"Jill Murphy"@en . . "Jill grew up a Roman Catholic, but is no longer practising. Her stay-at-home mother was a \"book maniac\" and her father was an Irish engineer. Jill was born and brought up in London and says that she can\u2019t remember a time she wasn\u2019t a storyteller/illustrator. \u201CMy earliest memory (my mum tells me I was two), is sitting on the kitchen floor surrounded by sheets of drawings.\u201D By the age of six, Jill was stapling her own little illustrated storybooks together \u2013 her mum kept them all and she still has them today! \u201CIt\u2019s great fun to see them all these years later,\u201D she says. \u201CYou can see how my handwriting and drawing improved as time went by.\u201D Jill had made her own enormous library of hand-written and illustrated books while still at primary school. Jill loved primary school, where, she says \u201CI could always draw my way out of trouble if we had a tricky history project!\u201D Jill attended the Ursuline High School, Wimbledon, a very strict academic convent which she hated for the first year. \u201CThe nuns didn\u2019t care that I could draw fantastic pictures,\u201D she says. \u201CWhere was my physics homework!?\u201D Together with the boarding school stories she enjoyed reading, this provided much of the material and inspiration for Miss Cackle's Academy in The Worst Witch series. Jill Murphy began writing The Worst Witch at the age of 15, while still at school. \"The characters in \u201CThe Worst Witch\u201D are all based on my school days. Mildred is based on myself when I had plaits so long that I could sit on them! Maud is based on my little best friend, Elizabeth, and all the teachers (both nice and nasty) are based on my schoolteachers. It was a very strict school and I began to think up the story of Mildred when I was still at the school, aged fifteen. I used to draw little pictures of Mildred, with her pointy witch\u2019s hat, all over my school exercise book. I made them into witches because I thought it would add a touch of magic to the story.\" However, Mildred wasn\u2019t a witch at all in the beginning: \u201CShe had pointy ears because she was in fact a fairy, and was originally in the wrong school \u2013 she should have gone to a fairy school. At the end of this story she starts to grow wings and has to wear a very tight vest to stop them showing. She flies out of the window to find the fairy school and has a wonderful time there.\u201D She started to write The Worst Witch while still at school, but put the book on hold while she attended Chelsea and Croydon Art Schools, having left school at sixteen. She continued to write it during a year living in a village in Togo, West Africa and later while working as a nanny back in the UK. She sent it off to three big London publishers, who all turned it down, and Jill \u201Cput it in a drawer and decided to concentrate on other things instead.\u201D After a spell working as a nanny and in a children\u2019s home, which she loved, Jill had a phone call from a small publisher interested in The Worst Witch. The book was published when Jill was 24 and proved an instant success. Jill continued working as a nanny until the publication of The Worst Witch Strikes Again prompted her to devote herself to writing full-time. She gave birth to her son Charlie in spring 1990. In 1986, a television movie with the same title as her fantasy novel premiered on HBO. It later aired on The Disney Channel during the 1990s around the time of Halloween. The Worst Witch stories have become some of the most successful titles on the Young Puffin paperback list and have sold more than 3 million copies. They were also made into a successful TV series, airing on CITV between 1998 and 2001. \"I was thrilled to bits to have Mildred and Co. in their own TV series. I thought it was better in the early episodes, but I do think that it was basically a good series and people still remember it very fondly. By the way, just in case you don\u2019t remember, the girl playing Ethel was Felicity Jones, who has gone on to be a very high-powered young actress. She is in The Invisible Woman showing at cinemas at the moment.\"- Jill Murphy Jill is also known for her picture books, in particular the popular Large Family picture books, which detail the domestic chaos of an elephant family. The \"Large Family\" is now a TV series on CBeebies and ABC Kids. In 1996 The Last Noo-Noo was adapted as a play and performed at the Polka Theatre, London. In 2007, Jill received an honorary fellowship from University College Falmouth."@en . . . . "Jill grew up a Roman Catholic, but is no longer practising. Her stay-at-home mother was a \"book maniac\" and her father was an Irish engineer. Jill was born and brought up in London and says that she can\u2019t remember a time she wasn\u2019t a storyteller/illustrator. \u201CMy earliest memory (my mum tells me I was two), is sitting on the kitchen floor surrounded by sheets of drawings.\u201D By the age of six, Jill was stapling her own little illustrated storybooks together \u2013 her mum kept them all and she still has them today! \u201CIt\u2019s great fun to see them all these years later,\u201D she says. \u201CYou can see how my handwriting and drawing improved as time went by.\u201D Jill had made her own enormous library of hand-written and illustrated books while still at primary school. Jill loved primary school, where, she says \u201CI "@en . . . . . . . . .