Friday February 10 2012
Login/Register| Disco dancing for Children in Need | Send to a friend |
| Written by Matthew Burrell and Felicity Baker | |||||
| Monday, 15 December 2008 11:25 | |||||
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Five members of the Science Department at Kingston put on their glad rags to raise over £400 on Children in Need day.Emma Barrett, Rosalia Schifano, Jessica Hayes, Natalie Thompson and Amanda Camporeale put on afro wigs and platform boots to bring a little bit of disco magic to the university.
Every hour on the hour they jived to seventies classics like Play that Funky Music and Staying Alive, inviting staff and students to join them for a £1 donation. They also toured the normally quiet admin corridors, bringing dance fever to various staff who were more than happy to donate. By the end of the day, the group had raised £416.
It has a long history: The first broadcast was a five minute radio show which went out on Christmas Day and raised a total of £1,143 in public donation in 1927. It was not until 1955 that Children in Need was first televised, although back then it was called the Children’s Hour Christmas Appeal, shown yearly on Christmas Day. This continued through to 1979 and across the years the show was presented by a number of presenters including Terry Wogan who first appeared in 1978. From 1955 to 1978 a grand total of £625,836 was raised for the cause.
Children in Need became an official charity in 1989, and Pudsey bear who first appeared in 1986 later went on to become the official charity mascot and an instantly recognisable trademark of the show.
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