Super Flying Fun Show | |
---|---|
Genre | Children's television |
Starring | Marilyn Mayo |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 9 |
Production | |
Producer | Jim Badger |
Production locations | Sydney, New South Wales |
Running time | 90 then 120 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | TCN-9 for GTV-9 |
Release | 1970 – 1979 |
The Super Flying Fun Show was a live weekday morning television programme aimed at children. It was broadcast by the Nine Network and made and aired at there studio TCN 9 in Sydney, the program was also broadcast on relay in Melbourne on GTV 9. The show was produced by Jim Badger. [1]
Super Flying Fun Show replaced the original Today show with Mike Walsh launched from GTV 9 in 1968. When Today was linked with TCN 9 and the compere changed to Tony Charlton, recently recruited Victorian regional stations began to drop the show. By October 1969 Today had been cancelled, and a mixture of live children's entertainment and cartoons on air between 7AM and 8:30AM was announced, to begin on 13 October 1969. [2] This announcement proved to be premature, [3] however the show was running in early December, 1969. [4] It was an instant success: reputedly it received '26,000 letters from kids' in the first month of broadcast. [5] The timeslot was extended to 9:00AM in early March 1970. [6]
The host throughout the program's duration was the dancer, singer and television personality Marilyn Mayo [7] known as "Miss Marilyn". Mayo had appeared on Tonight with Dave Allen and in the early days of the Super Flying Fun Show she was simultaneously a featured cast member of The Sound of Music hosted by Barry Crocker . In 1973 she was also co-host, with Ernie Sigley, of Sigley on Saturday. [8]
In the first two years of the show Mayo was joined by British-born comedian Rod Hull. Opening titles consisted of Hull as the character Caretaker Clot (also known as Clotty the Janitor) walking to the TCN 9 transmitter tower and flicking a big switch. Clot was already a popular police officer character in the channel's Kaper Cops, a local homage to The Keystone Cops . Its director, Stefan Sargent, claimed this show was a "direct steal of the American Keystone Kops". [9] In 1970 Hull told the Women's Weekly's Nan Musgrove that 'In the opening SFFS we made Clot leave the police force and join Channel 9 as Caretaker Clot.' [10]
A Channel 4 TV documentary about Hull titled Rod Hull: A Bird in the Hand, Jim Badger states that he had to persuade Hull to work with Emu, who Badger had found amongst Channel 9's props, and that Hull had told him 'I don't want to be a puppeteer'. The success of the puppet clearly changed Hull's mind and Hull returned to Britain in 1971, he was replaced by Marty Morton who was also a co-producer. [11] Badger claims that Hull 'had another Emu made' before returning to Britain and the original Emu remained on the Super Flying Fun Show. Hull was an almost instant success in the UK; he and Mayo (and Emu) were reunited in mid-1973 on an Australian television special, Rod Hull, Emu and Friends. [12]
Another character, Skeeter the Paperboy or "Amos" Skeeter (a pun on 'a mosquito'), was played by James Kemsley. Kemsley went on to host Skeeter's Cartoon Corner until 1973 when Daryl Somers took over the show. Kemsley later wrote and illustrated the newspaper comic strip Ginger Meggs .
Other Super Flying Fun Show regulars included Wing Ding (a human-sized chicken sponsoring a snack food from Arnott's), the Paddle Pop Lion (a human-sized lion sponsoring a brand of ice-cream from Streets), and Freddo Frog (a human-sized frog sponsoring a brand of chocolate for Cadbury).
While the show attracted criticism for this shameless commercialism, it also took an educative role. One example of this is when primary school headmistress Anne Price began reading and reviewing children's books once a week on the show, starting in 1974. [13] Another was the Department of Health-funded segments under the title 'Go Health', which promoted healthy activities - such as an anti-smoking message - to children; 'Go Health' was reputedly viewers' second-favourite segment on the program after the cartoons. [14]
Daily competitions included Miss Marilyn spinning a prize wheel. Contestants were rung by telephone. Live music was played by regular artists Marshall and his Portable Music Machine and country singer Smoky Dawson. The show also featured dancer Ross Hutchison [15] and the Jeral Puppets. [16] Between the live segments were cartoons and other, usually US-sourced, programming.
Merchandise from the show included an LP record [17] and a Milton Bradley board game.
In 1977, the program was decreed third of the three worst shows for children on Australian television by a group of Melbourne viewers polled by the Australian Broadcasting Control Board. The other two in this category were Get Smart and "Daryl and Ossie" (that is, Hey Hey it's Saturday). [18]
Throughout the decade, Super Flying Fun Show competed with an hour of Sesame Street on the ABC as well as Breakfast-A-Go-Go in Sydney, Fredd Bear's Breakfast-A-Go-Go in Melbourne and later, Non Stop Cartoon Carnival and The Early Bird Show on ATV 0. A similar show with the same title was also produced in Perth with host Dianna Hammond. [19] In Adelaide, the Super Duper Flying Fun Show was hosted by Ric Marshall, Bozo the Clown and Joanne White; in 2012, at the age of 83, Marshall was found guilty of an extensive series of sex offences against young boys and sentenced to 25 years' home detention. [20]
The last newspaper listing for the Super Flying Fun Show is in the Melbourne Age for Wednesday, 5 December 1979. It was replaced by cartoons. In 1981, Marilyn Mayo became a regular cast member on Holiday Island . Just as the Super Flying Fun Show had replaced a show called Today, the slot was filled two and a half years later by another show of the same name: Today is a news and current affairs program originally hosted by Steve Liebmann and Sue Kellaway. It commenced on 28 June 1982 [21] and is still running over forty years later.
It is not known if any of the episodes of Super Flying Fun Show were kinescoped or if any videotapes were made, and it is probable that the series is lost: aside from a small amount of photographic documentation, the National Film and Sound Archive records two incidents preserved on a 'goof reel' in its holdings. [22]
Rodney Stephen Hull was a British comedian and popular entertainer on television in the 1970s and 1980s. He rarely appeared without Emu, a mute and highly aggressive arm-length puppet modelled on the Australian bird.
GTV is a commercial television station in Melbourne, Australia, owned by the Nine Network. The station is currently based at studios at 717 Bourke Street, Docklands. GTV-9 is the home of the Australian Open tennis coverage.
TCN is the flagship television station of the Nine Network in Australia. The station is currently located at 1 Denison Street, North Sydney. The licence, issued to a company named Television Corporation Ltd headed by Sir Frank Packer, was one of the first four licences to be issued for commercial television stations in Australia. TCN-9 is the home of the NRL coverage and national-level Nine News bulletins.
Daryl Paul Somers is an Australian television personality and musician, and a triple Gold Logie award-winner. He rose to national fame as the host and executive producer of the long-running comedy-variety program Hey Hey It's Saturday and continued his television celebrity and status as host of the live-performance program Dancing with the Stars.
James Lawrence Kemsley OAM was an Australian cartoonist who was notable for producing the comic strip Ginger Meggs between 1984 and 2007.
Norman Frederick Hetherington was an Australian artist, teacher, cartoonist, puppeteer, and puppet designer.
Bandstand is an Australian live pop music, variety television program screened from November 1958 to June 1972. Featuring both local and international music artists, and produced in-house at the studios of the Nine Network in Willoughby, New South Wales, it was originally broadcast only in New South Wales, It became a national program in the early 1960s as the network expanded into other Australian states. The host of Bandstand for its entire existence was radio presenter and television newsreader Brian Henderson.
Marty Morton was an English-born Australian entertainer who acted in television, theatre and commercials in Australia and other countries including England.
The Outcasts was a 1961 Australian television serial. A period drama, it was broadcast live, though with some film inserts. All 12 episodes of the serial survive as kinescope recordings. It was a sequel to Stormy Petrel.
Stormy Petrel is an early Australian television drama. A period drama, the 12-episode serial told the story of William Bligh and aired in 1960 on ABC. It was the first live TV serial from the ABC.
The Patriots was an Australian television drama mini-series. A period-drama, it aired for 10 episodes on ABC in 1962.
The Toppanos is a 15-minute Australian television series which aired from 1958 to 1959 on Sydney station ATN-7. It starred Enzo and Peggy Toppano, and combined music with ab-libbed comedy, along with a dog puppet named Jazza.
Australia's Amateur Hour was a talent quest, broadcast on Australian AM radio from 1940 to 1958, and a television spinoff, which ran for less than a year, 1957–1958.
Rendezvous at Romano's was an Australian television series which aired on Sydney station TCN-9. The series debuted 2 April 1957 and ran to 23 April of the same year, for a total of four episodes. The series aired on Tuesdays at 9:30PM.
The House and Garden Show is an Australian daytime television series which aired on Wednesdays on Sydney station TCN-9 from 11 June to 20 August 1958.
Teenage Mailbag is an Australian television series which aired in 1960 on Sydney station TCN-9. It was a panel discussion series on teenage issues. Roger Climpson was the host. Teenagers would send in letters with problems and questions which would be discussed by a panel of three, with June Dally-Watkins and John O'Grady being the regular panellists, along with a guest panellist.
The General Motors Hour was an Australian radio and television drama series.
The BP Super Show was an Australian television series of loosely scheduled TV specials often of the variety show genre, which aired from circa 1959 to circa 1970. The programs often featured international performers that were touring Australia. It originally aired on ATN-7 in Sydney and GTV-9 in Melbourne, with the production of episodes varying between the two stations, and it also aired on other stations across Australia. It aired on the Nine Network after the formation of that network. Given the varied nature of the episodes, critical reception varied, but was often very positive, with a 1961 episode with Ella Fitzgerald being called by The Age newspaper "one of the best shows of its type presented on Melbourne TV".
Seagulls Over Sorrento is a 1960 Australian television play. It was based on the popular stage play Seagulls Over Sorrento and was produced by Crawford Productions for Melbourne's HSV-7, airing on 1 May 1960 as an episode of "ACI Theatre". It screened on TCN-9 in Sydney on Sunday 12 June.
Mickie de Stoop is an Australian former radio and television presenter.