Sunday, 2 November 2014
7. Play School
First watched : Uncertain
Play School was only being broadcast at 11.00 am on BBC2 in October 1968. It was first shown as a repeat on BBC1 at 16.20 pm on 5 November 1968 but I've waited until getting up to the 19th because that's the first time it had two presenters that I definitely recall. I certainly don't remember creepy Colin Jeavons being on the show ! I'll hang fire on the other tea time programmes for now because the likes of Circus Boy, Tom Tom and Belle , Sebastian and the Horses ring no bells whatsoever.
Play School was still relatively young at this point having started in June 1964 when it became the first programme broadcast on BBC2 after the infamous power cut of the previous night. It seemed to have a rotating cast of about a dozen presenters who would pair up M/F to front the show. The most regular characters were a motley quintet of ordinary toys, Big Ted, Little Ted, Jemima ( a rag doll ) , Hamble ( a scruffy plastic doll ) and Humpty ( who had the odd sneaky revamp ) . It had a magazine format with stories, songs, skill demos leading up to the showing of some film footage , generally some horrendously boring film stock of bottles being made or something like that but occasionally you'd have a Disney cartoon clip. These were seen through one of three "windows" - on to the outside world you see.
Top honcho was undoubtedly Brian Cant. Since Rolf went down; Brian has become the last redoubt for people of my age wanting to preserve some unsullied memory of childhood innocence; surely he kept his hands to himself ? He was one of the presenters on 19.11.68; the other was Carol Chell ( above ) who had a rather mumsy appearance but was still in her twenties. She always had this engaging smirk on her face as though she couldn't believe her luck. If you've seen the clip the still above has been taken from ( most of the series has been wiped ) you'll know most of the jelly remains firmly fixed inside the mould for all her shaking and banging. She later became a TV executive.
I think it was Play School rather than actual school that taught me how to tell the time as an interrogation on what time was showing on a cardboard clock in the studio always preceded that day's story.
Play School's reputation is pretty bomb-proof as far as political correctness goes. Paul Danquah ( who is gay to boot ) has been claimed as the first black presenter on the BBC and was soon followed by Derek Griffiths. In 1975 Hamble was replaced by a black doll Poppy although the impetus to replace Hamble ( never a favourite with the presenters because she couldn't sit up ) came from her fragility rather than pc zeal. She disappeared shortly afterwards; maybe Les Ferdinand's got her.
When did I stop watching it ? Well I don't remember Poppy so it's pre-75. I'm thinking it was probably some time in 1972. By that time its spin-off Play Away for slightly older children was established and I took the hint. It can't have been before the end of 1971 though because I remember seeing the promo film for Ernie by Benny Hill through one of the windows; my first direct exposure to a current pop hit.
The actual series ran till 1988 , three years after Brian Cant finally left the show following its removal from the afternoon special. Its influence lives on; Teletubbies being the obvious example.
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