterbunt as a child, with the squirrel monkeys Mr. Nilsson and Little Uncle, his apple pie horse? Completely free of conventions, parents or school teachers. Pippi Longstocking was a kind of child hippie.
I also wanted to be there
As a child, I often imagined that I would pack my backpack and date Pippi and her friends Annika and Tommy. It doesn’t matter if Pippi is looking for his father or if he’s going to Taka Tuka Land. I also wanted to be there. At least at Carnival, I was allowed to be my heroine for a day, with red braids and freckles.
Today, a wild personality like Pippi Longstocking with all his fluff would no longer be possible. It would first be reviewed by ADHD, then reported to the KESB and asked if it had a monkey and horse license.
It really didn’t matter at the time. Pippi comes from the imagination of Astrid Lindgren. He had invented Pippi’s adventure to sweeten his daughter Karin’s time when she was ill. This is how Karin is said to have invented the name. Lindgren only wrote Pippi’s adventure when he had to take care of the bed in March 1944 due to a foot sprain.
Pippi’s story hardly ever saw the light of day. The Bonnier publishing house had rejected Astrid’s Pippi manuscript in 1944. But Astrid Lindgren was not discouraged by the first rejection. The book has been translated into 70 languages and is the work most widely distributed by Lindgren.
The well-known television series with Inger Nilsson in the title role became a movie in 1968. There are a total of 4 movies and a 21-part television series that come from Lindgren’s pen.
If Inger Nilsson needed dozens of children to dream of her adventures, it brought her and her fellow actors Annika and Tommy little luck. The trio received almost no money for the television series, they were concerned about money concerns. And today Annika (Maria Persson) and Tommy (Pär Sundbergnicht) want to know more about Pippi. They prefer to live a good middle-class life. Well life is just a Taka Tuka country on TV.
The noon column is regularly available Monday through Friday at 11:30 a.m. and sometimes only at 12 p.m. in “Bluewin” these are known personalities, sometimes also unknown, and sometimes an asterisk is also found.
Inger Nilsson: Forever Pippi Longstocking.
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