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Old TV programmes remembered

(106 Posts)
GrannyIvy Sun 25-Feb-24 15:25:14

Does anyone remember Sara & Hoppity? I loved this programme in the early 1960’s. I even called my first born Sara! I saw an old You Tube of this yesterday and oh my goodness I found it a bit creepy but at 5 years old I adored it and never forgotten it. Another favourite was Torchy the Battery Boy. How childrens TV has moved on! I enjoy Peppa Pig and Fireman Sam now watching them with my grandchildren😂

TiggyW Tue 27-Feb-24 19:31:25

I used to love Tales of the Riverbank and all the Watch with Mother programmes, especially Rag, Tag and Bobtail. Also anything by Oliver Postgate. 😎
The best programme from our children’s era was Postman Pat and from our grandson’s younger days, Hey Duggee. 👍😎

Harris27 Tue 27-Feb-24 18:29:42

Andy pandy and looby Lou also the wooden tops!

Emerald888 Tue 27-Feb-24 18:11:10

Heidi, Robin Hood, William Tell, Dr Who. Had lots of brothers too.
Noggin the Nog, Captain Pugwash. Happy days.

Flo122 Tue 27-Feb-24 17:28:40

I still have my Sarah & Hoppity book (Sarah & Hoppity find a cat). I also loved Watch with Mother, Rag,Tag & Bobtail, Woodentops, I did think Andy Pandy was freaky though

Saggi Tue 27-Feb-24 15:45:40

Houseful of brothers …so The Lone Ranger….Hopalong Cassidy…..Popeye…..but I do remember Andy Pandy and Four Feather Falls

jacqui67 Tue 27-Feb-24 15:20:12

Loved pippi long stocking and little house on the parare didnt have a tv until i was about 10

Maggymay Tue 27-Feb-24 14:32:45

I remember watching Six -Five Special when I was about seven loved it,sadly it only ran for less than two years circa 1957 to 1958.

MissAdventure Tue 27-Feb-24 14:25:03

H.R. puffnstuff.

pen50 Tue 27-Feb-24 14:05:32

I remember Sara and Hoppity as it was the very first television programme I ever saw. We lived abroad, without television, when I was a small child; I saw S&H in the television lounge of a hotel in Richmond-upon-Thames, where we were staying after our flight from Bombay had landed.

Milest0ne Tue 27-Feb-24 14:01:18

We are watching re runs of Last of The Summer Wine. Some are very amusing but the latest offerings show all the actors chain smoking Yeuk!!! Awful stereotypeing.

MissAdventure Tue 27-Feb-24 13:59:21

Captain Scarlet, indestructible... something or other.

25Avalon Tue 27-Feb-24 13:54:39

Champion the Wonder Horse. Then ITV came with Rin Tin Tin which I desperately wanted to watch like all the other kids but Dad would not buy another telly so just BBC for another year.

Heliotrope Tue 27-Feb-24 13:50:35

I don’t remember Sara and Hoppity so just watched a YouTube pilot episode, quite gruesome, why do the puppets look so clapped out? I loved Rag Tag and Bobtail, the Lassie programs always had me in tears.

DrWatson Tue 27-Feb-24 13:49:32

For FannyD -- oh, that's what the 5th day had? I don't recall 'Picture Book' at all though!! And I'm sure Andy Pandy was Tuesdays, Flowerpot Men on Weds, as I liked the latter, and it was the middle one of the 5 shows? But maybe they changed them round?!

For ANYONE hankering after old shows, DO SEE the Talking Picture Channel, all sorts of old films and TV, some I remember, others not. They presently are reviving Dixon of Dock Green, Worzel Gummidge, Maigret, Rumpole, Dick Barton, Public Eye, Fireball XL5 and Out of Town (amongst many others). The films of The Huggetts (Jack Warner again, and the wonderful Kathleen Harrison) pop up every now and again, as does the best (IMO) Scrooge, in which she shared scenes with Alastair Sim. They do a nostalgia show at Sunday 'teatime' (repeated in the week) showing a wide variety of short films, grainy film clips sent by viewers, and other clips where people ask for help to identify what on earth was being filmed!

Talking Pictures TV is on Virgin 445, Freesat 306, Freeview or Youview 82 or on the Sky digital satellite platform, channel 328.

MissAdventure Tue 27-Feb-24 13:47:58

Listen with mother was on the radio in the afternoons, too.
Mum would be doing the ironing, and I was allowed a small piece of apple and a drink of water. (Sometimes)
Pampered, eh?

Musicgirl Tue 27-Feb-24 13:44:32

I loved Camberwick Green, Trumpton and Chigley. The Herbs was also one of my favourites. I had a Herbs annual and inside the front cover was a picture of a beautiful garden and it said that to enter the magic herb garden (ie turn the first page) you had to sniff the flowers and say the magic word: herbidacious. I did this every single time - the power of suggestion and suspension of disbelief. - it never occurred to me that I could simply turn the page! I, too, enjoyed The Pogles of Pogles Wood. I also liked Hammy the Hamsters but my favourite was Busy Lizzy with her dress with the magic flower on it. She rubbed the flower and had three wishes a day, but if she tried to have a fourth wish, everything went back to normal. Her first wish was always to bring her Eskimo doll, Little Mo, to life and they had lots of adventures together.

DrWatson Tue 27-Feb-24 13:24:45

I can remember the likes of Andy Pandy, Bill & Ben, Rag Tag & Bobtail, and the Woodentops. That was 4 days of the week, and I only saw them when taken to my mother's parents with her, so I presume she didn't visit on the 5th weekday?

We didn't have a telly until I was about 11 or 12 -- people nowadays don't understand that relatively few folk had a TV in those early days, it was a thing for the 'comfortably off' at least (and my mum and dad certainly weren't that!).

When we did manage to get a TV (dad may have had some small promotion?), it was from (I think) Radio Rentals, it had a meter on the back that took shillings or florins, and at the end of each week a chap came and took the rental from the coins in the box, and mum got a very handy rebate!

I remember it was crucial to have a supply of the right coins (as per electric and gas meters back then) as it was so annoying if the telly clicked off right at the end of something!

MissAdventure Tue 27-Feb-24 13:05:57

The Magic Roundabout.
That's quite strange when you come to think of it.

Purplepixie Tue 27-Feb-24 12:56:24

Watch with mother, the wooden tops and muffin the mule were on TV when I was a child. There weren’t many people in our village who had TV and when there was something special on we used to share our sitting room with some of the neighbours. It was fun as they always brought chocolate or sweets along. Ahhhhh those were the days. When I have watched some of the childrens programmes now with the grand kids I find them over the top and often creepy! But hey, a talking mule isnt? Haha!

FannyD Tue 27-Feb-24 12:51:00

Five weekdays, five programmes - Monday was Picture Book, Tuesday Flowerpot Men, Wednesday Andy Pandy, Thursday Rag, Tag and Bobtail and Friday The Woodentops. Mum sitting with me on the sofa and always going to sleep. Blissful days. Must have been 1954/5/6 ish because I started school in 1956.

Vintagegirl Tue 27-Feb-24 12:27:38

Did Bill and Ben ... and Little Weeeed get a mention?

MissAdventure Tue 27-Feb-24 12:04:26

Junior showtime, with Pinky and Perky.

Sooty and Sweep.
I loved Sweep.

Lizzie44 Tue 27-Feb-24 12:01:59

I loved Muffin the Mule in the 1950s. What's not to like about a puppet horse that dances on top of a grand piano? Also used to watch the Clangers for a while but got fed up with their weird whistled language.

Dempie55 Tue 27-Feb-24 11:44:17

Juliet27

Prudence Kitten was one of my early favourites.

Me too, and I called my current rescue cat Prudence!

MissAdventure Mon 26-Feb-24 23:26:19

Belle and Sebastian.