Luna (TV series) explained

Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Episodes:12
Num Series:2
Location:
Company:Central Independent Television
Network:ITV

Luna was a British children's science fiction TV comedy show produced by Central Television for the ITV network which ran for two series in 1983 and 1984. The first series was recorded at the former ATV studios in Elstree, the second at their Nottingham facility.

Premise

Luna was also the name used by the show's two central characters, the first played by Patsy Kensit (1st series) and a replacement by Joanna Wyatt (2nd series).[1] Luna was co-written by Colin Prockter and Colin Bennett; Bennett also acted in it. The show was created and produced by Micky Dolenz of the pop group the Monkees. Dolenz said that the idea for Luna dated back to the late sixties and was based on his daughter Ami; the idea only came into being after he had met Colin Bennett in Hollywood.[2] The character 80H was played by Roy Macready[3] and U2 by Bob Goody.

The show was about the domestic life of an eccentric family group set in the year 2040 in sector 80 of a colony named the Efficicity, although in the setting the characters are not in fact biologically related but assigned to shared living quarters by the bureaucracy. Parts of the setting were decidedly dystopic; in the first episode, Luna is threatened with execution for having lost her citizen's identity card.

A distinctive feature of the show was the language of "techno-talk", used by all of the characters and described as an alternative version of English that had emerged to make it easier for computers to understand human speech. Techno-talk was characterised by the formation of new words from stems that already existed in regular spoken English. It also had echoes of George Orwell's Newspeak, albeit that it had been created for a different purpose. For example, the characters live in a "habiviron" (from habitat and environment); similarly, school is "eduviron"; a child is a "diminibeing" (abbreviated to "dimini") and "regrets!" and "gratitudes!" replace "sorry" and "thank you".

The first season was repeated in the weeks immediately prior the broadcast of the second season, but the programme has not been repeated since then.

Characters

Episodes

Series 2

Converted songs

Many of the episodes of Luna feature "techno talk" versions of classic or music hall songs. These include:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Feature on Joanna Wyatt as the new Luna TVTimes February 11-February 17, 1984
  2. News: West. Roy. Luna is set to take off. 22 January 1983. Liverpool Echo. 28 April 2020. 31966. 2. British Newspaper Archive. subscription.
  3. TVTimes January 22–28, 1983, listing page of ITV Saturday 22 January 1983, credits for Luna include "80H ...Roy Macready"