SEEING THINGS: A Memoir - Oliver Postgate / Review



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Children’s imaginations must be fed, should be shaped by positive and nurturing cultural forces. There is a generation out there, having had childhood foisted upon them during the late 1950s and through the following decade of the 1960s, that now smiles wistfully at the mention of Noggin, Olaf The Lofty and Graculus; Ivor and Jones The Steam and their daily adventures in that top left-hand corner of Wales; the yodelling Clangers and their Soup Dragon; and that saggy old cloth cat, the mouse organ and Professor Yaffle, the very distinguished old woodpecker. When Oliver Postgate, the uniquely British genius behind all these characters, died in December 2008 the grateful acknowledgement from the media industry and public alike was deeply affecting, none more so than Charlie Brooker’s very moving and poetic tribute on BBC4’s Screenwipe that same month.

Smallfilms, the company that produced these films for children, came into being in 1957 when Oliver Postgate, then a stage manager at Associated Rediffusion and working in their children’s programmes department, set out to animate Alexander The Mouse using a crude magnetic process and backgrounds painted by Central School Of Art teacher Peter Firmin. 26 of these programmes went live-to-air and after struggling with the use of magnets to animate their characters, they made the move to stop-motion animation on film, originally using drawings and then later using puppets to bring life to such memorable creations.

The success of Alexander The Mouse and a film for deaf children, The Journey of Master Ho, allowed Postgate and Firmin to set up Smallfilms. Based in that studio in the now infamous, disused cowshed at Firmin’s home in Canterbury, Postgate wrote the scripts, animated puppets and provided both the narration and the voices for the characters and Firmin designed the characters and models. It’s Postgate’s charmingly surreal view of the world and his velvety narrations that continue to entertain, amuse and inspire audiences, adults and children alike, all over the world. And if nostalgia could be bottled then the output of Smallfilms, including Ivor The Engine (made in black and white for ITV and later in colour for the BBC in 1975), Noggin The Nog, Pingwings, Pogle’s Wood, The Clangers, Bagpuss and Tottie, all made between 1959 and 1984, would be considered of the highest quality, warmest, fuzziest vintage.



But how did Oliver Postgate arrive at Associated Rediffusion and then go on to influence generations of children and adults? In Seeing Things, Postgate’s memoir, originally published in 2000 and now republished with a new foreword and afterword, respectively, by Stephen Fry and Oliver’s son Daniel, takes the reader on a fascinating, often very funny and very odd, journey from his own childhood to his work at Smallfilms and beyond. Postgate clearly struggled to find his niche in life and tried his hand at practically everything and was alternatively a farm labourer, an actor, an inventor, an artist and a relief worker in Brunswick in post-war Germany.

This meticulous memoir, beautifully observed, wistfully poetic and with a seam of honest self-deprecation running through it, immediately showcases the idiosyncratic, slightly off-kilter but thoroughly charming qualities that Postgate eventually encapsulated in his scripts for Smallfilms. It’s a rare synthesis of life experiences, self-obsessiveness and a particular way of thinking about the world that emanates from the pages of this book. His haphazard path through life, particularly his teenage and young adult years, although initially demonstrating that he was a person who found it difficult to stick with anything for very long, also suggested a creative spark simply in need of the right kindling to realise his burning ambitions.



The book is chock full of witty and extraordinary stories, highly descriptive passages that burst with light, colour, sound. His early childhood sees his mother Daisy aghast at the fact that he’s been stroking the backs of bees in their Hendon garden, his anxiety about the view from the top of a tram in the Finchley Road, and visits to the House Of Commons to see his grandfather, Labour leader George Lansbury, speak in the chamber.

His father Ray, who would become the founder of the Good Food Guide, and mother Daisy would take their children on culturally edifying trips abroad to Denmark and France. With the outbreak of war, as evacuees to Devon, Oliver and his brother John became day pupils at Dartington Hall School. Founded in 1926, the school was renowned for its progressive coeducational boarding life, its minimalist formal teaching and its success in educating the more wayward children of the fee-paying, liberalist intelligentsia of the late 1930s. It clearly left its influence on Oliver even if it didn’t leave him well equipped with the best tools for socialisation.

His own waywardness continued through to his enrolment at Kingston College Of Art. There’s a wonderful story where one day he decided not to get off the bus going to college and simply continued his journey, accepting fully the mystery of his eventual destination. He ended up sunbathing on Box Hill and he acknowledges that his view of the English landscape from the hill, poetically realised in the book, profoundly changed something inside him. In the Foundation Drawing Class at the college there is also another ‘eureka’ moment when his creative impulse forms all the proper connections and his ability to draw is fully realised.



There is also a Goon Show sketch like moment when he describes being called up to enlist in the Household Cavalry and arrived at the barracks determined to be arrested as a conscientious objector. Arrested in the most bizarre and quintessentially English manner, he eventually ended up in Wandsworth Prison. From there he tried various jobs including one as a general farm labourer. Meanwhile, the memoir demonstrates his inventive mind, keen to solve engineering puzzles, in a charming and hilarious passage about the Heath Robinson contraptions he built for his family - a washing machine with a life of its own, a high speed food mixer and a bird-scarer that frightened the life out his aunt Emily.  

By 1946 he’d joined the Relief Team of the Save The Children Fund in Germany and was doling out honey and cod-liver oil to desperate children in depressingly under-resourced orphanages. Returning from Germany in 1947, he joined LAMBA, convinced his career was in acting. His story about his role as a Chinese policeman, at £15 a week, in a production of Aladdin is again lovingly observed and very amusing. The inventor in him flourished again when he was employed as a designer to work on a set of interior showcases at the Festival Of Britain.

In 1957 he married Prue Myers after they both had to negotiate her divorce from her current husband which included arranging to be caught inflagrante delicto in a hotel room by a private detective. It’s at this point that Oliver started working at Associated Rediffusion as a stage manager and prop supplier (a collapsible souflee, anyone?) and his career in making television programmes tentatively began. Through his friend Maurice Kestelman he met artist Peter Firmin, a lecturer at Central School Of Art And Design and they worked together on the Alexander The Mouse transmissions.



And so the story of Smallfilms began and Postgate provides plenty of lovely anecdotes about the making of their various series together, with him generating the ideas and writing scripts and Firmin realising these visually. He recalled the BBC commissioning process as:

"We would go to the BBC once a year, show them the films we'd made, and they would say, 'Yes, lovely, now what are you going to do next?' We would tell them and they would say, 'That sounds fine. We'll mark it in for 18 months from now,' and we would be given praise and encouragement, and some money in advance, and we'd just go away and do it".

If only it was like that now.

After Smallfilms, he would increasingly devote his time to the campaign for nuclear disarmament and to environmental causes. Prue sadly died in 1982 but with his partner, historian Naomi Linnell, he completed several public art and publishing commissions in the 1980s. These included a 50-foot long tapestry Illumination Of The Life and Death Of Thomas Beckett for Kingfisher Books and a mural for the University Of Kent. With Firmin (and Bagpuss) he was awarded an honorary degree by the University in 1987. Later, he blogged for The New Statesman, narrated BBC4’s Alchemists Of Sound documentary in 2003 and in 2007 was the guest on Desert Island Discs.

After Postgate's death in December 2008, Smallfilms was inherited by his son Daniel Postgate. In October 2008, media company Coolabi bought the licensing and merchandising rights to Bagpuss, Ivor the Engine and The Clangers for £400,000, and declared its intention to revive Bagpuss. By 2009, Oliver’s son Daniel, declared that as Coolabi didn’t completely own the rights he would veto any revival of Bagpuss.

Quite right too. Nostalgia shouldn't be tainted by corporatist acquisition and any reader with a passing interest in Smallfilms will cherish the memories of Oliver Postgate in this beautifully written and illustrated book.

Seeing Things: A Memoir - Oliver Postgate (Published November 5th, 2009 Publisher Canongate Books Ltd ISBN9781847678409)

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SARAH JANE ADVENTURES: The Mad Woman In The Attic Parts 1 & 2



The Mad Woman In The Attic

Part 1 / BBCHD - 22nd October 2009 - 4.35pm
Part 2 / BBCHD - 23rd October 2009 - 4.35pm

The character of Rani Chandra is one I've never wholeheartedly warmed to since she was introduced in the last series. Nothing but admiration for Anjli Mohindra and her acting abilities but the series hasn't really explored Rani's ambitions as a journalist and her desire to follow in the footsteps of Sarah Jane Smith. Until now. By referring to what is regarded as one of the landmarks in feminist literary criticism by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar "The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination", I wonder if writer Joseph Lidster was playing with us by using such an evocative title or was he actually attempting to beef up the subtext about the female characters in his story. Judging by this week's episodes, I have to take my hat off to a writer who makes an effort to examine, within the format of a children's drama, some of Gilbert and Gubar's thesis that female characters in male-authored texts can be categorized as either the “angel” or the “monster".

MERLIN: Series 2 - Episode 3 / The Nightmare Begins



BBC1 - 3rd October 2009 - 6.15pm

Immediately Ben Vanstone's name appears on a script for this series you know the quality of writing will be better. This indeed proved to be the case as this is by far the best episode yet in the second series. It showcases Katie McGrath's Morgana, shifting the mystery about her developing powers up a gear.

ANGELS & DEMONS Blu Ray Review And Competition


Angels & Demons

I'm not a Dan Brown fan, let's make that completely clear. I have read The Da Vinci Code and that was just because I felt I was perhaps missing out on something. It's a good yarn and it makes you turn the pages. A guilty pleasure, perhaps. But, alas, Mr. Brown you're just a hack writer churning out potboiler thrillers. You're not going to win any prizes for literature.

And so to Angels & Demons. I also have to confess I did not see the film version of The Da Vinci Code and therefore I really didn't know what to expect with this. Aware of the Vatican's grudge match with Brown over The Da Vinci Code and their dogged refusal to allow this production to film in Rome's churches, I thought we'd get two hours of Catholic bashing. However, Ron Howard's film (hardly believable that this is the same Ron Howard that gave us the superb Frost/Nixon in the same year) falls over itself to be nice to the Pope and the internecine religious corporation that he's the CO of.

SARAH JANE ADVENTURES - Prisoner Of The Judoon Parts 1 & 2



Prisoner Of The Judoon

Part 1 / BBCHD - 15th October 2009 - 4.35pm
Part 2 / BBCHD - 16th October 2009 - 4.35pm

Well, I’m sorry but even as an adult I was bored rigid by that opening story. Is it me but, as each series of The Sarah Jane Adventures escapes onto our screens, isn’t there an obvious deterioration of the writing as it gradually suffers from the need to constantly talk down to its intended audience and cope with budget cuts? Throw in what is clearly becoming a format with a paucity of ideas – crashed spaceship, possessed humans, comedy parents – and a fear of acknowledging that this is taking place in a post-Children Of Earth society and you do start to wonder why they’re bothering. And that’s a shame because good children’s television now resembles one of those rare animals that Stephen Fry searches for in remote jungles and then coos over on Last Chance To See.

MAD MEN Season 3: 'Seven Twenty Three' & 'Souvenir'



Seven Twenty Three - AMC - 27th September 2009 - 10.00pm

S P O I L E R S for non-US viewers!

'It's the soul of your home' remarks the interior decorator about the hearth in Betty's front room. But Betty really doesn't understand this concept because she's never really at home in her own home, is she?

THE WIRE: Truth Be Told - Review



A television show has properly entered the zeitgeist when British politicians start wading in with their opinions in the media. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Grayling came down from his ivory tower and apparently spent an evening out in the wilds of Moss Side with the Greater Manchester Police and the gang warfare they witnessed he immediately compared to the world of David Simon’s The Wire. The reaction from his Labour opposition, police and residents of Manchester all indicated he was stretching the comparison to breaking point to suggest that the levels of drug related violent crime in Manchester are anything like that in the Baltimore depicted in HBO’s acclaimed drama series.



Rafael Alvarez’s The Wire: Truth Be Told, a guide to all five seasons of the series, tackles many of the questions raised by The Wire about the morality of our politicians, our media and our police as well as, not surprisingly, touching on the reactions of Baltimore politicians to the perception the world has of Baltimore because of the series. In Mayor O’Malley To The Wire: Drop Dead, he examines reactions from those in positions of power in Baltimore, its politicians, its police and its workers. Mayor O’Malley and his successor Sheila Dixon were not pleased at how Baltimore was seen by viewers of the series. Dixon emphasised that the Baltimore of The Wire was only a very narrow depiction of the city itself.


I'm a seasoned convention goer. Although I haven't been an avid attendee for some years it has to be said but I know a good convention when it hoists up its skirts and shows me a bit of leg. And this one was positively sluttish in its behaviour!

It was absolutely fitting that the latest one day event from DWAS (and quite honestly it's time you joined) celebrated Doctor Who, old and new, at the legendary Riverside Studios. Time And Again became part of and reflected a great British television legacy at Riverside that proudly boasts the production of the original Quatermass, Hancock's Half Hour and, of course, classic Doctor Who. In fact, if you stepped out onto the Riverside's terrace you'd be able to see the very spot where a Dalek emerged from the Thames in Dalek Invasion Of Earth in 1964.

RECENT BLU RAY RELEASES: The Damned United / The Dark Crystal


The Damned United

Back in April, I covered the theatrical release of Tom Hooper's adaptation of David Peace's controversial book here and therefore I'm not going to rake over the embers of that review on this occasion. Suffice it to say, I think it's a terrific film but it is tonally quite different from the brooding, darker view of Brian Clough that Peace unearthed in his novel. The film is most definitely worthy of your time simply for the central performances from Michael Sheen and Timothy Spall as Clough and his co-manager Peter Taylor.

Looking at this on Blu Ray recently certainly reinforced the visual style of the film for me and it's worth revisiting the film in the HD format just to have the chance to reappraise director Tom Hooper's vision of the period and his compositional style. I would certainly suggest you listen to the fascinating commentary with Michael Sheen, Hooper and producer Andy Harries as it does provide anecdotal material about the production of the film, about how Sheen became Clough and an insight into Hooper's notion that in fact it is visually a film more about Britain, and the North in particular, emerging from the clouds of post-war hardship than it is about capturing the 1970s.

TRUE BLOOD - The Complete First Season / Blu-Ray



True Blood
's first season of twelve episodes is a pretty exhilarating experience. It's also one of the most assured television debuts I think I've seen to date with characters and situations that immediately hook you in and compel you to keep watching the episodes. So, how best to describe the certain 'je ne sais qoi' of the series? Especially when I still haven't fathomed what exactly makes a series like this so attractive, witty, scary, sexy and tragic when it's jumped straight into the rather stagnant waters of that old favourite of ours: the vampire genre.

MERLIN: Series 2 - Episode 2 / The Once And Future Queen



BBC1 - 26th September 2009 - 6.40pm

Now which 'queen' are we talking about here? Simpering little Gwen, who flutters her eyelids constantly enough that I fear she'll start to hover several feet off the floor? Or that en-armoured blonde hunk throwing hissy fits everywhere and treating the castle slaves as a sub-class. What a gay beeeaaatch you are, Arthur!

Now, we love Arthur just because he's such...such...a man! Arrogant, ignorant, thoughtless. Blonde hair, hairy chest. All that...and this word sticks in my throat as I'd vowed never to use it...'bromance' with Merlin. What's not to like? In this second episode Arthur decides that he's had enough of his fellow knights only giving respect because he's the King's son and he flounces off to join the common people and work out what people really think of him. But then he wants to have his cake and eat it. Even though everyone thinks he's off fighting some terrifying beast, he's still around to take part in the jousting competition and uses a substitute to cover his tracks and pretend to be the winning knight. Then he bunks down at Gwen's house, claims her bed and makes her skivvy around without so much as a thank you. Oh, he's such a lad! My sides!

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