is how much swearing went on. In the years Noni Hazlehurst was a presenter on the beloved kids’ TV classic, each episode was filmed continuously, as if it was being broadcast live. The only way to stop the cameras rolling was to let rip with something un-airable.is the second-longest running show on Australian TV, and the second-longest running kids’ show in the world. Hazlehurst was a presenter for 24 years – but that’s less than half of the time she’s been in the public eye.
When she began with the show in 1978, the role she fell into was “very Miss Prim”. Her co-host John Hamblin, in contrast, would sometimes deviate from the script or insert cheeky jokes. “I thought John was a bit slack because he didn’t always have the words 100 per cent correct.”“John Hamblin was a genius!” agrees Hazlehurst. It was only when she watched him on screen that she understood this. “You couldn’t take your eyes off him. He was in the moment.
Trying to fake your way through the job was never going to cut it. “A three-year-old child is a far better bullshit detector than any adult.”The second lesson the kids’ show taught Hazlehurst was that she’s not performing to an audience. “We were playing to one pair of eyes only. The camera was one child. It made me understand that you’re talking to one person at a time.
Source: Education Headlines (educationheadlines.net)
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