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Great Britain 1996, Remembering the first tv star, a puppet mule

“We want Muffin. Muffin the Mule. Dear old Muffin, Always playing the Fool”. Television was a new medium in 1946, but a new medium needs a breakout star. Even if it was a puppet. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Children’s television had a fifty year history at the time of this stamp. So the stamp shows a black and white image of the BBC presenter Annette Mills and the Muffin puppet. Imagine someone today conceiving a show of a mature and accomplished lady performs original music while a mule puppet is made to dance on the piano by puppetiers who concieved the puppet, voice it and wrote the script.It would have never happened that way now and the Muffin reboots since never stuck to the formula. The formula would have looked familiar to 1940s Britain. There were still traveling kids shows such as Punch and Judy that were similar.

A photo showing how it was done on live TV.

Todays stamp is issue A469, a 20P stamp issued by Great Britain on September 3rd, 1996. It was a five stamp issue in various denominations also available as a prestige booklet that displayed Britain’s children’s tv over time. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 45 cents used. The prestige booklet is worth $16.

The original puppet mule was made by puppet maker Fred Tickner on commission from the husband and wife puppeteer team of Jan Busell and Ann Hogarth. It was part of the puppet circus of the traveling Hogarth Puppet Theatre. The in person show went on hiatus during the war. The Hogarth team was hired by the BBC to work with presenter Annette Mills, a talented singer, pianist, and in her earlier days a dancer. She was also the sister of actor Sir John Mills and aunt to later child star Haley Mills. On TV they were able to recreate the live old style live performance but had the added challenge of debuting new material every week.

The show was very successful and ran until 1955 when Annette Mills died of a heart attack. A few years later the show was reimagined with Muffin the mule getting a lot of friends such as Sally the sea lion and Perguene the penguin. On the new ITV show Muffin lived in Muffinham village and was put upon by the hijinks of his new compatriots. You can sense the modernity creeping in.

The stardom of the puppet was such that in 1959 Lesney Products, then makers of Matchbox cars, made a die cast metal Muffin the mule toy. It was the only tv character they ever did that for. The character was even brought to the Soviet Union with a series of Soviet made episodes. They did however convert Muffin to a donkey.

Well my drink is empty and though there are people here worthy of a toast, it seems wrong in relation to a kids show. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.