Animal Magic (TV series)

Animal Magic
Presented by Johnny Morris
Country of origin United Kingdom
Production
Running time various
Release
Original network BBC One
Original release 13 April 1962 – 8 March 1983

Animal Magic was a BBC children's television series which ran from 1962 to 1983 from BBC Bristol. It began fortnightly and was transmitted weekly from 1964.

The presenter was the avuncular Johnny Morris. His charismatic style and genuine fondness for animals made the show an instant hit with children and adults alike. The show combined jovial voiceovers applied to various animals from Bristol Zoo with some basic educational features.

Morris' co-presenters over the years were: Gerald Durrell, Tony Soper, Keith Shackleton, Roger Tabor, Sheila Young, David Taylor and Terry Nutkins. When Nutkins joined the show in the early 1980s, the producers tried to update it, using new video effects technology. This allowed them to do such things as "shrink" the presenters to allow them to see life from an ant's viewpoint, or to swim in a riverbed for example. Joe Henson and Desmond Morris also appeared on the show. Dotty the ring-tailed lemur appeared as a regular guest for eight years in the 1970s. Other animal stars included the sea lion Gemini, and 2 parrots, Cocky (a sulphur-crested cockatoo) and Brolly (an umbrella cockatoo). Much to Morris' anger, the show was discontinued in 1983 when the programme's anthropomorphic treatment of animals fell out of fashion. A new children's wildlife series, The Really Wild Show, began in 1986, with the former 'Animal Magic' co-presenter Terry Nutkins as the main host.

The 100th edition was transmitted on 4 January 1967.

Many editions of the show were junked by the BBC in the early 1990s when they were assumed to be of no further use. Recent documentaries such as The Way We Went Wild have had to resort to using clips from off-air recordings of some shows.

The signature tune, "Las Vegas", performed by Group Forty Orchestra, was written by Laurie Johnson for KPM in 1960.[1][2]

References

  1. "Animal Magic (1962)". Soundtrack Collector. Concept and Creation. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  2. The Historic Record Quarterly, Volumes 1821. J. R. Wrigley. 1991. p. 18.
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