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Godfrey Philipp Godfrey Philipp i(A144521 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 form y separately published work icon Adventure Island John-Michael Howson , Peter Homewood , Godfrey Philipp , ( dir. Godfrey Philipp ) Ripponlea : Australian Broadcasting Commission , 1967-1972 Z1854433 1967-1972 series - publisher film/TV children's fantasy science fiction

Adventure Island was conceived as a replacement for the axed Magic Circle Club, when Reg Ansett, then owner of the Ten Network, refused to relinquish his ownership of the Magic Circle Club concept to another network.

Like its predecessor, Adventure Island had an explicit pantomime element, with a mixture of light entertainment and songs, as well as a strong focus on a 'good triumphs over evil' morality. Structurally, Adventure Island ran a single continuous story arc each week, beginning on Monday and wrapping up with Friday's episode. Stories often revolved around the machinations of the kingdom of Diddley-Dum-Diddley's various villains: with the exception of the scatter-brained Clown, whose perspicacity often saved the day, the kingdom's inhabitants were largely unable to see through disguises. Similarly, the inhabitants were often reluctant to use their magic powers, reserving them for particularly special occasions (perhaps as a result of the technical difficulties of enacting 'magic' on television). The program also had a science-fiction component in the form of a computer called 'I Know', which could answer any question a child could ask.

The program was originally hosted by Nancy Cato, who had previously worked as host of The Magic Circle Club. When Cato departed, she was replaced as host by
Sue Donovan.

The program's axing in 1972 (which some have suggested was politically motivated, given Godfrey Philipp's involvement in the Australian Labor Party's successful 1972 'It's Time' campaign) caused an uproar, particularly since the program was to be replaced by American import Sesame Street. Despite the 'Save Adventure Island' campaign of several MPs (and the subsequent questions in Parliament), the program's final episode aired on 22 December 1972.

The program did linger in the public consciousness, however: for example, the costume for Percy Panda was recycled on the ABC's Late Show in the form of 'Shirty, the slightly aggressive bear.'

1 form y separately published work icon Hey You! John-Michael Howson , ( dir. Godfrey Philipp ) Melbourne : Network Ten , 1967 Z1832750 1967 series - publisher film/TV

According to Don Storey, in his Classic Australian Television, 'Hey You! was a half-hour sit-com set in a suburban Melbourne boarding house. Described in publicity material as a 'down-to-earth' series, the comedy revolves around the inhabitants of the boarding house - a layabout Australian, an English con-man, an eccentric spinster, a sensitive wimp and a genteel landlady'.

The program was created by Godfrey Philipp and John-Michael Howson, who had been responsible for ATV-0's long-running children's fantasy program The Magic Circle Club.


Filmed in front of a live audience, Hey You! started strongly, but soon began to slide in the ratings. The network changed the program's timeslot and considered changing the format (including removing Sue Israel's character), but ultimately decided to cease production after sixteen episodes.

Of the production values, Storey notes that 'Design Director Brian Thomson assembled a set of the boarding house in the ATV-0 studios, which was almost a complete shell of the real thing. To add authenticity to the set, Thomson spent a few weeks scavenging around building wreckers' yards for old-style stairways, leadlight doors and other typical architectural items from period houses'.

Storey also notes that Sydney writer Romy Hill considered suing the program on the basis that it was close in conception to her own rejected script for a series set in a boarding house, but that nothing came of the lawsuit.

Since both The Magic Circle Club and Hey You! ceased production at roughly the same time, Philipps and Howson moved to the ABC, where they produced the highly successful and long-running children's television program Adventure Island.

1 form y separately published work icon The Magic Circle Club Peter Homewood , John-Michael Howson , Max Bartlett , Godfrey Philipp , ( dir. Rob Weekes ) Melbourne : Channel 0 , 1965-1967 Z1854449 1965-1967 series - publisher film/TV children's fantasy

Godfrey Philipps's first major television production for children, The Magic Circle Club was strongly inspired by pantomime, including not only a mixture of dialogue and song-and-dance routines but also the casting of male actors as elderly female characters, in the tradition of pantomime dames. The program also drew heavily from fairytales, featuring a number talking animals, stereotypical villains, and magical characters.

Initially, the program's storylines ran over a five-episode story arc, beginning in Monday's episode and concluding in Friday's. Later in the program's run, the story arcs were truncated to four episodes, with Friday's episode dedicated to a standalone set in a toy store stocked with anthropomorphised dolls.

The program was axed by ATV-0 in 1967 because of the high cost of production. Though the ABC immediately offered to undertake production, Reg Ansett (then owner of ATV-0) refused to relinquish ownership of the intellectual property, and the aBC instead produced similar but distinct (and equally successful) Adventure Island.

In December 1965, a specially written episode of The Magic Circle Club, 'The Stolen Smile', was performed on stage at the Tivoli Theatre, Melbourne, stage-managed by Sue Nattras, Simon Wincer, and Jim McElroy.

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