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Pretend time donkey show
Pretend time donkey show






  1. #PRETEND TIME DONKEY SHOW SERIAL#
  2. #PRETEND TIME DONKEY SHOW MAC#

I'm sorry to say I never really took to 'uncle Bill', guess I thought he was a bit. The Enchanted Frog is a pretty good one too, that's post cream of weat I think.

#PRETEND TIME DONKEY SHOW MAC#

I love how Nila Mac expanded the story, and what she did with the elves. One of my favourites is The Elves and the Shoemaker. Our own Jerry Hendages, (apologies Jerry if spelling is wrong), has supplied me with a few I have not seen elsewhere, but my apetite still remains insatiable haha.

pretend time donkey show

I would just about kill for more stories from before the sponsorship, when Gwen was more-or-less in charge, with 'Mr. Not so fond of the cream of wheat years, firstly because the 'games' have a rather staged feel, and second because I know it led to cuts in the actual stories. Think we must have discussed this before, I totally LOVE LOVE LOVE let's pretend. Text on ©2001-2023 OTRCAT INC All Rights Reserved. The show remained part of the Saturday schedule until October 23, 1954.įor other great Children's show see also: Howdy Doody Time, Minnesota School of the Air, Cinnamon Bear, Wormwood Forest, and Children's Collection. Mack's passing, directorship went to Jean Hight. Let's Pretend garnered several awards over the years, including two Peabody's, a women's National Radio Committee Award, and five Radio Daily Awards.

pretend time donkey show

Nila Mack suffered a fatal heart attack at her Manhattan apartment on January 20, 1953. For an adaptation of The Little Lame Prince, the show obtained permission from the White House for actor Bill Adams to do an impression of President Roosevelt, who was a victim of polio CBS made a record of the broadcast to present to the President.

pretend time donkey show

She was also right about the fairytale format long before Disney brought them to the screen, Let's Pretend aired adaptations of "Cinderella", "Sleeping Beauty", "Beauty and the Beast", "Jack and the Beanstalk", and "Snowdrop and the Seven Dwarfs". Nila felt that the grown-ups in the cast were not reaching the kids in the audience, so she decided to work almost exclusively with kids (who were paid $5 for three hours of rehearsal and the half-hour broadcast).ĭespite her initial misgivings at working with kids, Nila was great at it, and would often be the only grown-up in the studio beside the sound effects man (whose antics delighted the kids). Mack was an adaptation of "Sinbad the Sailor". Nila eventually retooled Helen and Mary to Let's Pretend ("radio's outstanding children's theater") which first aired on Saturday, March 24, 1934, and would remain part of CBS's Saturday lineup for the next two decades. Recalling her childhood in Arkansas City, Kansas, Nila determined that kids would tire of heroes such as "spacemen, cowboys, or clear-eyed adventurers" and prefer giants, witches, and fairy godmothers. She was initially terrified of working with kids, having none of her own, but the opportunity to make great radio (and a steady job early in the Great Depression) won out. She helped develop what would eventually evolve into The Columbia Workshop but in 1930 left the network, returning to Kansas to be at the side of her ailing mother.Īfter six months, the network contacted Nila, offering to let her take over Helen and Mary. Mack had worked in Vaudeville and had some small Broadway roles but turned to scriptwriting after being widowed in 1927, about the time CBS began needing writing talent. Writing Hard and Soft Boiled detective shows would prove a better fit for Merrill, and Children's Club was replaced by The Adventures of Helen and Mary, and run for 229 episodes before being turned over to Nila Mack. Lasting only a few weeks, Tottyville was replaced by The Children's Club Hour, written and hosted by Howard Merrill. Originating from the studios of WABC New York, the 'Tiffany Network's' flagship station, a Saturday morning show for the youngsters began in October 1927 titled Aunt Jymmie and Her Tots in Tottyville. Junior may not make as many buying decisions as Mom did on grocery day, but he could be taught to bug Mom long enough to get her to buy the brand of breakfast cereal pitched on his favorite program.

pretend time donkey show

CBS was anxious to have similar results with the kids. The wife may not have made all of the household's financial decisions, but as the family shopper, she had a big influence that marketers took advantage of for their products.

#PRETEND TIME DONKEY SHOW SERIAL#

The networks found surprising success by targeting housewives with day-time serial dramas, a.k.a. Kids are a notoriously difficult audience. "Heel-looo, Pretenders! Helllloooo, Uncle Bill!" Outstanding Children's Theater (1929 - 54)








Pretend time donkey show