Winnie the Pooh's birthday in kindergarten. Methodological development "Happy Birthday, Winnie the Pooh" methodological development (senior group)

Danilova Anna

Summary of the holiday quiz« Winnie the Pooh's birthday»

for children of the junior preschool group.

Target: Introducing kind and funny cartoon characters, developing the attention and cognitive sphere of children in a playful way.

Preliminary work: Watching cartoons about Winnie the Pooh, learning poems.

Educator: Children, hello! Today our meeting is dedicated to the day birth kind and such a funny character Winnie the Pooh. One great writer, Alan Milne, came up with it many years ago (the first book was published on October 14, 1924, while watching his son play with a teddy bear. This is how our funny, resourceful hero appeared, who is still loved by both adults and children.

The guys and I learned poems about Winnie the Pooh, let's listen to them.

(Children take turns reciting poems)

This hero has a friend - Piglet,

It's a gift for Donkey

He was carrying an empty pot.

I climbed into the hollow for honey,

He chased bees and flies.

Bear's name

Certainly, Winnie the Pooh!

He is not a cloud, but a bear,

He loves to sing songs!

And also, as they say,

He's happy to eat some honey!

Winnie the Pooh sings a snort

And the grumbler and the screamer,

A friend is running nearby,

Faithful, kind Piglet.

Educator: Guys, now we’ll check how carefully you watched the cartoons about Winnie the Pooh and his friends. I will ask you questions, and you will try to answer them correctly.

1. What is the name best friend Winnie the Pooh? (Piglet)

2. What do you like to eat most? Winnie the Pooh? (Honey)

3. To whom to Piglet was in a hurry for his birthday? (To Eeyore)

4. What did Piglet want to give to Eeyore? birthday? (Green ball)

5. Why did Pooh give Eeyore an empty pot? (Pooh ate the honey himself)

6. Who did you go to visit early in the morning? Winnie the Pooh and Piglet? (To the Rabbit)

7. Why did Pooh get stuck in the door of the Rabbit's house? (Because he ate a lot of honey)

8. Who did Pooh imitate when he wanted to sneak into the bee hive for honey? (Cloud)

9. What did Pooh use to rise into the air? (Using a blue balloon)

10. How did the Owl use Eeyore's tail? (Like a bell lanyard)

Educator: Well done guys, you watched the cartoons carefully and remembered everything! But I have one more task for you.

He loves to play very much

And make noisemakers.

But I suddenly forgot the noisemakers,

Help somehow!

Guys, let's help Vinny- Pooh should make noisemakers. I will read it out and you will add the last word.

Cones growing on a Christmas tree

Not for teddy (bears)

Isn't it strange that wolves

Can't live on (Christmas tree)

To his youngest daughter Tosya

Mom braids (braids)

They gave us toys -

Whole day they shoot(guns)

I wrote a letter to the bunny,

But I forgot to glue it (brands)

Educator: Well done, guys. It turns out that you are as resourceful and quick-witted as Winnie the Pooh!

Children, we have gathered today to remember birthday such a wonderful hero Winnie the Pooh. And on birthday It’s customary to give gifts, let’s give the little bear a gift, give him lots and lots of honey. Then our bear will be very happy. (Children draw or make an applique, as if filling empty pots with honey)

Now our sweet bear is very happy, he will have enough honey for a long time! And we found something to thank him for the good mood he gave us.

Publications on the topic:

Summary of the modeling lesson “Gifts for Winnie the Pooh” Summary of a lesson on the development of creative abilities in the senior group. Modeling: "Gifts for Winnie the Pooh" Tasks: - to educate emotionally.

Every year around the world, fans of the world's most famous teddy bear celebrate Winnie the Pooh Day on January 18, the birthday of the author of the series, Alan Alexander Milne, born in 1882. If you love Winnie the Pooh, you might want to celebrate his day by reading a book or dressing yourself and/or your kids in fun costumes, but before you do, you just need to know 10 interesting facts about an adorable teddy bear that you probably don't know.

Alan and Christopher Robin Milne

2. The original Christopher Robin toys can be seen in the New York Public Library, where they have been located since 1987. Unfortunately, Little Roo is missing from the collection as he was lost in an apple orchard in 1930

3. In 1998, British Labor leader Gwyneth Dunwoody created a campaign to return the original Christopher Robin toys to their homeland of Great Britain. However, this idea failed miserably; information about it even appeared on the cover of the New York Post

4. The Deep Forest is based on a real place called Ashdown Forest in East Sussex. Now in this forest there is a bridge called "Poohsticks", in honor of the game of the same name, which was translated into Russian as "the game of trivia". The essence of the game is that several participants throw sticks down the river, and then run to the bridge, from which they watch whose stick crosses the finish line first

5. Winnie the Pooh has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Thus he is one of the 16 fictional characters recipients of this honorary award

6. The original Winnie the Pooh was given to Christopher Robin for his first birthday (August 21, 1921) and was originally named Edward

7. During the creation of Winnie the Pooh and Trouble Day in 1968, Disney artists used about 1.2 million colored pencils, with which they drew almost 100,000 character drawings

8. The real Christopher Robin named his bear the name by which he is still known today after meeting a bear named Winnie at London Zoo and encountering a swan named Pooh on a family holiday. Thus, the name Winnie the Pooh consists of the names of two completely different animals.

9. The real-life Christopher Robin suffered taunts and ridicule from children at school due to the incredible success of his father's books, causing him to grow up resentful of the fact. He felt that his father exploited him and his childhood

10. Every June there is a real world Pooh Sticks Championship called the World Pooh Sticks Championships. The championship is held in Oxford and anyone can take part.

The birthday of Winnie the Pooh, a funny and resourceful bear cub invented 92 years ago by an English writer, is also celebrated, the site says.

History of the holiday

The teddy bear stuffed with sawdust was invented several years before the book about his adventures was published.

And it all started like this - the writer Alan Milne in 1921 gave his son, whose name was Christopher Robin, a plush toy. The boy was also a dreamer and often played with his favorite teddy bear in front of his talented dad. The writer himself, seeing the stories invented by his child, wrote them down in his old notebook, and when a sufficient number of them had been collected, he published them in the form of a book. It is noteworthy that Allan named the bear Winnie the Pooh, but did not change his son’s name at all.

After publication, the work received a response in the hearts of many children and their parents, and the book about the adventures of Winnie the Pooh quickly became famous not only in England, but in almost all countries of the world.

How is Winnie the Pooh's birthday celebrated nowadays?

Winnie the Pooh bear, thanks to his cheerful character, is very popular with children of different ages, who do not forget their favorite hero even after they become adults.


That is why, in libraries different countries around the world on October 14, themed holidays, drawing and craft competitions, fairs and sales are organized, the main character of which, of course, is Winnie the Pooh.

Unlike many Western works that burst into the culture of the USSR, the cartoon about Winnie the Pooh was not a translation of history English writer, but rather a retelling of it. Children's writer Boris Zakhoder, having seen illustrations for a book about Winnie the Pooh in the encyclopedia, created his own hero with the same name, and also invented his friends, who were not in the original version of the fairy tale.


The first episode of the cartoon about Winnie the Pooh was produced by the Soyuzmultfilm studio in 1969. Without a doubt, its film adaptation has become immortal and cult. Millions of people from different generations grew up with stories about the adventures of the bear cub. Modern children watch it no less often in the 21st century.

We invite you to remember the club-footed merry fellow and celebrate his birthday by watching the cartoon!

And recently another cult cartoon produced in the USSR received a continuation. It's called the "Hero Gene".

Dear friends! On October 14, Winnie the Pooh bear celebrates his birthday. So let's find out the story of this beloved teddy bear.

The teddy bear Winnie the Pooh was born as a character in the works of Alan Alexander Milne. He became one of the most famous heroes of children's literature of the 20th century. Winnie the bear got his name from one of the real toys of the son of the writer Christopher Robin.

In 1921, Alan Milne gave his son a teddy bear purchased from a department store for his birthday. After meeting his owner Christopher Robin, he received the name Winnie the Pooh. Later, the bear cub became Christopher’s “inseparable companion.”

It was the boy’s friendship with his favorite teddy bear that became the reason for the creation of works about the adventures of Winnie the Pooh. On December 24, 1925, the first chapter of Milne's book was published in the London Evening News. The first book was published as a separate edition on October 14, 1926 in London. The second book about Winnie the Pooh, entitled “The House at Pooh Edge,” was published in 1928.

The writer also published two more collections of children's poems. In 1924 - “When We Were Very Little” and in 1927 - “Now We Are Six,” which contain several poems about Winnie the Pooh.

Alan Milne's prose about Winnie the Pooh is a duology. However, of the two published books, each is divided into 10 independent stories with their own plot. Therefore, all these stories can be read independently of each other.

Although the teddy bear was given to Christopher Robin on August 21, 1921, his actual birthday is considered October 14, 1926, when the first Winnie the Pooh book was published, despite the fact that some of its fragments were published earlier.

The adventures of Winnie the Pooh have become a favorite read for many generations of children; they have been translated into 25 languages ​​(including Latin) and published in tens of millions of copies.

Christopher Robin's teddy bear Winnie the Pooh was named after a female bear named Winnipeg (Winnie), who was kept at London Zoo in the 1920s.

The Winnipeg Bear (American black bear) came to the UK as the live mascot of the Canadian Army Veterinary Corps from Canada, specifically from the outskirts of the city of Winnipeg. She ended up in the Fort Harry Horse cavalry regiment on August 24, 1914, while still a bear cub (she was bought from a Canadian hunter for twenty dollars by the 27-year-old regimental veterinarian, Lieutenant Harry Colborn, who took care of her in the future). Already in October of the same year, the bear cub was brought along with the troops to Britain, and since the regiment was supposed to be transported to France during the First World War, in December it was decided to leave the animal until the end of the war in the London Zoo. Londoners fell in love with the bear, and the military did not object to not taking her from the zoo even after the war. Until the end of her days (she died on May 12, 1934), the bear was on the payroll of the veterinary corps, about which a corresponding inscription was made on her cage in 1919.

In 1924, Alan Milne first came to the zoo with his four-year-old son, who truly became friends with Winnie. After Christopher met Winnie the bear, the teddy bear was named in her honor. Subsequently, the bear was Christopher’s “inseparable companion”: “every child has a favorite toy, and every child who is alone in the family especially needs it.”

In September 1981, 61-year-old Christopher Robin Milne unveiled a life-size monument to Winnie the Bear at London Zoo.

Teddy bear Winnie the Pooh (Winnie-the-Pooh) was born as a character in the works of Alan Alexander Milne. He became one of the most famous heroes of children's literature of the 20th century. Winnie the bear got his name from one of the real toys of the writer Christopher Robin's son.

In 1921, Alan Milne gave his son a teddy bear purchased from a department store for his birthday. After meeting his owner Christopher Robin, he received the name Winnie the Pooh. Later, the bear cub became Christopher’s “inseparable companion.”

It was the boy’s friendship with his favorite teddy bear that became the reason for the creation of works about the adventures of Winnie the Pooh. On December 24, 1925, the first chapter of Milne's book Winnie-the-Pooh was published in the London Evening News. The first book was published as a separate edition on October 14, 1926 in London. The second book about Winnie the Pooh, entitled The House at Pooh Corner, was published in 1928.

The writer also published two more collections of children's poems. In 1924 - “When We Were Very Little” and in 1927 - “Now We Are Six,” which contain several poems about Winnie the Pooh.

Alan Milne's prose about Winnie the Pooh is a duology. However, of the two published books, each is divided into 10 independent stories with their own plot. Therefore, all these stories can be read independently of each other.

Although the teddy bear was given to Christopher Robin on August 21, 1921, his actual birthday is considered October 14, 1926, when the first Winnie the Pooh book was published, despite the fact that some of its fragments were published earlier.

The adventures of Winnie the Pooh have become a favorite read for many generations of children; they have been translated into 25 languages ​​(including Latin) and published in tens of millions of copies.

Origin of the character

Christopher Robin's teddy bear Winnie the Pooh was named after a female bear named Winnipeg (Winnie), who was kept at London Zoo in the 1920s.

The Winnipeg Bear (American black bear) came to the UK as the live mascot of the Canadian Army Veterinary Corps from Canada, specifically from the outskirts of the city of Winnipeg. She ended up in the Fort Harry Horse cavalry regiment on August 24, 1914, while still a bear cub (she was bought from a Canadian hunter for twenty dollars by the 27-year-old regimental veterinarian, Lieutenant Harry Colborn, who took care of her in the future). Already in October of the same year, the bear cub was brought along with the troops to Britain, and since the regiment was supposed to be transported to France during the First World War, in December it was decided to leave the animal until the end of the war in the London Zoo. Londoners fell in love with the bear, and the military did not object to not taking her from the zoo even after the war. Until the end of her days (she died on May 12, 1934), the bear was on the payroll of the veterinary corps, about which a corresponding inscription was made on her cage in 1919.

In 1924, Alan Milne first came to the zoo with his four-year-old son, who truly became friends with Winnie. After Christopher met Winnie the bear, the teddy bear was named in her honor. Subsequently, the bear was Christopher’s “inseparable companion”: “every child has a favorite toy, and every child who is alone in the family especially needs it.”

In September 1981, 61-year-old Christopher Robin Milne unveiled a life-size monument to Winnie the Bear at London Zoo.

Cartoons

Naturally, such a popular hero as Winnie the Pooh could not go unnoticed by the directors. And after 1961, the Disney studio first released short cartoons, and then many different cartoons about Winnie the Pooh on plots no longer related to the work of writer Alan Milne.

Later, on the theme of these incredible stories and adventures of friends in the Wonderful Forest, even a musical for children was released. Some literary critics They even claim that “Pooh became the most famous and beloved bear in literature.”

In our country, a cycle of three cartoons by Fyodor Khitruk, co-authored with Boris Zakhoder (1969-1972), has become especially popular. While working on the film, the director did not know about the existence of Disney cartoons about Winnie the Pooh. Later, according to Khitruk, Disney director Wolfgang Reiterman liked his version. At the same time, the fact that Soviet cartoons were created without taking into account the exclusive film rights owned by the Disney studio made it impossible for them to be shown abroad and participate in international film festivals.

Winnie the Pooh in our country

In the magazine “Murzilka” for 1939, the first two chapters of Milne’s fairy tale were published - “About Winnie Poo the Bear and the Bees” (No. 1) and “About how Winnie Poo went to visit and got into trouble” (No. 9) in translation A. Koltynina and O. Galanina. The author's name was not indicated; the subtitle was "English Fairy Tale". This translation uses the names Winnie Poo, Piglet and Christopher Robin

The first complete translation of “Winnie the Pooh” in the USSR was published in 1958 in Lithuania, it was carried out by 20-year-old Lithuanian writer Virgilius Chepaitis, who used the Polish translation by Irena Tuwim. Subsequently, Chepaitis, having become acquainted with the English original, significantly revised his translation, which was republished in Lithuania several times.

In 1958, Boris Zakhoder looked through the English children's encyclopedia. “It was love at first sight: I saw a picture of a cute bear cub, read several poetic quotes - and rushed to look for the book.”

Zakhoder always emphasized that his book was not a translation, but a retelling, the fruit of Milne’s co-creation and “re-creation” in Russian, and insisted on his (co)authorship of it. Indeed, its text does not always literally follow the original. A number of discoveries not found in Milne (for example, the various titles of Pooh's songs - Noisemakers, Screamers, Vopilki, Sopelki, Pyhtelki - or Piglet's famous question: “Does the Heffalump love piglets? And how does he love them?”), fits well into the context of the work . Milne also does not have a complete parallel in the widespread use of capital letters (Unknown Who, Rabbit's Relatives and Friends), frequent personification of inanimate objects (Pooh approaches a “familiar puddle”), a larger amount of “fairy-tale” vocabulary, not to mention the few hidden references to Soviet reality

Authentic Christopher Robin toys:

Thanks to Boris Zakhoder’s retelling of “Winnie the Pooh and Everything, Everything, Everything,” and then the films of the Soyuzmultfilm studio, where the bear was voiced by Evgeniy Leonov, Winnie the Pooh became very popular in our country.

The place of Winnie the Pooh in Milne's work

The series about Winnie the Pooh eclipsed all of Milne’s quite diverse and popular adult works of his time: “he cut off his path back to “adult” literature. All his attempts to escape from the clutches of the toy bear were unsuccessful.” Milne himself had a hard time with this set of circumstances, did not consider himself a children's writer and argued that he writes for children with the same responsibility as for adults.

Continuation

In 2009, a sequel to the Winnie the Pooh books, Return to the Enchanted Forest, was released in the UK, approved by the Pooh Properties Trust. The author of the book was David Benedictus, who strives to closely imitate the style and composition of Milnov's prose. The book's illustrations also focus on maintaining Shepard's style. Return to the Enchanted Forest has been translated into several languages.

The management company The Pooh Properties Trust was formed under the will of A. A. Milne. In 1961, the trustees of the foundation, Mrs. Milne and Spencer Curtis Brown, assigned exclusive rights to produce films about Winnie the Pooh to Walt Disney. A. A. Milne's son, Christopher Robin Milne, sold his rights to other owners to raise money for the treatment of his daughter Claire, who had cerebral palsy.