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In the local listings mgazine TV Weekly for the week starting September 13 1963, a half page feature on promoting the start of Space Patrol in Wales that week appeared on page 2. Here is the article reproduced in full along with the picture used to promote it.
Police Keep Peace In Space
Already successful both as a novelist and as the author of puppet characters beloved by the most junior viewers, Roberta Leigh has now entered a third sphere of creative activity.
With the first instalment on Wednesday of SPACE PATROL, the begetter of Torchy, Twizzle and othertoyland fantasies emerges as an inventive new talent in science fiction, and in her 26-part series distinguished by ingenious production techniques she predicts the shape of things to come in the year 2100.
Addressed to older audiences than those who have enjoyed her earlier excursions into television, Space Patrol is likely to become compulsive viewing for the majority of the family. With convincing skill it chronicles the adventures of Captain Larry Dart, the leader of a Space Patrol crew, and his men - Husky, the Martian, and Slim, a citizen of Venus.
The imagined scenes of life a century and a half hence are brilliantly conveyed, given verisimilitude by complicated pseudo-scientific and technical details. For instance, space travel is in vessels called galaspheres, and as distance is annihiliated it becomes necessary to design electronic devices for the instant break-down of language barriers between different races inhabiting the stars.
Space Patrol city itself, a marvel of construction, is possibly the most ambitious model set yet prepared for a puppet series, and with its various buildings, each linked to the other by plastic monorails - the highways of the future - it epitomizes the thoroughness which has gone to the making of this prophetic peep into the days ahead.
© 1963 TV Weekly
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