What is Miss Frizzles magic vehicle?

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Who wouldn’t want a teacher like Ms. Frizzle? Brought to life by children’s author Joanna Cole—who died July 12, 2020, at 75 years old—and illustrator Bruce Degen, Ms. Frizzle and her trusty vehicle transported kids and kids-at-heart alike into the wonderful world of science. Take a ride down memory lane with these 12 facts about The Magic School Bus.

By the 1980s, educational children’s books had come a long way. Whimsical wordsmiths like Dr. Seuss and Beverly Cleary had produced energized page-turners kids actually wanted to read.

Still, certain subjects remained largely ignored. The Cat in the Hat and Ramona Quimby, Age 8 were a helpful for English teachers, but science teachers were still left without entertaining reads for their students. Eventually, masses of educators started asking publishers to fill the void.

“We kept getting requests from teachers who were interested in seeing more [picture] books in the science category,” Craig Walker, the late former vice president of Scholastic, Inc., told Publisher’s Weekly in 2006. “So we had the breakthrough idea of putting curriculum science inside a story.”

One day, inspiration struck when Walker remembered how much he’d enjoyed school trips as a boy. “I thought about doing books about kids going on field trips to places they really couldn’t: through a water system, to the bottom of the ocean, inside the Earth.”

To helm his new franchise, Walker hired offbeat illustrator Bruce Degen and science/humor writer Joanna Cole. Their first installment, The Magic School Bus at the Waterworks, was released in 1986. Readers from around the world fell in love with both the book and its red-headed protagonist.

Walker modeled Ms. Frizzle after a beloved, eccentric second-grade teacher from her childhood school. Degen and Cole have also each cited a teacher from their respective childhoods as inspiring some of Ms. Frizzle’s numerous quirks. The name Frizzle itself was a portmanteau of frizz and drizzle, which Cole came up with on a rainy day. “At the time, I had a perm,” Cole said. “She’s also based on me, because you know Ms. Frizzle loves to explain things and that’s what I do when I write my books,” the author added.

The Magic School Bus at the Waterworks was a difficult juggling act. Cole knew from the start that her story needed to be funny and informative in equal measure. She also knew she'd have to boil down complicated ideas into terms any child could understand—without boring her young readers. “I was very nervous about it,” Cole admitted, "because I didn't know if I could do this—to combine all these things. So, I cleaned out my closets, and I washed things. I mean, the kinds of things I never do. And one day I just said to myself, 'You have to write today. You have to sit down.' And so I wrote."

Right off the bat, her opening paragraph captured the tone she was going for. “I knew I had a teacher, and I knew I had a class, and I knew they were going to take these school trips that were going to be wacky, but I didn’t know what the teacher was going to be like. So, I wrote these words: ‘Our class really has bad luck. This year, we got Ms. Frizzle, the strangest teacher in school. We don’t mind her strange dresses or her strange shoes. It’s the way she acts that really gets us.’” Using those lines as her guide, Cole fleshed out Ms. Frizzle's character and the journey that was about to unfold.

Degen would sift through old elementary school picture day portraits. Then he’d pick out a kid whose outfit and hairdo he liked and convert them into a caricature. The illustrator believes most of those selected children “are in the class and … don’t know it.” Still, at least one was notified.

Nervous and bespectacled Arnold was, in fact, based on a good friend of Degen’s son. “I didn’t tell him until he was 16 years old,” Degen revealed. The news didn’t go over too well. “He said, ‘I don’t look like Arnold!’ I said, ‘Well, that day, you were wearing … that white and yellow striped polo shirt. And you had that blondish, curly hair; and that was you. You were Arnold.’”

This three-horned creature resembles a curly-tailed Triceratops. Native to Eastern Africa, the animal now roams the Hawaiian islands as well, thanks to careless pet owners. Originally, it was Cole who hatched the idea of giving Frizzle a lizard sidekick. Degen then chose this particular species because it was “the weirdest-looking one” he’d ever seen.

Launched in 1994, the PBS series lasted for four seasons and 52 episodes. The hard-rocking intro was penned by lyricist Peter Lurye and sung by 1950s icon Little Richard, who is perhaps best-known for his 1955 mega-hit, "Tutti Frutti."

Lily Tomlin became the voice of Ms. Frizzle in 1994. “Kids never believe I’m Ms. Frizzle because she kinda looks like Bette Middler,” Tomlin joked. At the 1995 Daytime Emmy Awards ceremony, she won the Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program category.

The Magic School Bus and the Climate Challenge, released in 2010, explained the scientific facts of climate change in a kid-friendly way, to the chagrin of some parents. Cole felt the book was both timely and necessary. “Kids should know about [global warming] and talk about it and they should talk to their elders about it,” she argued. “They can be a real influence because it’s their world that’s being changed.”

Cole typically spent six months researching the topic of a given installment. Afterwards, shed spend another six months putting the actual book together, with Degen illustrating it throughout this same period.

Eventually, Ms. Frizzle decided to branch out into the realm of social studies. Those books find Frizzle going on vacation, far away from her students and bus. To help set them further apart from the scientifically inclined stories, Degen uses a darker sort of paint called gouache in place of his standard watercolor.

To commemorate a quarter century’s worth of adventures, an actress dressed as Ms. Frizzle rang the final stock market closing bell at the NASDAQ MarketSite in Times Square on October 17, 2011.

Lily Tomlin once again brought Ms. Frizzle to life in The Magic School Bus Rides Again. In the reboot, Ms. Frizzle’s younger sister, Fiona Frizzle, wields the keys to the legendary bus. It appeared in people’s Netflix queues in 2017, and was canceled after just two seasons. The show was originally meant to be a computer-animated series titled Magic School Bus 360 and was scheduled for a 2016 release.

What is the name of Miss Frizzles lizard?

Liz. Liz is the class pet Jackson's chameleon who goes on most of the field trips with Ms. Frizzle and the students, often getting herself into dangerous comedic situations. She appears to get jealous when the bus receives more attention than she does.

Was Ms. Frizzle LGBT?

Frizzle; and because Kate McKinnon, who voices Fiona Frizzle, is also out in the public sphere as lesbian. There is no indication in the Magic School Bus, however, that Ms. Frizzle or Fiona Frizzle are part of the LGBTQ+ community. Ms.

How strong is Ms. Frizzle?

Frizzle is a terrific athlete with a strong level of health & fitness. She was not only able to win 2 out of 3 in the Teacher-athlon (she would have won a clean sweep had she not held her breath in the first event) but is capable of back flips and uni-cycling among many other physical feats.

What model is the Magic School Bus?

The Magic School Bus is somewhat based on a 1970s Ward International school bus with fender skirts on the rear wheels, and the front windshield being 2 different windows.