翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Play On Words (game)
・ Play On!
・ Play Out of Tune
・ Play party
・ Play party (BDSM)
・ Play Pause Stop
・ Play piercing
・ PLAY Project
・ Play Radio
・ Play Radio UK
・ Play Rapport
・ Play Safe
・ Play Safe (public information film)
・ Play School
・ Play School (Australian TV series)
Play School (New Zealand TV series)
・ Play School (UK TV series)
・ Play Something Country
・ Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)
・ Play Straight or Fight
・ Play Street Soccer
・ Play Strindberg
・ Play Ten Interactive
・ Play That Funky Music
・ Play That Song
・ Play the Funk
・ Play the Game
・ Play the Game (American game show)
・ Play the Game (film)
・ Play the Game (Irish game show)


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Play School (New Zealand TV series) : ウィキペディア英語版
Play School (New Zealand TV series)

''Play School'' was a New Zealand educational television show for children. It was based on the British Play School show.
==Program Synopsis ==
It was first broadcast in New Zealand during the 1975 originally screened twice a day at around 10am and then 2:30pm. Playschool was filmed from what was then TVNZ's Dunedin Studio. The last series screened on television in 1990.
The show was provided by the BBC in "kitset" form. They supplied scripts and also short filmed items for showing "through the windows".
The show starred five toys, which are famously nostalgic for New Zealanders who watched the program as children. They are:
*(Big Ted ): A traditional-style golden coloured teddy bear
*Little Ted: Identical to Big Ted, but much smaller
*(Manu ): A very human-looking plastic doll with Māori features, such as dark skin and hair
*(Jemima ): A rag doll with orange woollen hair
*(Humpty ): A round green fabric toy resembling Humpty Dumpty.
Today, Big Ted, Manu, Jemima, and Humpty are part of a collection at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa in Wellington, New Zealand. The museum also has a large collection of clothing and props from the show.〔(Play School items in the collection of Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa )〕 Little Ted's head was blown up by the film crew after the completion of the final series and can be seen at the Otago Settlers Museum in Dunedin.
The original clock from the series was discovered at a library in Invercargill in August 2009.
In 2006, TV2 started to screen the Australian version of ''Play School''. It features New Zealand presenter Jay Laga'aia who has been on the show since 2000, though the Australian version is significantly different from the New Zealand version, which was similar to the British format of the seventies and eighties.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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