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Romper Room is an American children's television series that was franchised and syndicated from 1953 to 1994. The program targeted preschoolers (children five years of age or younger), and was created and produced by Bert Claster and his presenter wife, Nancy Claster, of Claster Television .
Sherri Chessen (born 1932), also known as Sherri Finkbine, is an American former children's television host.She is also known as Miss Sherri, her role on the Phoenix version of the franchised children's show Romper Room.
Claster Television, Inc. was a Baltimore, Maryland–based television distributor founded in 1953 by Bertram H. (Bert) Claster and Nancy Claster (Goldman) as Romper Room Inc. [2] It was originally a producer of the children's show Romper Room, one of the first preschool children's programs.
Miss Mary Ann Pedersen is mentioned in Romper Room#New York City as working in the "early 1970s". She also has her own Facebook page. The San Francisco section states that Miss Nancy worked up to 1969, but that doesn't necessarily mean the show stopped when she did. Clarityfiend 07:15, 31 March 2012 (UTC)
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 30 January 2025. Canadian children's music group Sharon, Lois & Bram Sharon, Lois & Bram with Elephant in 1994 Background information Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada Genres Children's music Instrument(s) Sharon: vocals, guitar, piano, tambourine Lois: piano, autoharp, vocals Bram: guitar, banjo, vocals ...
Betty Thompson (1934–1994) was a Canadian television presenter who spent most of her career at CKCO-TV in Kitchener, Ontario.She was seen throughout Canada as host of CTV's version of Romper Room, a children's programme produced at CKCO's studios.
The Jeffrey Dahmer Story gives viewers a frightening front row seat to the serial killer's crimes. Here's what happened to his apartment.
It is the earliest known preschool series to be produced in the United States, predating Romper Room by a year. [2] The program was presented from a child's point of view. A 1953 magazine article reported, "Low-angled cameras see everything at Lilliputian eye-level, stories and activities are paced at the slow rate just right for small ears and ...