Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

Back in 2008, I posted an old piece of newsreel about a pioneering film studio based in Harringay in the 1940's.

Making some of the UK's first colour cartoons, the studio for British Animated Productions was in what is now the Kurdish Centre in the Gardens. 

The driving force behind the project was American-born George Moreno Jr., who settled in England, probably followng some war service here. The studios were a bold attempt at creating homegrown Technicolor cartoons for British cinemas. To begin with the studios saw real success with a series of five cartoons about a couple of characters called Bubble & Squeak. Mr. Bubble was a geeky taxi driver, and Squeak his sentient car. The cartoons were popular enough to spawn a series of children's annuals.

The studios opened in Harringay in 1947 and were listed in the 1949 Kinematograph Directory as being based at Hawker House, Portland Gardens, Harringay N4 (now the Kurdish Centre).

By 1950, the studio output seems to have dwindled and the businesss folded shortly after as the lifting of wartime restrictions on foreign products saw market flooded with cheap American-made cartoons.

Here are Bubble & Squeak in Funfair:

If you or your wee ones have had your appetite whetted, you can watch the whole series via our playlist through the embedded video above - they will run one after the other.

 

Read all about the history of the building where this business was based here.

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British Animated Productions employed over 20 people to work on the cartoon series. Some were ex-servicemen, some were local and some, hired because of previous experience, may have moved into the area to be close to their workplace.

Below is a list of known employees, grouped roughly by date of hiring -- the first group  was recruited in June 1946 when the studio first opened, a few more at the start of 1947 and a further recruitment drive occurred in June 1947, mainly for more trace-and-paint staff (who copied the animators' drawings on the acetate sheets known as cels).

c. June 1946

Mr E Banks                    Trainee Inbetweener
Harry Carder                 Trainee Inbetweener
S Cox                            Assistant Animator
Miss D Evans                 Trainee Inker & Painter
W Evans                        Trainee Animator
Alice Fenyves                Inbetweener
Pamela French              Assistant Animator
Hugh Gladwish             Assistant Animator
Jimmie Holt                  Animator
Claude A Lipscombe     Layouts and Backgrounds
Harold Mack                Animator
Miss M Musson            ?Admin?
Miss J Ryan                 Trainee Inker & Painter
Hylda Spiro                 Trainee Inbetweener
*A Stanhope               Trace & Paint supervisor *(hired by June 1947)
Roy Stedman              Cameraman

c. Jan 1947

Leslie (Jock) Boyd       Inbetweener (Trainee Animator)
Nancy Ferguson         Models and Colour Mixing
FAG Thompson          Inbetweener (Trainee Animator)

c. June 1947

Miss P Bacon              Trainee Inker & Painter
Mr R Coltham             Trainee Painter/Inbetweener
Mr E A Dutch              Trainee Inbetweener/Assistant Animator
Mr E Hyde                  Trainee Inker & Painter
Audrey Kniveton        Trainee Inker & Painter
Miss V Larter              Trainee Inker & Painter
Miss J Soper               Trainee Inker & Painter
Miss B Taylor             Trainee Inker & Painter
Miss U Wicken            Trainee Inker & Painter

(Hylda Spiro was married in 1949 and became Hylda Rickler)

Does anyone know of any of these people? I am interested in the history of British Animated Productions.

Thanks, Peter. May I ask what drives your interest? Thanks 

I worked for George Moreno for 6 months at Moreno Cartoons and then for Fred Thompson for 15 years. Now, in my retirement, I'm working on a database of British Animation (http://s200354603.websitehome.co.uk/) -- and wish I'd thought to ask more (indeed, any) questions about their past!

Interesting, Peter. Good luck with your quest.

So, I take it then that your list of employees came from company records?

I received the following email yesterday and am publishing it with the author's permission.

I came across Harringay online and the short article you posted on British Animated Productions.

My father worked for the company back in 1947 (+ or -). He was 16 and worked as Roy Stedman’s assistant (Roy was the head of the photographic dept and chief camera operator). Roy left 6 months in to the job and my father was put in charge (at 16!) and was the photographer to shoot all the stills produced by the art department.

My father is now 92 and I’m trying to capture all that he did as a young lad. Whilst he forgets what he did in the morning, he can still remember leaving a film and George Moreno jr’s gold camera on the bus when he was entrusted to take it to Technicolor for coloration. Fortunately, the but bus ran a circular route and he managed to retrieve it after an anxious hour and a half wait. Different times!

Evidently, British Animated Productions was so far ahead of the game and entrepreneurial beyond belief. Unfortunately timing and limited resources finished them off.

It’d be wonderful to expand my knowledge on the company and the people who were there if you could connect me to anyone or provide any updates.

Andrew Thomas

Hi Hugh

I am a relative of Hylda spiro, later Hylda Rickler, my grandmother's cousin.  I have just come across this after looking for more information about her on line.  I can sadly pass on the news that she died yesterday at the age of 96.  She married Lou Rickler and had two daughters, Janet and Diane, and had grandchildren and great grandchildren.  

Sorry to hear that, but glad to learn that she had such a long innings. Thank you for letting us know.

Oh Alison, your post started off so positively but soon saddened.  Really sorry to hear that.

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