Author | Margaret Stuart Barry |
---|---|
Illustrator | Linda Birch |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Simon and the Witch |
Genre | Children's fantasy |
Publisher | Collins |
Publication date
|
23 August 1976 |
Media type | |
Pages | 78 pages |
ISBN | |
Followed by | Simon and the Witch in School |
Simon and the Witch | |
---|---|
Starring |
Elizabeth Spriggs Hugh Pollard Naomie Harris Nicola Stapleton Joan Sims |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 25 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 min. |
Release | |
Original network | BBC |
Original release | November 16, 1987 – 1988 |
Simon and the Witch is a children's book by Margaret Stuart Barry, published by Collins, illustrated by Linda Birch. It also refers to the name of the series, which follows on. Simon is a very sensible young schoolboy, who has a friend who is a real witch. She is very silly, and a huge showoff.
In 1985, the first of the stories (The Backwards Spell) was dramatised for Children's BBC, and shown as a one-off episode (called "Simon and the Witch") in the second series of Up Our Street, a series of unrelated wacky stories, each with an different cast and writer, linked only by the unnamed 'street' of the title.
In 1987, the books were made into a television series for Children's BBC, consisting of twenty five fifteen minute episodes, starring Elizabeth Spriggs as the Witch, and Hugh Pollard as Simon. Guest stars included Joan Sims and a young Nicola Stapleton.
In the first chapter, The Backwards Spell the witch teaches Simon how to turn the school gardener into a frog, but forgets how to turn him back. She eventually remembers the spell, and turns the gardener into a man again, claiming privately she never forgot the spell at all. In chapter two, The Lost Magic Wand, the witch loses her wand so Simon takes her to the police station where the witch becomes fascinated with Constable Scruff's uniform, and so becomes a policewoman. The three eventually find the witch's wand, which has been stolen by two thieves who used it as a poker for their fire.
In chapter three, The Witch at the Seaside, Simon takes the witch on holiday to the beach for a day, where she makes the English Channel disappear, not believing Simon's assurances that it is not flooding. She agrees to put it back on the condition she is featured on the evening news, which she is. In The Witch has Measles, chapter four, the witch catches double German measles, so goes to hospital. She sees the trolleys patients are moved round on, and organises races on them, and everyone has so much fun they all feel better and go home again.