My work mates had a good time making fun of my Halloween attire.
Among the comments they made was that this was an outfit I'd wear on a Tuesday.
Then Phil said I looked like Mr. Benn's shopkeeper.
As with most children's stories from the late 60's, early 70's Mr. Benn had to have been written under a haze of hallucinogens.
Enjoy another bizarre British children's show.
Mr Benn is an ordinary fellow, living an ordinary life in an ordinary suburban house, at Number 52, Festive Road. One day, Mr Benn receives an invitation to a fancy dress party, and so, donning his bowler hat, he sets off to find a costume to wear. Unable to find a suitable outfit in the usual shops, he turns down a small lane and finds a shop filled with strange and unusual costumes. Inside, Mr Benn asks the fez-wearing shopkeeper if he can try on a suit of red armour; he then enters the changing room, puts on the outfit, and walks through another door... and suddenly finds himself transported back to medieval times. It is the first of many amazing and extraordinary adventures for Mr Benn…
Mr Benn’s adventures originally began in 1967 with the book ‘Mr Benn – Red Knight’, which was written and illustrated by David McKee. After it was published, the BBC commissioned McKee to create a series of adventures for television, and so thirteen fifteen-minute episodes were made; each episode was written and illustrated by McKee, and narrated by the warm and friendly tones of Ray Brooks. Using the magic costume shop, Mr Benn could become anyone - a spaceman, a balloonist, a wizard, or a cowboy, to name but a few - and each story saw him helping people and solving problems using just his wits and intelligence.
The television episodes were originally shown over two years in the ‘See-Saw’ slot on BBC2, and have since been repeated over sixty times! McKee went on to write another book, ‘123456789 Benn’ in 1970, and later adapted two of the television stories for publication (‘Hunter’ as ‘Big Game Benn’, and ‘Clown’ as ‘Big Top Benn’); two more were planned but never appeared, although ‘Spaceman’ and ‘Caveman’ were later published in 1993. Then, in 2001, McKee revisited the character for an all-new story entitled ‘Mr Benn - Gladiator’, which was then turned into a television episode and shown in 2005.
Although Mr Benn was never given a first name on-screen, David McKee himself tells me that he always thought 'William' would suit our bank clerk hero. And whilst it was never made clear how the shopkeeper was able to send Mr Benn on his journeys through time and space, the fact that in ‘Gladiator’ Mr Benn meets Smasher Lagru, a character whom he has met in contemporary times, can surely mean only one of two things: 1 – that Smasher is also a time-traveller, or 2 – that Mr Benn’s adventures are not actually real, but are merely dreams or hallucinations. Personally, I always wondered what else the shopkeeper slipped Mr Benn when he paid a visit to the costume shop…
Mr Benn’s adventures originally began in 1967 with the book ‘Mr Benn – Red Knight’, which was written and illustrated by David McKee. After it was published, the BBC commissioned McKee to create a series of adventures for television, and so thirteen fifteen-minute episodes were made; each episode was written and illustrated by McKee, and narrated by the warm and friendly tones of Ray Brooks. Using the magic costume shop, Mr Benn could become anyone - a spaceman, a balloonist, a wizard, or a cowboy, to name but a few - and each story saw him helping people and solving problems using just his wits and intelligence.
The television episodes were originally shown over two years in the ‘See-Saw’ slot on BBC2, and have since been repeated over sixty times! McKee went on to write another book, ‘123456789 Benn’ in 1970, and later adapted two of the television stories for publication (‘Hunter’ as ‘Big Game Benn’, and ‘Clown’ as ‘Big Top Benn’); two more were planned but never appeared, although ‘Spaceman’ and ‘Caveman’ were later published in 1993. Then, in 2001, McKee revisited the character for an all-new story entitled ‘Mr Benn - Gladiator’, which was then turned into a television episode and shown in 2005.
Although Mr Benn was never given a first name on-screen, David McKee himself tells me that he always thought 'William' would suit our bank clerk hero. And whilst it was never made clear how the shopkeeper was able to send Mr Benn on his journeys through time and space, the fact that in ‘Gladiator’ Mr Benn meets Smasher Lagru, a character whom he has met in contemporary times, can surely mean only one of two things: 1 – that Smasher is also a time-traveller, or 2 – that Mr Benn’s adventures are not actually real, but are merely dreams or hallucinations. Personally, I always wondered what else the shopkeeper slipped Mr Benn when he paid a visit to the costume shop…
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