Raise a glass to Gerry Anderson

On Boxing Day it will be exactly two years since Gerry Anderson passed away and left a hole in the hearts of his fans.

Whatever you’re doing that day, we invite all fans to raise a toast to Gerry, and the many other people who helped him make the shows we love.

How about making it Anderson-themed? Jeff Tracy’s favourite seems to have been scotch on the rocks, while Victor Bergman had a special bottle of brandy, and Lady Penelope always opted for Pernod while she was in Paris. Even if you’re on duty you could always have a non-alcoholic bottle of champagne (but don’t let the Mysterons touch it).

Cheers Gerry!

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Fanderson survey 2014

The 2014 survey is now open for Fanderson members to complete, and will stay open until the end of this year. The results will be published at the Annual General Meeting in 2015.

This is your chance to feedback to us on everything from club sales items, to conventions to the articles published in FAB. We’d love to hear from you so that we can make Fanderson work even better for it’s members.

To take part in the survey members will need their membership number and the unique security code that is on the mailing label for FAB 79.

One lucky entrant will win a year’s free Fanderson membership. So, good luck!

The security code will change with each FAB. Please keep this safe, as it will also enable you to vote at Fanderson’s Annual General Meeting on Saturday 21st March 2015.

Take the 2014 Fanderson survey

‘…3…: ‘Thunderbirds competition continues!

Thunderbird 3 bagThanks to our friends at ITV Studios, club members can win a Thunderbirds Are Go! promotional bag, in the third in our series of competitions!

Produced specially for BLE, the black bag carries the series title along with the silhouette of Thunderbird 3. Inside the bag is an A5 flyer and a costume patch, sealed in silver foil.

To be in with a chance to win this very special prize, just answer this simple question:

Name one of Graham Bleathman’s unpublished cutaways for the Space Precinct comic (clue: the answer’s in FAB 78)

Send your answer to query@fanderson.org.uk along with your full name and club membership number by 23:59 BST next Friday, 31st October 2014.

The winner will be drawn at random from all valid entries on Saturday 1st November, when we’ll have another competition for you! Two runners-up will be sent the Thunderbirds Are Go! flyer.

The Last Station – exclusive look at design sketches

Hakutan variationsDevelopment of Sylvia and Dee Anderson’s new animated series The Last Station continues apace, and they are keen to give Fanderson members an exclusive look at development sketches for some of the leading characters.

Fanderson chairman Nick Williams said, “I’m delighted that Sylvia and Dee value the support of Fanderson members for this project. Once again, Sylvia brings her flair for character, story and design to such a refreshingly original concept, and I’m sure club members will want to support it as much as possible.”

In just two weeks the Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign has jumped considerably, and the project is getting a lot of high-profile support within the entertainment industry. Your chance to participate in the campaign closes on 4th October.

Contribute to The Last Station

Sylvia and Dee Anderson to develop new animated series – The Last Station

Sylvia Anderson and her daughter Dee Anderson have announced plans for funding of an exciting new animated series!

Set in the distant future on Mykron, a planet far from Earth, The Last Station is a fusion of music, animation and science fiction. The series charts the threat posed to Mykron by the sinister Spyrons, vampiric monsters that feed off the creative energy of music and souls.Robot DJs The Hakitans

Having fully developed the concept, characters and scripts, the Andersons have turned to crowdsourcing platform Indiegogo to raise the money needed to take the project to a finalised stage and produce the first pilot six episodes.

The Last Station has  garnered some high-profile involvement. Cass Lewis of Skunk Anansie fame is the series Musical Director, and will be sourcing musical talent for the series. Thomas Sangster (Game of Thrones) stars in the voice cast.

Sir Richard Taylor, best known for  iconic multi-award winning productions such as Lord of the Rings, Avatar and The Hobbit has described The Last Station as ‘Groundbreaking Television and of its Time’.

The £660,000 goal has  one month to run – The Last Station needs your support!

To find out more about the project, including funding allocation, videos, quotes and character outlines, visit the The Last Station’s Indiegogo page.

John Blundall Has Died

johnblundallJohn Blundall 1937 – 2014

The death has been announced of John Blundall, a legendary figure for generations in the world of marionette puppetry and a key member of the AP Films team of puppeteers and sculptors from Supercar through to Thunderbirds.

The son of a painter and a fine craftsman, John found his way by combining his artistic leanings (he was keen when young to become a performer) and craftsmanship. At school he was keen on drama, woodworking and metalwork.

In 1951 he created his first marionette theatre, The Festival Marrionettes (this was the year of the Festival of Britain), a four-person group of puppeteers and a marionette variety act. This troupe one various talent awards and the young Blundall was greatly inspired by the Russian puppeteer Sergy Obratsov, whose tours of America and Europe helped popularise artistic puppetry.

John was still only fifteen, and the world of work beckoned. John first worked for GEC, gaining a qualification in electrical engineering before leaving to work with marionettes and in graphic design. Like most young men of his generation, John’s career was interrupted by compulsory National Service, but his time at the RAF was spent well, teaching painting and drawing to officers and running a touring variety show.

On leaving the RAF, John worked in variety theatre as a Stage Designer and Stage Director, at the Dudley Hippodrome and the Pavilion Theatre, Liverpool. This form of popular entertainment was declining due to the rise of television, which was sweeping all before it with the arrival of commercial television from 1955. Christine Glanville invited John to join the AP Films team on Supercar, and his skills in woodworking and creating puppets ensured that he created some of the most memorable puppets used in the Anderson series.

The most famous of all his designs was Parker, but Thunderbirds was to be the last series John worked on for the Andersons.  His ideas of puppetry as an expressive, artistic form becoming at odds with the more lifelike approach Century 21 was taking with Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. A puppet design as caricatured as Parker was impossible to imagine among the correctly proportioned designs used in the final three Supermationation series.

Much of his subsequent efforts went into the formation of Birmingham’s Cannon Hill Puppet Theatre, which operated for a quarter of a century and was internationally renowned. Through Cannon Hill John helped to train a new generation of puppeteers who went on to work for Jim Henson and the Spitting Image TV series.

John eventually relocated to Glasgow, along with his enormous collection of books about the theatre and his famous collection of model theatres. There he set up The World Through Wooden Eyes, an exhibition of his life’s work at the Mitchell Library.

John is survived by his brother Derek, and his sister Sheila Maser. Our deepest condolences go out to them.

Tracy Island revealed!

Fans got their first look at the new Tracy Island after the producers of Thunderbirds Are Go! released this exclusive official image!

The new-look Tracy Island, from Thunderbirds Are Go!

The picture was unveiled as a Thunderbirds panel came together to discuss the heritage of the series at COMIC-CON® International, San Diego, in celebration of the show’s upcoming 50th anniversary in 2015.

Despite the obvious differences, the new Tracy Island retain its iconic appearance from the original series – crystal clear waters and an exotic location! Let’s hope for more pictures of retractable swimming pools and tilting palm trees soon…

Executive Producer Giles Ridge said, “It‘s great to have the chance to give fans a sneak peek at the home of Thunderbirds. Tracy Island was a much-loved feature of the original show, so it felt right that we showcase our new-look location with the show’s followers.”

ITV Studios is currently in production with Pukeko Pictures on a remake of the classic series originally produced by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. The series will debut on ITV and CITV in 2015 and has already been sold to Australia’s Nine Network.

David Graham, the original voice of Parker, will reprise his role and is to be joined by Rosamund Pike as Lady Penelope. The Tracy brothers are to be voiced by Thomas Brodie Sangster (Game of Thrones), Kayvan Novak (Fonejacker) and Rasmus Hardiker (Saxondale).

Thunderbirds Are Go! at Weta Workshop: a report

Fanderson's New Zealand agent, ready to set out on in her next mission on her FAB1/3.

Fanderson’s New Zealand agent Sereena Burton reports on her trip to Weta Workshop, the company behind the special effects on Thunderbirds Are Go! Armed with a list of questions from fellow fans, and her pink FAB1/3, she set out to discover more about this most eagerly-anticipated series…

First things first…

In the immortal words of a character from a classic TV series a little younger than Thunderbirds: “Don’t panic, Captain Mainwaring.”

Right, now that I’ve hopefully relieved your concerns, permit me to go over some of what I did during my visit to Wellington in April 2014. I’m as keen as the next person to ensure that Thunderbirds is done with respect for those who created it (especially Gerry Anderson) as well as us fans. So when I decided to visit our capital city this year, I also decided to include a visit to Weta Workshop’s workshop.

As I’m sure you all know Weta Workshop is a New Zealand company that has produced the special effects for such film luminaries as the Lord of the Rings trilogy, The Hobbit, The Chronicles of Narnia and others. They, along with Pukeko Pictures, have been charged with the weighty task of producing the next Thunderbirds series.

When we last holidayed in Wellington we visited the Weta Cave; a museum/store dedicated to all things Weta. But at that point the closest they had got to anything remotely sounding like Thunderbirds was the Tintin movie. Since then they have added a tour to their itinerary, offering a glimpse through the window into their workshop, and I have to say that originally I figured that peering through a window was all that we’d get to do.

I was wrong. It’s not so extensive that you get to stand at the shoulder of each craftsman and watch them work, but we did get to see more than I’d anticipated.

It was a typical Wellington day, although maybe less windy than we might have expected (the nation’s politicians must have been having a break from expelling their usual excess of hot air), so we were a little bedraggled when we got there. As we’d pre-booked our place on the tour a month ago we were assured of our spot, and we got there with plenty of time to look around the museum. Having seen few of Weta’s movies, apart from Forgotten Silver and Under the Mountain, we were only interested in the craftsmanship that went into the models on display. However I did take some photos for movie lovers to enjoy.

Unfortunately these were the only photos I was allowed to take.

Does that “caterpillar” remind you of anyone?

Does that “caterpillar” remind you of anyone?

The museum/shop is not very big and we were crammed in along with the 20 other people who were waiting for the tour, and a bus group admiring the sights. No one was willing to join the trolls outside in the rain, so we spent our time trying to keep out of the way of people getting selfies with Gollum.

At 11.00am we were greeted by Warren Dion Smith (whose credits credits include The Hobbit films, King Kong, and a couple of Lord of the Rings movies). He escorted us outside into the rain, around the corner, through the locked door (which sadly for those fans was not a wardrobe), and into a kind of foyer room. There we got the usual pre-tour talk; although maybe it wasn’t the usual talk as it was only the second tour that Warren had led. The first being the 10.30am one before us, where he’d run himself ragged trying to control them all.

But Warren was great. He was witty, entertaining and more than willing for us to experience these things that he’d helped produce. His role in the company was for creating makeup and hair, but he’d done all that and more. He said that Richard Taylor’s (Weta Workshop creator) vision for employees is to be passionate, innovative, creative, and then have skills. If you have the first three traits then they’ll teach you the last one.

He showed us how props such as weapons are made. The weapons designer makes up to 500 designs and five or so of the best are chosen. Then the CAD (Computer Aided Design) department makes the plans for the individual components. From these moulds are created and the whole thing is made out of nothing more sophisticated than skateboard wheel plastic. Then the finished prop is painted, “dirtied down” (a term we followers of Derek Meddings know well), until they are finally used in the movie… Unless the director decides that scene isn’t going to work and it’s cut from the whole show.

A “miniature” of King Kong’s head. Miniature in that it was about 700mm tall.

A “miniature” of King Kong’s head. Miniature in that it was about 700mm tall.

We all got to hold a ray gun and see the various stages that it had gone through to reach the final product. Warren also let us hold a sword and a flail; the handle of which was held together by a wooden dowel. What’s amazing is that although these have been decorated to look like well-worn pieces of iron weaponry, they’re actually fairly soft, flexible, and light enough that even I could heft them off the ground. Everything’s been made in two halves, so all the props will have a seam running down their length (something to zoom in on with your blu-ray machine); but that seam or any other imperfections are not to be visible on screen. (So much for blu-ray.)

It was about this point where Warren asked if anyone had any questions about past shows or future ones. “…such as Thunderbirds?” I put my hand up. “I’ve got a list!” He suggested that I talk to Abbey later on.

We carried on, seeing a giant rabbit (appropriate for Easter) that both Peter Jackson and Richard Taylor had great delight in wearing and scaring little children with. I’m not surprised really. A lot of Peter Jackson’s early films were quite frightening, so he obviously has a love of putting The Frighteners on us all.

We were introduced to giant WotWots; a children’s TV show Weta produced with Pukeko Pictures in 2009, and one that has generated more income than any of the blockbuster movies mentioned above.

We were also shown the head moulds of various actors and these had been used to create the prosthetics they wore for their films. The manufacturing process that goes into creating these moulds sounds pretty arduous. The actor has to sit very still, with straws up his or her nose to breathe, while dental alginate is applied to their head, neck and shoulders. What follows is 20 minutes of being in darkness and constrained by a suffocating head case; and I would think that if you couldn’t hack the claustrophobia you would wind up as a head case. Warren told us that Elijah Wood was able to cope better than most, because he didn’t need to use the straws and survived by taking shallow breaths.

Replicas of costumes. Weta museum.

Replicas of costumes. Weta museum.

Moving on we came to a working model of the armoured car in Perfect Strangers, with a frozen Sam Neil sitting in the driver’s seat. The dummy was good enough that I knew who it represented even before Warren let us into the secret. So now I can say that I’ve shaken Sam Neil’s hand (and that he’s got a rather limp handshake.) And, as I said, the car was a working model – one of the staffers used it as a wedding car.

Behind a window a master armourer would normally work at making replicas of swords (out of steel) for over US$25,000.00 a pop. It could be even more expensive if you wanted extra details like writing engraved on it. Through another window was all the CNC (Computer Numerical Control) machinery. One boy left school with few practical skills, worked the Weta CNC machines gaining experience, and now he makes one-off perfume bottles for men to give to their wives for $100,000.00 each.

That’s nothing to sniff at.

Warren showed us the various types of chainmail that they used for different shows and characters. They were quite heavy, but were made by slicing up PVC pipe, linking them together, and electroplating them. (Which had to be lighter than using actual metal.) He also told us that he had a bedspread made out of scale chain maill  (which was made up of triangular steel scales). He found it good because it reached body heat no matter what the weather, and was warm in winter and cool in summer.

We learnt that when wearing the fake suits of armour (even though it was made out of the skateboard rubbery stuff), the actors had to limber up for 45 minutes before putting them on, because wearing it was such a workout. However the actors in those roles were so fit and flexible (they were dancers and the suchlike), that they were able to move freely and even skateboard when in costume. (We did wonder about other, eh-hem, human activities, but didn’t like to ask.)

Wellington Airport – there used to be two of these eagles soaring above the food court. That was until a 6.2 earthquake in Cook Strait on the 20th January 2014. Then the “unmanned” one fell, fortunately not hitting anyone. The remaining eagle, Gollum and the fish have all been tethered more securely since then.

Wellington Airport – there used to be two of these eagles soaring above the food court. That was until a 6.2 earthquake in Cook Strait on the 20th January 2014. Then the “unmanned” one fell, fortunately not hitting anyone. The remaining eagle, Gollum and the fish have all been tethered more securely since then.

When wearing armour, eating was done without removing the costume and at the end of the day the wardrobe department sometimes had to clean bits of food from the inside. They also had to clean out the gallons of sweat that the actors perspired, before disinfecting the whole thing ready for the next morning’s shoot. When you consider the number of suits of armour that had to be cleaned, and the fact that the call time on the set was sometimes 2.00am, and that shooting may finish at 7.00pm, then these suits didn’t have a lot of time to dry out! Many times an actor had to put on a wet costume.

Those actors who didn’t have to wear armour, but had prosthetics as part of their costume, had holes in the soles of their “feet” so the sweat could drain out – pooling around them. We were allowed to play with the prosthetic plastic that they use body parts such as arms and faces. This was quite an experience; if a little creepy.

The next piece of technical wizardry that we were shown was a wig that Warren had made by tying individual strands of human hair into a fine net, which gave us yet another idea of the level of detail that Weta go to.

After learning all that we came to a group who were working on various projects. One of the ladies was the aforementioned Abbey and Warren told her that I had a list of questions. I think both were surprised when I pulled a full sheet of A4 paper out of my pocket.

Detail of the eagle.

Detail of the eagle.

I didn’t want to hold her up too much as Abbey was working from a picture on a small scale model of Taipei for *trumpets sound* Thunderbirds! It was only about 20mm high and, like the model makers of 50 years ago, she was using various objects in ways they were never designed for to get the look that she wanted. (I didn’t see any lemon squeezers.) At this stage of completion, the city was painted grey and windows were made of roughly 5mm x 5mm craft mirrors, painstakingly glued side-by-side and in neat vertical columns to make skyscrapers.

If only I had been allowed to take photographs!

On the Fanderson Forum I had asked for people to supply me with the questions that they would like me to ask on their behalf, so I gave Abbey the list and she had a quick read and then asked me to ask her and she’d answer while she worked. So here they are (and I hope I’ve remembered her answers correctly.)

 

Is FAB1 going to be a Rolls Royce again, or have the rights to use the name been refused again, as happened with the 2004 film?

  • She believed that it was going to be a Rolls Royce, but wasn’t 100% sure.

Is Jeff Tracy going to be in the series, and will it essentially be a continuation of the story after the events of Thunderbird Six?

  • We’re going to be seeing many of the same characters, with a few additional ones, and some of the stories are going to be reworkings of the original episodes.

Are the Thunderbirds machines the same or been updated?

  • True to the originals, but slightly updated.

When are we likely to get our first trailer?

  • Abbey didn’t know.

Is it easier or harder to make the puppets than it was back in 1965? Are you still using the same techniques?

  • Sorry, I didn’t ask this one.

Is the production team immersing themselves in the original series whilst making these new adventures?

  • Very much so. She had a good grasp of what was what. And, as an aside, if you check out the crew’s biographies on Weta’s web site you will see that a number of them were inspired by Thunderbirds. One gentleman’s photograph has him holding Thunderbird Two, with Thunderbird Five and Sun Probe in the background; and his bio states that he made a Thunderbird Two with his dad as a child.  Also, apparently the office has Thunderbirds models about the place. (Sounds like my kind of work environment. The best I can do is a photo on my computer’s desktop and sound clips telling me when something’s about to happen, like Virgil calling me Brains and telling me when it’s time to go at the end of the day.)

Is it set in present day or the world-of-tomorrow kind of setting of the originals?

  • The Tracy Villa will have a modern retro feel. The date it’s set in is nebulous, but it’s in the future.

What does it look like compared to the 1965 version? Fresh, retro?

  • Faithful.

Is it going to respect the original material or be a cynical money grabbing abortion?

  • I didn’t quite phrase it that way, but Richard Taylor, the boss at Weta Workshop is – devoted, I think is the word Abbey used – to Thunderbirds, so he’s determined to be true to it. Right down to the way that the palm trees leaves hang. And if that one fact doesn’t inspire confidence, nothing will.

What has happened to Jeff?

  • He’s sitting at Tracy Villa waiting for filming to start.

Will we see Fireflash? That machine was legendary

  • Abbey wasn’t sure about that one. But we do get the Mole and the Firefly.

Will Barry Gray’s Thunderbirds theme be used in any capacity?

  • Abbey didn’t know if they’d managed to get the rights to use the original music.

How different will the series be from a real world tech position? (Green energy, social media, dangers of smoking, factual space exploration, voice interface / A.I. computing?)

  • It’ll be faithful to the 1960s version, taking into account today’s technology and values, but with an eye towards the future.

Has ITV stipulated any specific elements that must be retained from the original series?

  • Abbey is only a model maker, and “only” sounds wrong because without the model makers where would the series be? But she isn’t privy to the machinations at head office level, so she couldn’t answer that.

Was there a specific reason why the episodes are 25 minutes rather than 50?

  • Sorry, I didn’t ask that one.

Will Thunderbirds Are Go! hint at any other Anderson formats (the existence of Spectrum from Captain Scarlet for example) or be a standalone series?

  • She wasn’t aware of any crossovers.

Besides Fireflash, will any other guest vehicles or pod vehicles show up from the original series?

  • Definitely the old favourites, and if, as Abbey said, existing stories are reworked, then quite probably.

What year will Thunderbirds be set in and what will the relative ages of the Tracys be?

  • Abbey didn’t have definitive answers and thought that those questions would be left up in the air.

 

Did I have fun?

Very much so, even when I missed out on part of Warren’s talk because I was gleaning all the information I could about Thunderbirds Are Go. (I could have quite happily popped out the door and followed the next group back in – except that tour was full.)

If you ever get the opportunity to take the tour I would thoroughly recommend it. And if Warren’s the one who’s leading you around you’ll probably hear about the woman who actually had a long written list of questions about Thunderbirds ready and waiting to be asked. Fame at last!

So now you can hopefully relax. International Rescue is in good hands.

  • Thank you to Magnus of Weta Workshop and ITV for validating my report.
Wellington Airport – a giant Gollum fishing above the food court.

Wellington Airport – a giant Gollum fishing above the food court.

Are you a Thunderbirds expert?

Victory Television, the makers of shows such as Who Wants to be a Millionaire, are looking for people who are experts on Thunderbirds for the pilot of a new competitive entertainment show.

If you think you’re up for the challenge, and regard yourself as a Thunderbirds expert, please e-mail Arfan_arif@victorytelevision.com to find out more!

Good luck, everyone!