Boogie Beebies

Boogie Beebies
Genre Children's television series
Directed by Helen Darrington, Karen Ferguson, Brendan McCaul
Presented by Pete Hillier, Nataylia Roni
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 58
Production
Executive producer(s) Claire Elstow
Producer(s) Karen Pringle
Editor(s) Damian Raistrick, David Horwell, Jim Baker, Gary Hewson
Camera setup John Shuker, Bart Baker
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) BBC
Release
Original network CBeebies
Original release October 19, 2004 (2004-10-19) – 2006 (2006)

Boogie Beebies is an United Kingdom children's television programme, which is produced and broadcast by the BBC. It is aired on CBeebies (both the separate channel and CBeebies on BBC One and BBC Two). It won the Best Pre School Live Action award, at the BAFTA Children's Awards in 2005.[1][2]

Each programme is fifteen minutes long, and teaches children a dance (to a short original song), a different one each week. It was originally presented by Nataylia Roni and Peter Hillier. Nataylia had previous been a member of the "teen pop" group B-Yond who attempted to win the 1997 Great British Song Contest with the song "Lighten' Up". However, from December 2006, it was presented by Hillier alone. It also features clips of children (at home, in schools or in front of bluescreen).

In earlier series, the same programme was shown throughout the week. In the later series, a slightly different programme was shown each day. The only variant being, the verses are taught, and the chorus is only run through once.

The dance is taught segment by segment by the instructor(s). In earlier programmes, the two instructors took turns with each segment. The moves to each day's dance, as well as the theme of the song, are drawn from nature or the world around us (i.e., "The Ocean Motion" features dance moves inspired by various sea creatures). The programme culminates with a complete performance of the song and dance, called "Big Video Time".

The name of the programme comes from the informal verb to boogie (dance) and the Beebies part of CBeebies. The program was advertised using a child dancing "travolta style" to A Fifth of Beethoven by Walter Murphy.

References

  1. "BAFTA 2005 award news". BBC News. 27 November 2005. Retrieved 2 March 2008.
  2. "Past Winners and Nominees - Children's - Awards - 2005". BAFTA. Retrieved 13 January 2010.

External links

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