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The Bullwinkle and Rocky Role-Playing Party Game was designed by David Cook and Warren Spector, and published by TSR in 1988 as a boxed set with a 32-page book, two 16-page books, 108 cards (two decks), 20 cardboard stand-ups (19 characters & 1 blank), six spinners, two cardstock sheets, 4 dice (2 moose dice & 2 flying squirrel dice) and 10 hand puppets.
Tickle, Patch and Friends is a BAFTA award-winning television series for children. The series was produced in-house by Ed Matthews for the United Kingdom television network Channel 5 , and was originally broadcast in the Milkshake! programming block, which ran from 28 August 1999 to 26 June 2005.
His fascination with puppets began at the age of four, when he performed with hand puppets for family and friends. [3] In 1945, when Davis was 10 years old, he saw a performance in Washington, D.C. It featured Frank Paris Marionettes and an Italian puppet company. [4] Soon after, Davis and his father converted the family garage into a puppet ...
Wielie Walie (Pronounced Vee-lee Vaa-lee) was an Afrikaans children's variety programme created by unknown featuring puppets, which was broadcast from the launch of television in South Africa in 1976. With Karel and Sarel, two best friends but always fighting. Bennie always ready to read a story, and the duck and the socks chatting.
Kukla, Fran and Ollie is an early American television show using puppets. It was created for children, but was soon watched by more adults than children. It did not have a script and was entirely ad-libbed. It was broadcast from Chicago between October 13, 1947, and August 30, 1957. [1]
Garfield Goose and Friends is a children's television show produced by WGN-TV in Chicago, Illinois, United States, from 1955 to 1976. The show was known as Garfield Goose and Friend from 1952 to 1955 when it aired on WBKB and WBBM-TV. It was the longest running puppet show on television until Sesame Street broke that record. [4]
"Bobby the Banana", an inanimate plush banana toy, was the first puppet, joining presenter Phillip Schofield for many of the in-vision links. Bobby the Banana was generally phased out and made way for the more expressive Gordon the Gopher, a hand puppet gopher operated, from under Schofield's continuity desk, by Paul Smith. [1]
Later, of course, I avidly read the Whanslaw books." [2] In 1954, he joined the Television Puppet Theatre, producing various puppet plays using marionettes. For the Toytown plays based on a long-running Children's Hour radio series, however, he decided to use rod puppets to emulate S.G. Hulme Beaman’s original character designs. [3]