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Romper Room was a rare case of a series being both franchised and syndicated, and some local affiliates—Los Angeles and New York being prime examples—would produce their own versions of the show instead of airing the national telecast. For some time, local shows all over the world used the same script but with local children.
WTVT: Romper Room ("Miss Colleen"; Weekdays 9:00-9:30am from October 1955 until January 1959) WFLA: Romper Room ("Miss Kay", "Miss June", "Miss Alice") (Kay's version aired at 9:00–9:30am each weekday from January 19, 1959 until Spring 1961. June's WFLA version aired at 10:00-10:30am each weekday from March 31, 1975 until May 30, 1980, and ...
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) I actually appeared on the New York Romper Room with Miss Louise. I have a picture somewhere, which I will never upload.--
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.
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.
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 ...
An OnlyFans model who shut down the New York City-to-Dublin portal last spring proudly flashed Donald Trump during his rally Thursday night — saying the stunt was part of her larger fundraising ...
No on-stage Mister Do-Bee, Mister Music in 1960's/1970's New York shows [ edit ] The first time I saw "Mister Do-Bee" as anything other than a static cartoon-character bumblebee was in one of the revamped shows of the 1980's.