The Jewish Chronicle

CLAIRE CANTOR

- KIDS TV

THE WHEELS on the bus go round and round…” — the tunes remain long after our nappy-changing days are long gone. For new parents, surviving the sleepless, emotional fog of early parenthood often requires a solid support system of grandparen­t back-up, baby clinic nurses, au pairs, nannies and handbooks, and the lifeline of other mums and dads to share your worries and moans, and accompany you to play-groups and parks.

But now you don’t need to move from your sofa. Welcome to Cbeebies’ The Baby Club the TV offspring of producer and ideas generator Emma Hyman. Inspired by her own local synagogue baby group, Hyman’s programme brings a real-life baby group to our screens, complete with teething babies chewing on wooden spoons, breast feeding and nappy crises, and ordinary mums and dads singing Heads, Shoulders, Knees and Toes, while making that all-important eye contact with their children.

Unlike the various chaotic baby groups I attended, The Baby Club is calm and tidy, a happy, shiny, colourful place where the mums and dads do not look exhausted and the babies are largely perky and engaged unless they have dozed off, only emitting the occasional whinge or whimper.

It’s easy to like it, with its friendly formula of simple songs, repetition, charming animation and friendly, smiling presenters, gently inviting us to check out “what’s in the bag?”

Hyman, 42, has found her dream job combining her love of babies with her creative skills. Growing up in Cheadle in a traditiona­l Jewish family, where her father owned Manchester’s famous deli, Titanics (which sadly closed a few years ago) and her mother was a teacher, Hyman was always drawn to children.

“As a teenager I used to do a lot of baby-sitting,” she says. “I took a year off in Israel with Habonim and worked in the kibbutz nursery. I learnt a lot about kids and what affects them in and out of the home environmen­t, and that good helpings of effective interactio­n with a child

can make a big difference. I loved to entertain the children and I ended up doing drama at university.”

Hyman took her own baby steps in television at Endemol, the production company behind Big Brother. “Endemol was flying at that time; everything they touched turned to gold. I had a year’s training with them, which has stood me in good stead.”

As a young married couple Hyman and her husband joined Brondesbur­y Park shul, where she was a regular at the baby group with her first child Ruby.

“It connected me with lots of other mums, and I found a lovely group of local friends. It got me out of the house and chatting about other things. It was a very special time, and we continued our friendship outside of the group.” Once she took over the running of the group, the seed for The Baby Club programme started growing.

“I have been quietly brewing the idea for a long time,” she says.

“Mulling over how to transfer and recreate the comforting, supportive environmen­t and invaluable connection with other mothers gained at a

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