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Mary, Mungo and Midge is a British animated children's television series, created by John Ryan and produced by the BBC in 1969. [1]The show featured the adventures of a girl called Mary, her dog Mungo, and her pet mouse Midge, who lived with Mary's parents in a tower block in a busy town.
The New Casper Cartoon Show: 26 US: 1963 The Funny Company: 260 US: 1963 Bleep and Booster: 313 UK: 1963–1977 Space Patrol: 39 UK: 1963 Mr. Piper: 39 Canada: 1963–1964 Compilation Show Daithi Lacha Ireland: 1963–1969 Le Manège Enchanté: 400 France: 1963 Ōkami shônen Ken: 86 Japan: 1963–1965
Mama Mirabelle's Home Movies; Marine Boy; Marlene Marlowe Investigates [43] Marrying Mum and Dad; Martha Speaks [44] Martin's Mice; The Marvel Action Hour; Mary, Mungo and Midge (1969-1978) The Mask: Animated Series; The Master of Ballantrae; Match of the Day Kickabout; Mathspy; Matilda and the Ramsay Bunch; Maya & Miguel; McGee and Me! Me and ...
Watch with Mother was a cycle of children's programmes created by Freda Lingstrom and Maria Bird.Broadcast by BBC Television from 1952 until 1975, it was the first BBC television series aimed specifically at tiny tots to pre-school children aged 6 months to 5 years old, a development of BBC radio's equivalent Listen with Mother, which had begun two years earlier.
Bura and Hardwick was the name credited to represent the duo of Bob Bura and John Hardwick, who worked variably as puppeteers and animators in the United Kingdom.From the mid-1950s to the 1980s they contributed to a number of children's television series.
“Here’s some stuff this guy Paul thinks is funny,” wrote the artist of these, in our opinion, hilarious one-panel comics. Paul is a brilliant cartoonist and author whose work has captivated ...
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Pippin was a UK children's comic, published by Polystyle Publications between 1966 and 1986, featuring characters from British pre-school television programmes. Stories were generally of four or eight numbered panels, with a short sentence below each illustration (similar to Rupert), although some stories did appear in prose form.