Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA show presenting art projects and pantomime performances oriented for a hearing impaired youth audience.A show presenting art projects and pantomime performances oriented for a hearing impaired youth audience.A show presenting art projects and pantomime performances oriented for a hearing impaired youth audience.
- Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
- 2 premios ganados en total
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Vision On was a children's show that began in in 1964. It was aimed at deaf children. One of the presenters Pat Keysell used sign language.
By the time I watched it, the main focus was Tony Hart and artwork.
It was still a visual show, with animation, sketches and sign language as well. There was innovative photography and visual effects.
A recent BBC repeat had Hart using seaweed to create a picture. Pat Keysell and Sylvester McCoy end up in a backwards world.
There was an emphasis on silent comedy. Then there was the Gallery as the show displayed viewers artwork. None of it could be returned.
Tony Hart would have his own series in 1977 where he would introduce Morph.
By the time I watched it, the main focus was Tony Hart and artwork.
It was still a visual show, with animation, sketches and sign language as well. There was innovative photography and visual effects.
A recent BBC repeat had Hart using seaweed to create a picture. Pat Keysell and Sylvester McCoy end up in a backwards world.
There was an emphasis on silent comedy. Then there was the Gallery as the show displayed viewers artwork. None of it could be returned.
Tony Hart would have his own series in 1977 where he would introduce Morph.
This show was made with deaf children in mind. The presenters always signed what they were saying It was ahead of it's time I guess Tony Hart could make the most amazing pictures appear out of the biggest messes
We watched this with fascination. There was no talking, only some sign language for the deaf.
The highlight was the Gallery, a look at the best paintings that kids had sent in that week, accompanied by some addictive soft glockenspiel music. It was always my ambition to get a painting on and see my name on the telly, but I was too afraid to send one in. I used to wonder about all the kids who didn't worry about sending in total rubbish. Maybe I was different.
You never quite knew what was going to happen on this programme. There'd be some animation, and a regular sketch featuring a rigid man in a white lab coat and a Hitler hairstyle, called the Professor, who used to cause general chaos by carrying ladders about. It was all silent and surreal. We watched open-mouthed, not quite knowing what to make of it.
Tony was a genial and benign white-haired fellow, perhaps a bit fussy in the way he dealt with his pots and utensils, but we liked him all the same. We had complete confidence in whatever he started to do, with whatever bizarre materials and however incomprehensible it seemed at first, we knew he would end up with something ingenious.
It was an ingenious programme, that instilled a sense of freedom and originality in us. Good to grow up with.
The highlight was the Gallery, a look at the best paintings that kids had sent in that week, accompanied by some addictive soft glockenspiel music. It was always my ambition to get a painting on and see my name on the telly, but I was too afraid to send one in. I used to wonder about all the kids who didn't worry about sending in total rubbish. Maybe I was different.
You never quite knew what was going to happen on this programme. There'd be some animation, and a regular sketch featuring a rigid man in a white lab coat and a Hitler hairstyle, called the Professor, who used to cause general chaos by carrying ladders about. It was all silent and surreal. We watched open-mouthed, not quite knowing what to make of it.
Tony was a genial and benign white-haired fellow, perhaps a bit fussy in the way he dealt with his pots and utensils, but we liked him all the same. We had complete confidence in whatever he started to do, with whatever bizarre materials and however incomprehensible it seemed at first, we knew he would end up with something ingenious.
It was an ingenious programme, that instilled a sense of freedom and originality in us. Good to grow up with.
Vision On ran from 1964 to 1976 under various directors and was broadcast in many countries. It made TV artist Tony Hart, an international star.
The format had minimum speech as it was primarily aimed at deaf children but instead played legendary jazz themes including 'Leftbank 2' which was used for the 'gallery' where viewers drawings and paintings were shown each week.
There were 260x30 minute episodes, a composite of ideas and people, backed by a very good production team. Ben Benison and legendary co-host Pat 'None of your pictures can be returned' Keysell, both worked with Tony Hart on the series as did Sylvester McCoy of Dr Who fame.
It won many prestigious awards (including a Bafta) and was a starting ground for those behind the now world famous Aardman Animations amongst others. It also starred David Cleveland (better known as 'The Prof') and the famous 'Suzanne & Humphrey'. Humphrey was a tortoise and is the main reason why even today, many tortoises go by this name.
It also has a fan site of its own which documents the history and those behind Vision On. More information can be found on Tony Hart's own website.
The format had minimum speech as it was primarily aimed at deaf children but instead played legendary jazz themes including 'Leftbank 2' which was used for the 'gallery' where viewers drawings and paintings were shown each week.
There were 260x30 minute episodes, a composite of ideas and people, backed by a very good production team. Ben Benison and legendary co-host Pat 'None of your pictures can be returned' Keysell, both worked with Tony Hart on the series as did Sylvester McCoy of Dr Who fame.
It won many prestigious awards (including a Bafta) and was a starting ground for those behind the now world famous Aardman Animations amongst others. It also starred David Cleveland (better known as 'The Prof') and the famous 'Suzanne & Humphrey'. Humphrey was a tortoise and is the main reason why even today, many tortoises go by this name.
It also has a fan site of its own which documents the history and those behind Vision On. More information can be found on Tony Hart's own website.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaSpoken dialogue and links were simultaneously interpreted into British Sign Language by the show's host, Pat Keysell.
- ConexionesFeatured in The 100 Greatest Kids TV Shows (2001)
- Bandas sonorasAccroche-Toi, Caroline
(uncredited)
Composed by Caravelli
Performed by The Paris Studio Group
[series theme tune]
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Fokus Pokus
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución30 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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