On this date in 1964 BBC television launched Playschool. 10 facts about the show:
Play School was originally commissioned by Michael Peacock, the chief of programmes for BBC2, who’d noticed there was a lack of programmes for small children. It was created by Joy Whitby.
It was the first programme ever shown on BBC2, although that wasn’t planned. A more grand opening schedule was intended, but was scuppered by a power failure, so Play School was shown instead.
There were many presenters over the years, some of whom went on to become household names. They included: Brian Cant; Julie Stevens; Johnny Ball; Wally Whyton; Derek Griffiths; Floella Benjamin; Eric Thompson and Phyllida Law. Paul Danquah was the first black host of a children's show. The first show was presented by Virginia Stride and Gordon Rollings.
There was also a succession of guest storytellers which included Val Doonican, Richard Baker, Rolf Harris, Clive Dunn, Roy Castle, Pat Coombs, Patricia Hayes, Roy Kinnear, George Chisholm, Ted Moult and Cilla Black.
A feature of the show was a short educational film. Viewers were invited to guess which of three Windows the film would appear through – a round, square or arched window. A triangular window was added in the 1980s. The shape of the window chosen actually had a pattern to it, depending on the subject of the film. If it was about something round, like balloons or wheels, it would be the round window. Square things like boxes or houses would be viewed through the square window and fountains or arches through the arched window. The arched window was used the least often.
There were a number of pets, including Bit and Bob the Goldfish, a cockatoo called Katoo and numerous Mice. The Play School pets were originally sourced by Harrods pet buyers Ken Exall and Anna Thompson and from 1965-88 were looked after by Wendy Duggan, a fellow of the Royal Zoological Society. Katoo has the distinction of making Johnny Ball swear on camera when it bit his finger.
Then there were the toys: Jemima, a rag doll with long red and white striped legs; Humpty, a dark green egg-shaped soft toy; Big Ted; Little Ted; a rocking horse named Dapple; and the unfortunate Hamble, who it seems, everyone hated. Hamble dolls were once quite popular and sold in Woolworth’s, but by this time there were only two known to be in existence, the Play School one and another owned by a woman in Chester, who would hire it to the BBC for £40 a week whenever the Play School regular got broken. She might not have been so keen had she known how poor Hamble got treated by the presenters, some of whom would kick her around the room, hence her understudy was frequently required. Presenters didn’t like her because she wasn’t as cuddly as the others and wouldn’t sit up. One confessed to sticking a knitting needle up Hamble’s bum so she’d sit up straight. None of the foreign broadcasters who took up the show kept Hamble in it, and she was eventually replaced in the UK by Poppy, a black doll, officially to make the toys more inclusive, but also because poor Hamble was getting a bit worse for wear.
At Brian Cant’s audition with Joy Whitby, she kicked a box out from under a table, and instructed Brian to 'Get in the box, and row out to sea'. He did it, with a running monologue about his “boat” and got the job.
Each day had a different theme: Monday: Useful Box Day; Tuesday: Dressing Up Day; Wednesday: Pets Day; Thursday: Imagination Day; and Friday: Science Day.
Almost 5700 editions aired between 1964 and the last show on 11 March 1988, but only 1900 are currently known to survive thanks to the BBC policy of the time to record over anything not deemed useful enough.






