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  1. Romper Room
    1953 · Children's television series

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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Romper_RoomRomper Room - Wikipedia

    Romper Room is an American children's television series that was franchised and syndicated from 1953 to 1994. The program targeted preschoolers (children five years of age or younger), and was created and produced by Bert Claster and his presenter wife, Nancy Claster, of Claster Television.

  2. The classic pre-schooler program as seen in North America, Australia, Japan and beyond!

  3. Romper Room: With Sally Claster Gelbard, Nancy Claster, Molly McCloskey, Bruce Edward Hall. A 1953 -1994 children's T.V. show that used hosts, puppets, games, music, short cartoons, and educational segments to teach a variety of subjects to preschool children.

  4. Romper Room (TV Series 1953–1994) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  5. Romper Room was a beloved children's television program that aired in multiple countries from the 1950s to the 1990s. The show featured educational content a...

  6. Hour long episode of Romper Room featuring Miss Molly with commercials. Show 1 of 4. Episode was taped when my brother was on the show.

  7. Romper Room: With Susan Jamieson, Helena Bailey, Patricia Godfrey, Craig Walker. A preschool program created by Bert and Nancy Claster (USA), franchised in Australia, Canada, Japan, Puerto Rico, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.

  8. Jan 1, 1994 · Romper Room was a long running children's television series that ran in the United States from 1953 to 1994 as well as internationally at various times in Canada, United Kingdom, New Zealand, Australia, Puerto Rico and Japan.

  9. Romper Room originated on WBAL-TV in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1953 – the creation of Nancy Claster (the original “Miss Nancy”) and her husband, Bert, who decided from the start to syndicate and franchise the show.

  10. Remember Romper Room? Each program would open with a greeting from the hostess and the Pledge of Allegiance. Then the hostess and her group of children would embark on an hour (or half hour) of games, exercises, songs and moral lessons, which were regularly accompanied by background music.

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