Bill Has Trouble with the Magic Box

Bill Has Trouble with the Magic Box (It's Fun to Read)

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Puppets of Bill, Penelope and the letter P star in this episode of Granada TV's early years' school literacy programme

Getting to watch television at school always seemed a treat, even if it was an educational programme. School broadcasts began in 1957 in Britain, first on ITV and soon after on the BBC, bringing audiovisual learning into the classroom without the need of a film projector. The It's Fun to Read series, produced by the Granada franchise, is a charming example of how colour could add appeal and, just as importantly, visual definition to early years literacy programmes.

The puppets are filmed mostly in static poses with magical appearances, limited camera moves, and some basic puppetry taking the place of more expensive and time-consuming stop-motion animation. The 26 episodes were designed to be watched in sequence, with the reading requirements becoming more advanced across the series. Accompanying the series was a set of 12 reading books and separate teacher's guide, which contained the full commentary of Keith Gardner's clever participatory narrative commentary. Repeated multiple times in the 1970s, the series was the last broadcast in 1997 on the shortlived Granada Plus digital channel.


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Bookworms Welcome!: Literature for Kids

Once upon a time... How television celebrates the joy of reading
The magic of reading is all in the mind, with words and pictures lighting up our imaginations and taking us on extraordinary journeys without us ever having to leave our armchairs. And yet, the relationship between books and television has existed since the very beginning, with countless stories making the leap from page to screen and back again. Picking up the baton from radio, television was the great entertainer and educator of the latter half of the 20th century. Dramatisations of literary classics and contemporary page-turners are a familiar fixture in TV schedules, but beyond the art of adaptation lie programmes that capture the joy of reading, that bring books to life and that take us behind the curtain to meet the beloved wizards and dreamweavers whose work delights us all. This is no more the case than in the world of children’s books and, more broadly, learning to read. Within this collection, you will find documentaries and discussion programmes, government campaign films and local news reports, magazine shows and more. And at the heart of it all is the power of the story and the written word, and the simple, magical pleasure of reading and being read to. Are you sitting comfortably? Then we’ll begin.

24 videos in this collection

1

The Book Tower [30/01/80]

2

Reading + Literacy: Little Miss Muffet

3

Burglar Bill (Gammon and Spinach)

4

Peter Ustinov Tells Stories from Hans Andersen

5

Tintin (Opening Shot)

6

An Interview with Raymond Briggs

7

Children's Books

8

COI: National Year of Reading - CORP/DCSF2496/031

9

Pig-in-the-Middle

10

It's Fun to Read [29/12/70]

11

Parent's Day [07/02/76]

12

Our Post War Reading Disaster

13

Our Show [10/12/77]

14

Zig Zag (Prog 11)

15

Reading + Literacy: Owl & Pussycat

16

Library Offers Alternative Tales

17

Bill Has Trouble with the Magic Box

18

Headspace at Bolton Library

19

Personalised Books

20

The Book Tower [02/01/85]

21

The Book Tower [05/01/81]

22

The Book Tower [29/12/80]

23

The Book Tower [22/12/80]

24

The Book Tower [12/01/81]

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