Derek griffiths remembers play school

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60TH ANNIVERSARY

A pang of nostalgia will touch the hearts of millions to learn that Play School is 60. For 24 years from 21 April 1964, the programme (officially the first to air on BBC2) offered simple pre-school pleasures such as stories and songs, plus games with the famous toys (Big and Little Ted, Humpty, Jemima and Hamble). Via the square, round or arched window, it also opened up the world for tots by showing short films of biscuits being made in a factory, or kite-flying in China. Derek Griffiths, a star presenter for ten years, reveals his standout memories…

“I enjoyed entertaining kids and adults, so Play School was a family show for me,” says the actor and musician, still working at 77. “One presenter, Miranda Connell, saw me in panto and told me I was right for ‘Johnny Ball and I together were a riot... they soon separated us!’

Play School. Sadly, I didn’t know of it!” But the producers saw him on stage and he was invited to audition.

A pair of presenters would guide viewers through each day’s activities — the hosts were constantly rotated and included many other future stars such as husband-and-wife Eric Thompson and Phyllida Law, Carmen Monroe, Brian Cant, Johnny Ball, Toni Arthur and Floella Benjamin.

Griffiths brought an impressive range of skills to the show, from flexible physical acting to comedy and mime. He also had great musical ability, as a singer, writer and multi-instrumentalist. Was he able to introduce any of his own ideas to Play School? “I wanted to bring jazzy pop songs in, to make kids dance around the room. And I heard that they did!”

PLAY MATES Derek Griffiths with fellow Play School presenters Johnny Ball and Sarah Long; and (inset) the cuddly Jemima
BBC PHOTOSALES

Other shows to benefit from Griffiths’s gifts were the spin-off series Play Away, plus Cabbages and Kings, Ring-a-Ding!, Heads and Tails and Bod, where he composed all of the individual character themes. “I had bought a penny whistle, and wondered how I could introduce it as a lead instrument…”

Bearing all this in mind, his answer when asked what people would be surprised to learn about him is itself surprising: “Shyness.”

As for his inanimate co-stars on Play School, Hamble was his least favourite toy, “because she reminded me of a BBC boss I did not get on with!” Any bêtes noires among the pets? “The cockatoo. It was a thug and bit everyone, and caused ructions by screaming during recordings. I failed miserably in teaching it to swear.”

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And does Griffiths remember any funny moments, perhaps not recorded, during his decade on the series? “Dear Sarah Long and I were dressed up as tramps. Towards the end of

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