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Chic-a-Go-Go | |
---|---|
[REDACTED] Chic-a-Go-Go logo | |
Created by | Jake Austen Jacqueline Stewart |
Starring | Jake Austen Mia Park |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | over 1,000 |
Production | |
Producers | Jake Austen Jacqueline Stewart |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Chicago Access Network Television |
Release | May 1996 (1996-05) |
Chic-a-Go-Go is a public-access television cable television children's dance show that airs on Chicago Access Network Television (CAN-TV). The show bills itself as "Chicago's Dance Show for Kids of All Ages".
Show description
The show invites members of the public to participate in tapings at CAN-TV studios. A typical episode features dancing to prerecorded music, as well as musical guests lip syncing to their own songs. Each show is hosted by Jake Austen, who portrays Ratso, a teenage puppet rat, and Mia Park as human sidekick Miss Mia.
Among the show's regular features are the "El Train Line" (based on Soul Train's "Soul Train Line"), the "Fantasy Dance" (which features dancers in front of a green screen), and videotaped interviews with guests.
History and influences
Austen got the idea for the show when he published a story in his magazine Roctober about Kiddie-a-Go-Go, an all-kids dance show produced in Chicago between 1963 and 1970. Austen and Stewart met the show's creators, Jack and Elaine Mulqueen, and were inspired to complete a certification course that would allow them to use the facilities of Chicago Access Corporation. They shot the first episodes of the show in March 1996.
In addition to Kiddie-a-Go-Go, the show is influenced by well-known dance shows such as Soul Train, American Bandstand, and Solid Gold.
In the 2004 movie The Big Bounce, Morgan Freeman's character is seen watching the show.
See also
References
- About Chic-a-Go-Go! Archived May 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- "CHIC-A-GO-GO: Building Their Own Bandstand", Peter Margasak, Chicago Reader, June 12, 1998
- "Chicago Reader". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
External links
Categories:- Dance television shows
- Local music television shows in the United States
- American public access television shows
- 1996 American television series debuts
- 1990s American children's television series
- 2000s American children's television series
- Original programming by local channels in Chicago
- American television shows featuring puppetry