Rare Still Discovered - Ian Hendry + June Ritchie From The Film, This Is My Street [1964]

Picture above: June Ritchie and Ian Hendry - This Is My Street [1964]

A recent find of what is a rare and previously unseen black and white still, featuring�Ian Hendry and June Ritchie in the film, This Is My Street [1964]

This Is My Street is a 1964 British drama film directed by Sidney Hayers and starring Ian Hendry, June Ritchie, Avice Landone, John Hurt and Meredith Edwards. The screenplay is by Bill MacIlwraith from a novel by Nan Maynard. The storyline is based on a bored housewife living in a run down inner city London house begins an affair with the lodger, a salesman.

Video: 'Cindy goes missing' from This Is My Street [1964]

In the scenes above, Ian Hendry sees his chance to ingratiate himself with Margery (June Ritchie) as they search for her daughter, Cindy (Sheraton Blount) who has gone missing.

Picture: Ian Hendry, June Ritchie and Sheraton Blount.

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Picture: Film poster by Tom Chantrell, This Is My Street [1964]

To see the original concept artwork for this film poster and to read more about the life and work of Tom Chantrell, click on the link below:

Tom Chantrell - Original artwork for This Is My Street [1964]

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Jane Asher + Zena Walker - Lobby Card From Girl In The Headlines [1963]

Picture above:(from l-r) Ian Hendry, Jane Asher + Zena Walker in Girl In The Headlines [1963]

Girl In The Headlines [1963]

Girl in the Headlines (AKA The Model Girl Murder Case ) is a 1963 British detective film directed by Michael Truman and starring Ian Hendry, Ronald Fraser, Jeremy Brett and Jane Asher. It is based on the novel 'The Nose on my Face' by actor Laurence Payne.

Plot

Inspector Birkett and Sergeant Saunders are called in to investigate the murder of a glamorous model. It becomes apparent the girl had led a chequered life and that her acquaintances included drug dealers. Jordan Barker and Hammond Barker are reluctant to help but when the police finally make an arrest, another murder occurs in a seedy Soho Jazz caf�. But are the two murders connected?

Cast
Ian Hendry - Inspector Birkett
Ronald Fraser - Sergeant Saunders
Margaret Johnston - Mrs Gray
Natasha Parry - Perlita Barker
Jeremy Brett - Jordan Barker
Kieron Moore - Herter
Peter Arne - Hammond Barker
Jane Asher - Lindy Birkett
Rosalie Crutchley - Maude Klein
Robert Harris - William Lamotte
Duncan Macrae - Barney
Zena Walker - Mildred Birkett
James Villiers - David Dane
Alan White - Inspector Blackwell
Martin Boddey - Inspector
Marie Burke - Madame Lavalle
Patrick Holt - Walbrook
Douglas Muir - Fingerprint Expert

Jane Asher

Jane Asher (born 5 April 1946) is an English actress, author and entrepreneur, who achieved early fame as a child actress, and has worked extensively in film and TV throughout her career.

She has appeared in TV shows and films such as Deep End, The Masque of the Red Death, Alfie, The Mistress, Crossroads, Death at a Funeral and The Old Guys. She is also known for supplying specialist cakes and kitchenware, as well as publishing three best-selling novels. She was a key figure of 1960s show business society as well as a girlfriend and muse to Beatle Paul McCartney

Asher was a child actress and appeared in the 1952 film Mandy and the 1955 science fiction film The Quatermass Xperiment. She also played the title role in dramatised versions of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass in 1958 for Argo Records. In 1961 she co-starred in The Greengage Summer which was released in the United States as Loss of Innocence. She also appeared in the 1962 film and Disney TV programme, The Prince and the Pauper. British TV appearances included three episodes (1956�1958) of the ITV series The Adventures of Robin Hood and as a panelist on the BBC's Juke Box Jury.

Asher as Juliet when the Bristol Old Vic made a US tour in 1967. She appeared in Roger Corman's The Masque of the Red Death (1964) with Vincent Price, in Alfie opposite Michael Caine in 1966, and in Jerzy Skolimowski's Deep End (1970). Jane Asher acted with John Moulder Brown in Deep End.

On television, she guest-starred in an episode of the British television comedy series The Goodies; The Stone Tape; Wicked Women; Rumpole of the Bailey; as Celia Ryder in the 1981 Granada Television adaptation of Brideshead Revisited; A Voyage Round My Father opposite Laurence Olivier; The Mistress (1985�87); and as Faith Ashley in Wish Me Luck (three seasons from 1987�89).

In 1994, she portrayed the Doctor Who companion Susan Foreman in a BBC Radio 4 comedy drama Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman? Another notable radio appearance was in The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes in 2002, in the episode "The Peculiar Persecution of Mr John Vincent Harden".

In 2003, she appeared in the revived ITV soap, Crossroads where she played the hotel's owner, Angel Samson. After the soap was axed, Asher apologised to Crossroads fans for the way the 2003 series went.

On 18 April 1963, the 17-year-old Jane Asher interviewed the Beatles�at Royal Albert Hall in London, England and began a five-year relationship with Paul McCartney. In December 1963, McCartney took up residence at Asher's family Wimpole Street town house and stayed there until the couple moved into McCartney's own home located in St John's Wood in 1966. McCartney wrote several Beatles songs inspired by her, including "And I Love Her", "You Won't See Me", "I'm Looking Through You", and "Here, There and Everywhere". McCartney and Asher announced on Christmas Day 1967 that they were engaged to marry, and in February and March 1968 Asher accompanied the Beatles and their respective partners to Rishikesh to attend an advanced Transcendental Meditation training session with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. In mid-1968, Asher returned to London from an acting assignment in Bristol earlier than expected and caught McCartney in bed with Francie Schwartz. A fan who frequently hung around Paul's Cavendish Avenue home claims to have witnessed the incident, saying "...Paul brought this American girl home...[and a little while later]...another car turned into Cavendish Avenue � it was Jane. She'd come back...earlier than she was supposed to. Jane went into the house. A bit later on she came storming out again and drove away." Shortly after, Margaret Asher drove to Cavendish Avenue to collect her daughter's things.

On 20 July 1968, Asher announced publicly to the BBC that her engagement to McCartney had been called off, an announcement that shocked many people, including McCartney himself. At the time of Asher's announcement, McCartney was at his father's home with Schwartz by his side. McCartney, who had not been formally broken up with before the announcement, had been publicly dumped on television. Though Schwartz has confirmed that Asher did see them in bed together, she claims that she was not the sole reason for the breakup, and that the couple were on the verge of breaking up prior to Asher walking in. Other people, such as Hunter Davies and Barry Miles, state that the relationship always had major problems, one of those being that McCartney wanted Asher to give up her career after they married, an aspiration of his that Asher would not comply with. Another prevalent problem in the relationship was McCartney's drug use and womanizing. After returning to London from a five-month acting tour of the United States in May 1967, Asher found McCartney to be completely different, confiding in Davies that McCartney had "changed so much. He was on LSD, which I hadn't shared. I was jealous of all the spiritual experiences he'd had with John. There were fifteen people dropping in all day long. The house had changed and was full of stuff I didn't know about."

Since the breakup, Asher has never spoken about her relationship with McCartney. Being asked about it irritates her, as she stated in 2004: "I've been happily married for 30-something years. It's insulting." She did attend the London premiere of the Beatles' last movie Let it Be along with John Lennon's former wife Cynthia, though none of the Beatles was in attendance.

Asher met the illustrator Gerald Scarfe in 1971. Their daughter Katie was born in 1974. They married in 1981 and they had two more children, sons Alexander (born 1981) and Rory (born 1983).

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Liz Fraser - Live Now, Pay Later [1962] - Original Film + Promotional Still

Picture above: Ian Hendry + Liz Fraser - Live Now, Pay Later [1962]. Original promotional still, recently found in the United States.

Live Now, Pay Later [1962] was the first film in which Ian Hendry was cast as the lead - following his departure from The Avengers in 1961. It has often been cited as an influence on the later film - Alfie - starring Michael Caine.

Video: Opening credits + theme tune - Live Now, Pay Later [1962]

This original still above - recently found in the United States - is from a scene towards the end of the film where Ian Hendry ( as Albert) rushes to the aide of Liz Fraser ( as Joyce Corby) after she has been struck by a car.

Picture: Reverse side - Ian Hendry + Liz Fraser. Live Now, Pay Later [1962]

Video: Joyce Coby incident and aftermath - Live Now, Pay Later [1962]

This film is long overdue a re-release on DVD and is currently only available as a moderately good copy from collectors on certain websites. It is also currently available on Youtube (see below), but may be taken down at any moment if flagged for copyright infringement.

Video: Complete film - Live Now, Pay Later [1962]

Review - British 60s Cinema

There is an excellent review of the film on the British 60s website, which includes video clips and pictures from the film:

Extract below:

Live Now, Pay Later is a 1962 film starring Ian Hendry, John Gregson and June Ritchie that takes a blackly comic look at the 'affluent society' (a phrase introduced by John Galbraith's 1958 book of the same name). The Radio Times Guide to Films, which I picked up in a second hand bookshop recently, giving it 4 stars out of 5, describes it as:

"...a remarkably cynical and revealing portrait of Britain shifting from postwar austerity into rampant consumerism and the Swinging Sixties"

I think that's spot on. In the meantime poor old Halliwell's Guide gets it completley wrong as usual, when calling it:

"A satirical farce melodrama which lets fly in too many directions at once and has a cheerless cumulative cheerless effect despite funny moments".

Given that Live Now, Pay Later is not a comedy as such, this is a bit like saying that Cries and Whispers is a bit downbeat, and why don't all these miserable Swedes sort themeselves out?

As old misery guts says though, LNPL does have funny moments, and the character of Albert Argyle (Hendry) is clearly laid out in this opening clip,which also features a highly memorable theme tune, presumably written especially for the film.

To read�the rest of this excellent review article, please visit:

Live Now, Pay Later - British 60s Cinema

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Theatre 625 Ep. 'Miss Julie' - Ian Hendry + Gunnel Lindblom. Review and Original Promotional Still [1965]

Picture above: Ian Hendry (as Jean) and Gunnel Lindblom (as Miss Julie)

Theatre 625 - BBC Production

Theatre 625 is a British television drama anthology series, produced by the BBC and transmitted on BBC2 from 1964 to 1968. It was one of the first regular programmes in the line-up of the channel, and the title referred to its production and transmission being in the higher-definition 625-line format, which only BBC2 used at the time.

Overall, about 110 plays were produced with a duration of usually between 75 and 90 minutes during the series' four-year run, and for its final year from 1967 the series was produced in colour, BBC2 being the first channel in Europe to convert from black and white. Some of the best-known productions made for the series include a new version of Nigel Kneale's 1954 adaptation of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1965); the four-part Talking to a Stranger by John Hopkins (1966) which told the same story from four different viewpoints, and features Judi Dench; and 1968's science-fiction allegory The Year of the Sex Olympics, again by Kneale.

In a 2000 poll of industry experts conducted by the British Film Institute to find the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes of the 20th century, Talking to a Stranger was placed seventy-eighth.

As with much British television output of the 1960s, many editions of Theatre 625 no longer exist, see Wiping. Some episodes, previously thought lost, were discovered in Washington D.C. in 2010. These recoveries included the remake of 1984.

Theatre 625 - Episode 'Miss Julie' [BBC Production - 1965]

Plot

Miss Julie has a torrid, strange relationship with her servant, Jean.

Cast

Jean - Ian Hendry

Miss Julie - Gunnel Lindblom

Christine - Stephanie Bidmead

Credits

Director - Alan Bridges [and writing credit]

Writer - August Strindberg

Translation - Elizabeth Spriggs

Producer - Cedric Messina

Production Design - Fanny Taylor

 

Theatre 625 - 'Miss Julie' Review By Louise Penn

The following review of Miss Julie is taken from the excellent LouReviews website�created by Louise Penn. Before this website had even begun, Louise had already written a very thoughtful piece on Ian Hendry. At a time when there were scant resources online about his life and work, it was refreshing to find such a well written and balanced piece. The many comments beneath that article are also well worth a read:

Ian Hendry - The Original Avenger [LouReviews]

Louise went to see a special screening of the Miss Julie, Theatre 625 TV play at the BFI in 2014 and later wrote this piece based on her impressions:

This entry in the Theatre 625 series was adapted and directed by Alan Bridges, from the play by August Strindberg.� �Miss Julie� is a heady and melodramatic mix of class rivalry, sexual lust, and psychological breakdown which is all the more intense from happening within the space of one night and day (or as in the running time here, 70 minutes).

Jean (Ian Hendry) is a valet who has ambitions to rise in the world and open a hotel, but lacks the capital (and probably the initiative) to live out his dreams.� He freely helps himself to wine from his employer�s cellar, but admits that the sight of the Count�s boots makes him feel �servile�.� Into this frustrating setting steps his mistress, Miss Julie (Gunnel Lindblom) who is bored with her privileged existence and physically drawn to Jean, despite the class differences between them.� She orders him to dance with her, and then teases and taunts him until eventually things progress to a head and their relationship clearly crosses a line which will eventually be fatal to one of them.

My initial feeling was that Lindblom (a Swedish actress) was too over the top in her role, and Hendry too reticent and modern, but as the play developed their styles began to gel, and in Jean�s character we saw that combination of vulnerability, arrogance, cruelty (the killing of the greenfinch)�and sensitivity which characterised many of Hendry�s early roles.� Remember at this point it was still possible to�imagine him succeeding in major leading film roles, even romantic ones, before fate placed him into the realms of character playing.� There�s a moment where Jean jokes about drinking being something you do to keep your partner company which may have echoes of the actor�s real life situation at the time, and I found this a rather sad moment of coincidence; still, this was a good role for Hendry � who looks great, speaks the dialogue well, and is eventually convincing in all the nuances of this complex role.

Bridges� direction does not hold back on bringing the audience into the heart of the play, with extreme close-ups (sometimes of just eyes�or mouths), odd flashbacks in vision and sound, and heightened dramatic performances especially as Julie realises a moment of madness has cost her far more than a fleeting moment of pleasure away from her position of privilege.� Her fall is ultimately tragic, the more so as�you feel it will have no real consequences for Jean and his cook fianc�e, Christine (a small role for Stephanie Bidmead, but she�s good, and you feel she�really is the driving force in their relationship).� He is a weak man who will probably again rise to the bait if he is tempted, but he is destined to be answering the ring of bells in the servants� hall for life.

Thanks to Louise for this review and don't forget to visit her excellent website by clicking on the link below:

LouReviews Website�

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Wanda Ventham - The Lotus Eaters Promotional Still [BBC Production 1972- 1973]

From the archives comes a great still of Ian Hendry [as Erik Shepherd] and Wanda Ventham [as Ann Shepherd]

The Lotus Eaters is a BBC television drama made between 1972 and 1973.

Plot

The series, written by Michael J. Bird, dealt with the lives of various British expatriates living on the island of Crete and their reasons for being there.

The central characters were a married couple, Erik (Ian Hendry) and Ann Shepherd (Wanda Ventham), who ran a tavern called "Shepherd's Bar".

 

Picture: Ian Hendry and Michael J. Bird work on a script.

Ann is revealed in the first episode to be a sleeper agent of British Intelligence, Erik having been a broken-down drunk whom she was made to marry as part of her cover story. Other episodes dealt with the other expats who frequented the bar. The most intriguing character in both series is the Greek police captain, Michael Krasakis (Stefan Gryff). In the second series the British Intelligence aspect is developed, until a clash with Soviet and Chinese agents results in both Ann and Erik having to leave Crete. In the final scene, about to board a plane leaving Heraklion airport, they have a partial reconciliation, since each is the only person the other can trust.

Cast

Ian Hendry as Erik Shepherd
Wanda Ventham as Ann Shepherd
Timothy Carlton as Gerard Mace
Carol Cleveland as Leigh Mervish
James Kerry as Donald Culley
Sylvia Coleridge as Miriam Woolley
John Horsley as Sir Hugh Russell

Location

The Lotus Eaters was filmed in the Cretan resort of Aghios Nikolaos and derived its title from the Lotus Eaters of Greek mythology, where those who ate the fruit of the Lotus tree lost the desire to return home.

 

 

The series was also the first of the Mediterranean-based dramas written by Michael J. Bird for the BBC. The others included Who Pays the Ferryman?, also set in Crete, The Aphrodite Inheritance, set in Cyprus, and The Dark Side of the Sun, set in Rhodes.

Michael J. Bird

For those wishing to find out more about the work of Michael J. Bird, be sure to check out the excellent official tribute website run by Dave Rice.

Michael J. Bird - Official Tribute Website

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Police Surgeon - 'Dr. Brent's Casebook' - New Book Reveals The Compelling Story Behind The Almost Forgotten Series That Led To The Creation Of A Television Legend - The Avengers

The series that launched the career of Ian Hendry and subsequently inspired the creation of a television legend - The Avengers.

In a new book, 'Dr Brent�s Casebook' tells the story of 'Police Surgeon', a short-lived television series - produced in 1960 - that gave Ian Hendry ('The Lotus Eaters', 'Get Carter') his first regular starring role. It made its mark in TV history not for what it was but for what it led to - the world beating show 'The Avengers'.

Unlike its illustrious successor, 'Police Surgeon' has faded from public memory and has rarely been revisited for the purposes of research or retrospective celebration.

Richard McGinlay and Alan Hayes now redress the balance. The cases of POLICE SURGEON are uncovered, described and explored, revealing information about the creation of the series, its production, transmission and narratives � including the mysterious 'Diplomatic Immunity', which never appeared in TV listings � and the circumstances that caused 'Police Surgeon' to be brought to a sudden end after just 13 weeks.

Richly illustrated by Shaqui Le Vesconte, The book is now available in hardback/ softback and digital ebook [epub format].

To find out more about this book and to place an order, please click on the link or image below:

Note: Special Discount Offer -�Lulu are running a promotion that expires at 23:59 on Sunday 2nd April 2017.

Enter FWD15 at Lulu checkout (15% discount), click apply - then enter APRSHIP in the same box, click apply again and you'll get free shipping too. You may also be interested in their other books on The Avengers [see below], for which these codes also apply.

Click Here For Book Details/ To Order -> Dr. Brent's Casebook - Richard McGinlay and Alan Hayes

 

Police Surgeon - Production

The series was created for ABC by Sydney Newman. It was first broadcast in September 1960 and starred Ian Hendry as a police surgeon who worked for the Metropolitan Police. The series was originally produced by Julian Bond who was effectively co-creator of the series having had the idea from meeting a GP in the Notting Hill area of London whilst working on another television series. This doctor also worked as a police surgeon and Bond was interested in writing a series of "low key" dramas which would be distinct from the BBC's "police drama" output at that time in the shape of series like Dixon of Dock Green, and would deal with "social misfits".

Sydney Newman had reservations about this concept but supported the creation of the series and Bond cast Ian Hendry in the lead role. Julian Bond felt uncomfortable as a TV producer, being more interested in the creative side and felt that he was not a robust manager. Leonard White took over as producer on the direction of Sydney Newman. A generous commercial deal had been struck with the police surgeon who was the inspiration for the series and had financial and creative rights in the series, aside from the script writing and just before the first episode was to be transmitted legal action was threatened by this individual, unless he could write the scripts and ABC television's legal department became involved. The series ran for merely 13 episodes and was then cancelled by Sydney Newman. It is possible that the reason for this was the legal and financial disputes surrounding the original concept, as The Avengers appears to have been devised as a hasty replacement that could also serve as a vehicle for its star, Ian Hendry.

When Police Surgeon was cancelled, Newman took both Hendry and co-star Ingrid Hafner to this series, and this may be why it is sometimes mistakenly claimed that The Avengers was a direct sequel to Police Surgeon, with Hendry playing the same character in both. Although there were similarities, this was in fact not the case. This myth has possibly been encouraged because material relating to Police Surgeon is scarce, and that the first episode of The Avengers aired only one month after the final episode of Police Surgeon.

Cast and crew

John Warwick played the regular character of Inspector Langdon, and Hafner played Nurse Gibbs. Guest actors who appeared in Police Surgeon include Michael Crawford, Bernard Archard, Harry H. Corbett, Geoffrey Palmer, and Nigel Stock.

Scriptwriters included Julian Bond, who was also story editor and, initially, producer. He was succeeded as producer by Leonard White, who went on to produce The Avengers.

Archiving

Only one episode of the series, "Easy Money", featuring Michael Crawford, is known to exist. This episode was shown as part of Channel 4's TV Heaven season, introduced by Frank Muir, on 28 March 1992.

Video above: Surviving episode, 'Easy Money' - Police Surgeon [1960] - starring Ian Hendry, Michael Crawford and Ingrid Hafner.

 

Click Here For Book Details/ To Order -> Dr. Brent's Casebook - Richard McGinlay and Alan Hayes

The Avengers - Series 1 [1961]

For those interested in the very �first series of The Avengers, also check out the another excellent book by Richard McGinlay, Alan Hayes and Alys Hayes. It tells the compelling story of how a new television 'vehicle' was created by ABC TV for the talent of Ian Hendry - after Police Surgeon series had ended. Along with Ingrid Hafner, he would be joined by his new partner in crime - Patrick Macnee who would eventually go on to play the lead in the series as the world-famous John Steed.

Picture: Ian Hendry as Dr. David Keel and Patrick Macnee as John Steed - Soho, London.

 

Two Against The Underworld - The Collected Unauthorised Guide To The Avengers Series 1

 

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Janet Munro Interview [Showtime Magazine - September 1964] Plus Jack Lemmon, Susannah York, Cilla Black, Richard Chamberlain, James Bond's Girlfriends - Honor Blackman + Jacqueline Jones And More!

Showtime Magazine - September 1964

Showtime�-�the film magazine - was first published in 1964 as Rank�s competitor to the ABC film Review. Showtime only gave publicity and praise to those films showing in rank cinemas and similar to the ABC film review it contained articles on fashion, pop music and interviews with stars of the day as well as film reviews and advance publicity of films due to be released.�The magazine could only be purchased in Rank Cinemas or by subscription.�The magazine was not as successful as the ABC Film Review and ceased publication by the late 1960�s. In this Septemeber 1964 edition we highlight the interviews published on Ian Hendry and Janet Munro, Jack Lemmon, Susannah York, Richard Chamberlain as well as a classic portrait of Cilla Black, who was celebrating her first anniversary in show business!

Ian Hendry + Janet Munro Interview

Ian Hendry and Janet Munro met when they were both cast in ABC TV's Armchair Theatre production of 'Afternoon of A Nymph [1962]. A year later they were married and by September 1964 Ian had completed his third feature film playing the lead part in Val Guest's 'The Beauty Jungle'.

Original Film Trailer - The Beauty Jungle [1964]

.

Ian Hendry + Janet Munro Interview + Portrait

Showtime Magazine Advert - The Beauty Jungle [1964]

Product placements and film/ movie tie-ins are of course not a new phenomenon. Here Maidenform have ensured that their products are featured prominently!

Showtime Magazine September 1964 - Also Featuring...

James Bond's Girlfriends - Honor Blackman + Jacqeline Jones

Another former Avenger featured in this edition of the magazine - Honor Blackman who replaced Ian Hendry [Dr. David Keel] as Patrick Macnee's [John Steed] new assistant, Kathy Gale. Blackman then left The Avengers TV show when she was offered the part of Pussy Galore in the James Bond film, Goldfinger. She was in turn replaced by Diana Rigg, who went on to play the part of Emma Peel.

Susannah York

Richard Chamberlain - Dr. Kildare

Roy Orbison + Brian Poole and the Tremeloes

Cilla Black

Celebrating her first anniversary in show business!

Jack Lemmon

Also On General Release...

First Man In The Moon And East Of Sudan

Edward Judd, Martha Hyer and Lionel Jeffries in First Man In The Moon and Anthony Quayle and Sylvia Simms in East Of Sudan...

Marnie [Dir. Alfred Hitchcock]

Sean Connery + Tippi Hedren in...

633 Squadron

Cliff Robertson and George Chakiris in...


Irma La Douce

Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine in Billy Wilder's...

Adverts

A selection of classic adverts, typical of the time. Charles Atlas (born Angelo Siciliano; October 30, 1892 � December 24, 1972)[1] was an Italian-American bodybuilder best remembered as the developer of a bodybuilding method and its associated exercise program which spawned a landmark advertising campaign featuring his name and likeness; it has been described as one of the longest-lasting and most memorable ad campaigns of all time.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Brian Clemens - Rare Interview Of Legendary Screenwriter and Producer Rediscovered And Released On DVD

I received a fascinating email this week from Jeff Smart, a producer now working at the BBC, telling me about a rare interview of the legendary screenwriter and producer Brian Clemens�- recorded in the�early 2000's. Brian Clemens once hailed Ian Hendry as "Britain's greatest actor.' Brian's work with Ian included The Avengers, Captain Kronos and the Thriller anthology.

The interview has been rediscovered after several years - having been�feared lost forever when a computer hard drive became corrupted. It has been carefully remastered as part of a limited DVD release.

Extract from Brian Clemens Interview

Both Jeff and interviewer, Henry Holland, visited Brian Clemens at his home in Bedfordshire and shared a few hours reminiscing with their hero about his life in television and film. This then resulted in the 105 minute interview which has now been officially released with permission of the Clemens family - giving a fascinating insight into the man, his life and his work.

Find our more�>�Brian Clemens Interview DVD

 

Way back in the early 2000�s, I used to produce many extras materials for American DVD releases of British sourced material.

At one stage it was mooted that the ATV series Thriller was going to be released, so it got me thinking as to what extras I might offer up.

Myself and long time associate Henry Holland put our heads together and chased up the creator of the series Brian Clemens, with a view to doing an interview.

Brian was only available to us across a few specific weeks, as he was about to take on a theatre project, so we had a fairly short window of opportunity to get this done.

Despite the fact the extras hadn�t been signed off yet, we decided to take a punt and do the interview during this time, and so within a week or so we found ourselves in rural Bedfordshire, driving in convoy up a very long private road wondering if we were in the right place!

When we arrived there were three buildings, an old manor house type building, and two rather oddball farm buildings, one of which was a converted stables.


Picture: Brian Clemens in 1976

It all looked very much like a typical �Thriller� location, weird isolated houses, �were we ever going to be seen ever again?

As we arrived Brian came out of the stables to greet us and soon any nervousness on our part about meeting a TV hero of ours, soon vanished and we found him to be a very entertaining, friendly and interesting guy.

We ended up staying for an evening meal which we ate outside on a table�all very continental, and this began a long time friendship with him and his wife Janet.

I cut the interview together and it looked great, but we became a victim of our own success, as due to its length we couldn�t fit it onto the Thriller DVD release!

The interview was on a hard drive for a few years, which then got corrupted, so for many years we thought the interview would never appear again.

Luckily I had run off a copy of the interview for Henry at the time, and very recently we found it again, so with a bit of technical jiggery pokery , we are now able to present to fans the interview on DVD for the very first time.

We very much hope you enjoy hearing from the man himself, the legend which is Brian Clemens.

To view the DVD and make a purchase, please click on the link below:

Purchase >�Brian Clemens Interview DVD

Credits:
Jeff Smart - Producer
Henry Holland - Interviewer


Picture: Brian Clemens in the 70s

Brian Clemens

Brian Horace Clemens OBE (30 July 1931 � 10 January 2015) was an English screenwriter and television producer, possibly best known for his work on The Avengers and The Professionals. Clemens was related to Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens), a fact reflected in the naming of his two sons, Samuel Joshua Twain Clemens and George Langhorne Clemens.

 

First-rate man of mystery: Brian Clemens, the screenwriter who made The Avengers iconic

The following is an interesting article first published in The Independent - following the death of Brian Clemens in January 2015 - and traces his creative involvement with The Avengers

54 years ago, ABC Television, the ITV franchise holder for the Midlands and North of England, embarked on a new drama series that stood a good chance of success. The leading man was Ian Hendry, who played David Keel, a GP avenging the death of his wife; the producer was Sydney Newman, the creator of the acclaimed Armchair Theatre. The first episode was scripted by Brian Clemens, a young writer who had previously worked for the Danziger brothers, the B-film producers who based their masterpieces around stock footage and borrowed props. Against not inconsiderable odds, Clemens� scripts often managed to make a Danzigers production entertaining. The Avengers would provide a higher profile showcase for his talents.

As it was, Hendry departed the show after the first series � and the two complete surviving episodes that still exist, as well as a fragment of the pilot episode, �Hot Snow�, show a black-and-white London populated with much the same sharp-suited villains as may be found in a contemporary Edgar Wallace film. Eight years later, under Clemens guidance as script-editor and co-producer, The Avengers had virtually created the term �cult television� and had subverted the 1960s spy genre with understated wit and style.

Between 1962 and 1965 Clemens � who died on 10 January � gradually transformed The Avengers, from studio recreations of Soho to the creation of the show�s own mystique. He promoted Keel�s sidekick, John Steed, to the main character and had Patrick Macnee dispense of his regulation spy�s trench coat in favour of a deliberately dandified mode of dress. Teaming Steed with Honor Blackman�s Cathy Gale elevated The Avengers far beyond the conventions of contemporary Bond films, where female characters tended to exist either to conveniently drop dead or fall prey to the charms of 007�s chest hair. When Blackman left the show in 1964 � ironically to star in Goldfinger � the series was extensively revamped, with the John Dankworth theme replaced by a Laurie Johnson score and a film format adopted.

Shooting the fourth season of The Avengers on celluloid not only allowed for greater opportunities of export, it defined the programme as much as the casting of Diana Rigg as Emma Peel. To see just how much The Avengers differed from other British filmed television series of this period, you just have to watch an episode of The Saint or any other �International Man of Mystery� series churned out by ITC. Such programmes had many elements in common, such as their choice of directors and a supporting cast of guest villains � Peters Bowles and Wyngarde and a young Donald Sutherland � and Home Counties locations; but unlike The Saint or Danger Man, The Avengers never strayed beyond its own vision of England, a decision made by Clemens. Under his guidance, Steed and Peel would never find themselves at a cardboard replica Eastern Bloc border crossing in the midst of Black Park � or visit a �France� created by driving a Citroen DS on the wrong side of the road in Hertfordshire.

Instead, the best episodes followed in the tradition of Quatermass II, The Damned or Village of the Damned, where the seemingly mundane hid a country of infinite menace � a theme Clemens would develop for his celebrated 1970s TV series Thriller � and where small communities could still exist in total isolation from the rest of the country. The first filmed episode, �The Town of No Return�, established a world where a branch line could still convey travellers to semi-deserted coastal towns where visitors might disappear with impunity. The change to colour for the fifth season, a move prompted by the show�s sale to US television, actually emphasised this sense of pervasive unease. This is best displayed in �Murdersville�, where the tranquil surface of the sort of village that might have been celebrated in a late Ealing comedy masks a community where none of the standard laws or conventions apply.

Clemens also helped to ensure that the move away from black-and-white did not mean that The Avengers would suddenly emulate the most excruciating moments of The Saint, where Simon Templar had to confront Swinging London via Elstree�s approximation of a �groovy happening�. Instead, the fourth and fifth seasons further remove the show from any social context, creating an idiosyncratic vision of the 1960s with a blend of Pierre Cardin-infused Edwardiana and Lotus Elan sports cars. Steed and Peel�s world makes perfect sense to them � and instead of sub-Bondian intrigue, they chiefly encounter eccentrics, mad scientists and bounders who try to maintain the status quo by any means possible.

Inevitably it was all too good to last. Rigg left the show in 1967 to be replaced by Linda Thorson, by which point the scripts descended into outright whimsy and self-indulgence. The last episode of The Avengers marked the end of the Sixties as much as the Abbey Road album, with the 1970s revival, The New Avengers, a dismal vision of fashion disasters and malfunctioning British Leyland cars that is best forgotten.

Of Brian Clemens� many achievements, one of his greatest was to create a series that Lewis Carroll might have approved of, where the surreal is perfectly balanced with deadpan wit. It was a show that could be erotic and menacing � just look at �A Touch of Brimstone� � and possess genuine feeling: Emma�s farewell to Steed is utterly affecting. And thanks to Clemens, the best of The Avengers does not date, as it created its own self-contained world.

Source: The Independent

A big thanks to Jeff for sharing this story with us and for helping to keep Brian Clemens memory alive.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The Avengers - 'The Deadly Air' [Series 1 Ep.24 - 1961] - Ian Hendry [as David Keel] and Patrick Macnee [as John Steed]

Picture above: Ian Hendry [as Dr. David Keel] and Patrick Macnee [as John Steed] - The Avengers Series 1 [1961]

The Avengers - The Deadly Air

This lovely still looks as though it was taken on�the set of 'The Deadly Air' in which Keel and Steed carry out an investigation within a laboratory.

Series 1 - Episode 24 - The Deadly Air
By Lester Powell

Production completed: 7 September 1961. First transmission: 16 December 1961

When several experiments with a new vaccine go wrong, Steed and Dr Keel volunteer for the next test. One of the scientists, Heneager, appears to be sabotaging the project and a potent airborne virus nearly kills the Avengers. As Keel interrogates Heneager for the truth, Steed is discovering that Dr Craxton is the real mastermind. Steed is convinced that Craxton has fatally poisoned him, until it is revealed that the lethal vaccine had been replaced by water as a security measure.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Sir John Hurt - A Tribute

Picture above: John Hurt as a young 24 year old, as Chalie in This Is My Street [1964]

On Saturday, his agent, Charles McDonald, confirmed his death on Friday in London.

Hurt�s role in the made-for-TV film The Naked Civil Servant, first broadcast on ITV in 1975 � as well as its 2009 follow-up, An Englishman in New York � identified him with Crisp, whose transgressive public behaviour had made him a pioneer in altering public attitudes to homosexuality in the late 1960s and early 70s.

Hurt told the Guardian he had been �warned not to do it � they said you�ll never work again�, but in the event it proved a rousing success; Hurt won several awards, and it transformed him from a mercurial supporting player � in films such as 10 Rillington Place, where he played Timothy Evans. the hapless neighbour of Richard Attenborough�s thoroughly creepy serial killer John Christie � to a genuine international star.

Video: John Hurt - Bafta Acceptance Speech - 2012

Born in 1940 to an Anglican clergyman father and an engineering draughtswoman mother, Hurt grew up in Woodville in Derbyshire before being sent to school in Kent, where he later revealed he had been sexually abused by the headmaster. He later moved to a school in Grimsby, before a spell at art college and then Rada (Royal Academy of Dramatic Art). Having worked his way up through TV bit parts and theatre, his first significant role was in the 1966 film of A Man For All Seasons, as Richard Rich.

After The Naked Civil Servant, Hurt went on to appear in Jerzy Skolimowski�s The Shout (as a composer who is terrorised by a mysterious stranger, played by Alan Bates), voicing the role of Hazel in an animated adaptation of Watership Down, and playing Caligula in the BBC�s celebrated TV adaptation of I Claudius, Hurt took another step upwards with memorable supporting roles in major Hollywood productions � both by British directors.

Alan Parker cast him as an English junkie in a Turkish jail in 1978�s Midnight Express (for which Hurt won a Bafta and a Golden Globe for best supporting actor, and was nominated for an Oscar). The following year saw him take the role with which he arguably made the most permanent impact on popular culture: Kane, the crew member of the Nostromo in the Ridley-Scott-directed Alien, out of whose chest an xenomorph gruesomely bursts.

As Crisp later wrote, Hurt seemed to �specialise in victims�; he next went on to play one of the most heart-rending of all in The Elephant Man, directed by David Lynch. Notoriously, the extensive make-up and prosthetics required to recreate John Merrick�s physical deformities meant Hurt had to endure seven hours of preparation each day; however, the difficulties paid off when Hurt was nominated again for an Oscar, this time for best actor. (He lost out to Robert de Niro for Raging Bull.)

Having been elevated to these heady heights, Hurt then embarked on a blizzard of wildly differing roles, moving rapidly between genres and continents as he went. He was cast in Hollywood films such as Heaven�s Gate and The Osterman Weekend; comedies such as History of the World Part 1 (for his Elephant Man producer Mel Brooks); and British independents such as the Stephen Frears directed The Hit, Champions, in which he played a Grand National winning jockey, and Nineteen Eighty Four, as Winston Smith opposite Richard Burton. His rich, rasping tones were perfect for animation and voiceover: he worked on The Plague Dogs and The Black Cauldron as well as the celebrated Don�t Die of Ignorance public health warning about Aids.

This prolific, eclectic career continued through the 90s and 2000s: he worked with fashionable arthouse directors like Gus Van Sant (Even Cowgirls Get the Blues), Jim Jarmusch (Dead Man, The Limits of Control) and Lars von Trier (Dogville, Manderlay) while making regular outings in Hollywood, including Rob Roy, Contact, Hellboy, V for Vendetta and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Reportedly, though, his personal favourites were Love and Death on Long Island in which he played an ageing author obsessed with a young man, and The Field, Jim Sheridan�s fable of strife in a remote Irish village.

The advent of the British commercial-cinema revival in the same period saw Hurt called upon for Captain Corelli�s Mandolin and the Harry Potter films (where Hurt appeared as the wand-maker Mr Ollivander in the first film, Philosopher�s Stone, and the final two, Deathly Hallows. He continued to alternate between gamey Hollywood fare � such as Immortals and Hercules � with more considered work: he played Control in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy; a centuries-old vampire called Christopher Marlowe in Only Lovers Left Alive, again for Jarmusch; and the guru-like Gilliam in Snowpiercer.

Picture: John Hurt - King's Head Theatre, Islington in the 1970s

Though he always prioritised film acting, Hurt also made regular appearances on stage, including the first West End production of David Halliwell�s cult play Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs in 1967 (before going on to appear in the 1974 film version, funded by George Harrison). However, he was most identified with a series of performances of Samuel Beckett�s Krapp�s Last Tape, which he first played in 1999. Hurt also played numerous roles on TV, including Alan Clark in the 2004 adaptation of The Alan Clark Diaries and the Doctor in the 50th anniversary special episode of Doctor Who in 2013.

Hurt had a turbulent personal life: he was married four times, and between his first and second marriages he had a 15-year-relationship with a partner, Marie-Lise Volpeliere-Pierrot, who died in 1983 after a horse-riding accident. (He had two children, Alexander and Nicholas, with his third wife, Jo Dalton.) In 2008 he admitted to having recovered from a long-term problem with alcohol, that had seen him tentatively grouped with the likes of Richard Harris and Peter O�Toole as a �hellraiser�. However his distinguished work over six decades was recognised with a special Bafta for outstanding British contribution to cinema in 2012, and a knighthood in 2015.

Source: The Guardian

Our thoughts go out to his family, friends and many fans around the world.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry_Southern Star (1969)

George Segal - On Working With Ian Hendry On The Film - The Southern Star [1969]

Picture above: Ian Hendry - an original still from The Southern Star [1969] - which Ian gave to me in 1975.

George Segal - On Working With Ian Hendry

The author of Ian Hendry's biography - Send In The Clowns, The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry - is in prolific form. His latest biography on the life and career of Albert Finney has just been published on January 10th 2017.

See also:

Gabriel Hershman Interview - 'Strolling Player' The Life Of Albert Finney

Now he is busy with his latest project, a biography on the much underrated actor, Nicol Williamson, who Ian worked with on the film, The Jerusalem File [1973] - along with�Donald Pleasence, Bruce Davison and Daria Haplrin

See also:

The Jerusalem File [1973] - Article on the film

As part of the research, he has just been in touch with actor George Segal who worked with Nicol Williamson on a 1968 TV film version the John Steinbeck novella 'Of Mice and Men' - which tells the story of two ranch workers, one of them simple-minded, who look for work and happiness during the Great Depression, but luck is not on their�side.

 

Picture: George Segal and Ursula Andress - The Southern Star [1969]

A year later in 1969, Segal worked with Ian Hendry whilst making the film, The Southern Star (French title: L'�toile du sud) a Technicolor British-French comedy crime film directed by Sidney Hayers and also starring Ursula Andress, Orson Welles and Harry Andrews.

The location for the film is French West Africa, when in 1912 an extremely valuable diamond is stolen. It was based on the novel The Vanished Diamond by Jules Verne. The film's opening scenes were anonymously directed by Orson Welles - the last time he would direct scenes in another director's film.

George Segal -�Quote

As well as providing Gabriel Hershman with a detailed response about working with Nicol Williamson - George Segal also kindly shared his thoughts on working with Ian Hendry:

 

"....as for Ian he may have tippled a bit off camera but when the red light came on he nailed it each and every time - a consummate actor."

George Segal - 17th January 2017

___________________________________________________

George Segal, Jr.�born February 13, 1934 is an American actor and musician.�He�became popular in the 1960s and 1970s for playing both dramatic and comedic roles. Some of his most acclaimed roles are in films such as Ship of Fools (1965), King Rat (1965), Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), Where's Poppa? (1970), The Hot Rock (1972), Blume in Love (1973), A Touch of Class (1973), California Split (1974), For the Boys (1991), and Flirting with Disaster (1996).

He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and has won two Golden Globe Awards, including the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for his performance in A Touch of Class.

On television, he is best known for his roles as Jack Gallo on Just Shoot Me! (1997�2003) and as Albert "Pops" Solomon on The Goldbergs (2013�present).

He�is also an accomplished banjo player. He has released three albums and has also performed the instrument in several of his acting roles and on late night television.

Stills From The Film - The Southern Star [1969]

Ian Hendry_Southern Star (1969)

If you are reading this George, we wish you well and the very best of health.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry

 


Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun [aka Doppleganger] - Rare Original Photographs And The 'Real-Life' Connection To The Cambridge Science Instruments Co. [1969]

Picture above: Ian Hendry (left) and Roy Thinnes (right) in the spaceship from Journey To The Far Side of the Sun (released as Doppleganger in the UK).

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun - aka Doppleganger [1969]

We start off the new year with an article on some recent finds, this time three original black and white promotional stills - discovered in Belgium - from the Gerry and Aylvia Anderson cult movie, Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun.

The film was released as Doppleganger in the UK - which perhaps from a marketing viewpoint was not the most accessible or easily understood title!

Also, have you ever wondered where film-makers source their sci-fi futuristic gadgets, machines and gizmos from for filming? Well the fascinating story below of the 'real-life' connection with the Cambridge Science Instruments Co. helps to explain�some of the story behind the making of this film.

See also:

Doppleganger in Wikipedia

Ian Hendry, Roy Thinnes and Lyn Loring - Promotional Pictures - Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun

Ian Hendry and Loni Von Friedl - Beach Promotional Picture - Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun

Picture: Ian Hendry in Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun - a serious contender for a caption contest!


Picture: Patrick Wymark stands over an injured Ian Hendry in intensive care.

 

Cambridge Science Instrument Company - Cambridge News

Some more background on the making of this film came to light recently. In a couple of fascinating recent article in the Cambridge News, the connection between the film and the Cambridge Science Instruments Company was discovered.

Patrick Wymark who played�EUROSEC director Jason Webb (Patrick Wymark) convinces NASA representative David Poulson (Ed Bishop)�that the West must be the first to send a mission to investigate a mysterious planet located on the same orbitalpath as earth. During the film he is seen in a medical facility with some very futuristic looking machines and gadgets.

The Cambridge News published a picture taken when Patrick Wymark visited the Company and was obviously given a briefing on the machine and it's various knobs and dials!

Picture: Patrick Wymark looks intense as he is briefed on the machine at the Cambridge Science Instruments Company. Photograph courtesy of Cambridge News archives.

See also:

Cambridge News - Science Fiction and Science Fact

Cambridge News - Cambridge Science Instrument Company and Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun

The first article suggested that the machine was a dummy, made by the company for filming purpsoes. Not so. Alan Osborne saw the article and came forward with the full story about the machine and the film.

The following extract from the second article explains more:

One of our archive photos a few weeks back showed British film star Patrick Wymark being shown some fancy-looking equipment produced by the firm, which was going to be used in the movie Doppelganger, also known as Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun, produced by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson of Thunderbirds fame.

The company, renowned for making medical gadgets such as electron microscopes, had been drafted in to lend veracity to the 1969 film, a sci-fi story about two astronauts whose mission to a planet beyond the Sun ends in disaster. One of them (played by Ian Hendry) is killed, and the other (Roy Thinnes) survives, only to discover the planet is a mirror image of Earth, where everything is back to front.

We assumed the equipment shown in our photo was just a mock-up, but Alan Osborne, who was one of CSIC�s top designers, has been in touch to explain that it was a genuine piece of medical kit and that the picture of Wymark, in which Alan is the CSIC representative, was taken at Pinewood Studios, where the movie was shot.

Alan Osborne explained:

�The MCPR was a very successful cardiac monitoring instrument which I sold all over the world, even to Dr Christiaan Barnard, the heart transplant pioneer, in the Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, who was very much in the news at the time.

Alan said: �It was actually taken as a publicity still on the film set. I spent a week operating the machine, called a multichannel physiological recorder, for them on the set. It was certainly not a dummy, but very much a working production instrument. I remember teaching Cy Grant, the calypso singer and actor who played the technician, how to operate it. In fact one of the consoles was damaged by a stage hand who managed to push it over by catching the wheels in a drain cover. It cost the film company their insurance no claims bonus to fund the repairs.

�Sylvia and Gerry Anderson where still together at this time and I�m afraid the space ship launch shots were very much akin to Thunderbirds production standards and not a patch on today�s CGI techniques.�

Picture: Roy Thinnes and Cy Grant and the machine! Photograph by Alan Osborne

Alan sent in a photo of Roy Thinnes hooked up to the machine (above), with another actor, Cy Grant, operating it.

Alan said: �Cy was also popular at the time as he had a daily slot on TV singing calypsos about current news items. I remember he was desperate to become accepted as a serious actor.

�I initially worked in research and development, helping to design electrocardiographs and similar patient monitoring equipment including the MCPR which featured in the Doppelganger film. Somehow Cambridge Instruments found their way onto the BBC and film company files and it wasn�t just Doppelganger that featured Cambridge medical instruments as props. I was often called to the BBC studios in Wood Lane to provide and operate our medical equipment as practical props for plays and movies. I think over the years I did about five Dr Who episodes, several late night horrors and some Doomwatch programmes."

Thanks to Cambridge News and Alan Osborne for bringing this story to light.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute to Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


2016 - A Review Of The Year

As 2016 draws to a close and 2017 waits�in the wings, I thought I'd write a brief review of the year.

Tributes

The loss of many celebrities has made the headlines on numerous occasions - David Bowie, Prince, Alan Rickman, Leonard Cohen, Rick Parfitt, Carrie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds and George Michael to name but a few. Of course, there were also other notable losses in all walks of life.

It remains to be seen whether 2016 was an anomaly, or as a result of many more people becoming celebrities and household names in the second half of the last century.

And in tribute to some of those who played an important part in Ian's life, we remembered the lives of the following people who we lost this year:

Leonard White - British Actor and Television Producer

Sylvia Anderson - Television and Film Producer/ DirectorProducer

Tom Clegg - Director

Wolfgang Suschitzky - Cinematographer and Photographer

A Milestone

This website sprung into life on the 2nd March 2013, with the welcome post and the first of a two-part article looking at Ian's early student life at the Central School of Speech and Drama. Whilst he was there, he met Coco The Clown, who he would go on to work for as his stooge - the two becoming a lifelong friends and a strong influence on Ian's life.

Ian Hendry and The Circus That Came To Town - Part One

In March of 2016, we published the 100th article on the website - a retrospective on the first three years:

Ian Hendry - 100th Celebratory Post: A Retrospective

Some Important Rediscoveries

There were also some significant finds and rediscoveries in 2016, in terms of memorabilia and recordings:

Stills and Promotional Photographs Recovered

Picture: Ian Hendry, Harry Andrews and Sean Connery - The Hill (1965)

Picture: Ian Hendry and Britt Ekland - ABC TV Armchair Theatre promotional photograph - A Cold Peace (1965)

Picture: Ian Hendry and Michael Caine - On the set of Get Carter (1971)

Picture: Ian Hendry and Geraldine McEwan - TV Play - We're Strangers Here (1973)

Picture: Ian Hendry and Jane Blackburn - The Informer - Your Secrets Are Safe With Me, Mr. Lambert (1967)

Picture:�Ian Hendry - Police Surgeon (1960). 'Found' in the ABC TV book, Both Sides Of The Camera published in 1960.

Picture: Ian Hendry and June Ritchie in This Is My Street. Tom Chantrell Original Artwork - with thanks to owner, Terry Doyle.

Recordings Recovered
The Jerusalem File (1972)

A recording was found for this film - in which Ian Hendry had a cameo role - although it does have Finnish subtitles!

The Jerusalem File (1972) - Article and Download

The Avengers - Tunnel Of Fear (1961)

Of course, one of the highlights of the year was the rediscovery after 55 years of the missing episode of The Avengers, Series 1 which was recovered by Kaleidoscope in October of this year.

The full story can be found here:

The Avengers - Tunnel Of Fear (1961) - Missing Episode Rediscovered

Picture: Opening Credits - Tunnel Of Fear, The Avengers (1961)

Picture: The original 16mm film - Tunnel Of Fear, The Avengers (1961)

And finally, thanks for being such an important part of this website. To all our friends - old and new - I wish you a very happy, healthy and peaceful 2017.

Until next year,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute to Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Britt Ekland - Rare Promotional Picture For Britt's British TV Debut In ABC's Armchair Theatre Production Of 'A Cold Peace' (1965)

Picture above: Ian Hendry + Britt Ekland. Rare promotional picture for Britt's forthcoming British TV debut in ABC's Armchair Theatre production of 'A Cold Peace' (1965).

In what was one of my more surreal moments (and there have been many), I found myself chatting this week with Britt Ekland on Twitter. Whilst we were exchanging a few messages, there was a knock on the door from the postman - who had a special delivery for me. And the parcel's contents? It was this black and white promotional photograph that I had ordered two weeks previously from a vendor in the United States. Some things just cannot be explained.

ian-hendry-britt-ekland-abc-tv-armchair-theatre-a-cold-peace-1965-reverse-small-copy
Picture: Reverse side - Ian Hendry + Britt Ekland - ABC Armchair Theatre 'A Cold Peace' Rare Promotional Picture discovered in the States - but original copyright of from the Daily Mirror. It appears that this photo has also spent time in Buenos Aires with the Inter-Prensa!

When Ian Hendry negotiated his contract for his lead role in the first series of The Avengers, it was agreed with ABC TV that he would also be given two roles in forthcoming productions of Armchair Theatre. The first one was significant as it introduced him for the first time to his future wife to be - Janet Munro. The production was, of course, 'An Afternoon With A Nymph' (1962) - also written by Robert Muller.

ian-hendry_britt-ekland_a-cold-peace-1965
Picture: Ian Hendry and Britt Ekland. ABC TV's Armchair Theatre - A Cold Peace (1965). Ian wore make-up and had his hair greyed to give a more mature appearance. This picture was kindly given to my sister by the wardrobe assistant who worked on this production.

ian-hendry_britt-ekland_a-cold-peace-1965-2-copy
Picture: Ian Hendry and Britt Ekland by the swimming pool. ABC TV's Armchair Theatre - A Cold Peace (1965). This picture was also kindly given to my sister by the wardrobe assistant who worked on this production.

from-left-to-right-dickie-davies-philip-harben-dusty-springfield-patrick-macnee-diana-rigg-bruce-forsyth-britt-eckland-ian-hendry-and-1-830x860

Picture: Stars of ABC TV - 1965. From left to right, Dickie Davies, Philip Harben, Dusty Springfield, Patrick Macnee, Diana Rigg, Bruce Forsyth, Britt Eckland, Ian Hendry and David Buck.

A Cold Peace (1965) - ABC's Armchair Theatre

The second Armchair Theatre production occurred some time later - in 1965 - but was also significant for two other reasons. Firstly, it was to be Britt Ekland's debut appearance on British TV

Britt Ekland Armchair Theatre A Cold Peace 1965

Secondly, it also marked the beginning of a very good friendship between Britt and Ian. It is well documented that her marriage to Peter Sellers was extremely difficult - perhaps a gross understatement. But during that testing time, though, a very good friendship grew between the two - both of whom were also facing their own challenges of dealing with young families whilst being in the spotlight.

First broadcast: ABC TV at 9.05pm on�Saturday, 18th December 1965. 90 minutes - black and white. The BFI hold a copy - but not yet released.

Plot:

A middle-aged writer/ journalist (Ian Hendry) escapes from London, his job and failed marriage - to a villa the South of France. There he discovers romance with Karen (Britt Ekland), who distracts him from the problems of his past. A troubled visiting couple, Donald and Gwen Timwood (played by Roy Dotrice and Isabel Dean) add a stark contrast to the proceedings.

Cast:

Ian Hendry - Richard Bligh
Britt Ekland - Karen
Roy Dotrice - Donald Timwood
Isabel Dean - Gwen Timwood
David Phethean - Kirby
Kathleen Breck - Marina

Director - Don Leaver
Producer - Leonard White
Writer - Robert Muller

 

abc-armchair-theatre-1965_12_18_acoldpeace-britt-ekland-ian-hendry-tv-times-cover

Leonard White's excellent book 'Armchair Theatre - The Lost Years' provides further details on this episode. In particular, he mentions two particular issues - one technical and one to do with the censors!

The technical issue was that this production was supposed to be set at a villa in the South of France and so required an opulent setting which included a large swimming pool! This had to be constructed at Studio One at Teddington and the shear weight and volume of water involved led to leaks!

As Leonard White explained in his book, this had a definite affect on the filming:

The tempo of shooting during that recording was raised considerably!

and:

We got the show in the can, but not all the water!


Picture: Ian Hendry and Britt Ekland - pictured in bed in a scene from the television drama series 'Armchair Theatre - A Cold Peace' in 1965. Note the studio assistant pictured just off set - top-left of the photo!

The censorship issue was a little more delicate - at least back then! But as Leonard explained, it was good for both publicity and ratings!

The Press

ITA Censors Britt Ekland Play
- Daily Telegraph

Britt Ekland's TV Debut Censored
- Daily Mail

TV Censor Cuts Britt's Love Scene
- Daily Express

In fact, Leonard White states that only a short piece of tape was cut - just 12 inches long - which he kept for years in his own personal scrapbook!

It was reported that the objections were that:

Ian Hendry fondled Miss Ekland a little too fondly

The particular scene in question was of course extremely mild, apparently Ian was laying fully clothed on bed! How time's have changed.

Of course, videotapes back then were expensive and it was the first time that Leonard White had been involved in having to make such a cut - thus rendering it's reuse impossible. The cost of the tape had to be set against the production's costs.

Our very best wishes go to Britt Ekland - wishing you much peace.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Tribute To Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry

 


Ian Hendry - Magazine Portraits From The 1960s

Picture above: Ian Hendry as Don Mackenzie in The Beauty Jungle (aka Contest Girl). Cutting from a 1964 magazine. The film also featured Jeanette Scott, Ronnie Fraser and Edward Purdom, with cameos by Lionel Blair, Sid James. Joe Brown and Stirling Moss!

Video: Original trailer for The Beauty Jungle (1964)

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Picture: Ian Hendry portrait from a c.1965 edition of Photoplay Magazine.

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Picture: Reverse side of the main feature photograph. Advertisement for Billy Wilders romantic comedy 'Irma La Douce', with Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine. Initially released in 1963, it is based on the 1956 French stage musical Irma La Douce by Marguerite Monnot and Alexandre Breffort.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry

&


Ian Hendry + Constantin de Goguel - The McKenzie Break (1970) - United Artists Promotional Still

Picture above: Ian Hendry as Major Perry and Constantin de Goguel as Lt. Hall in The McKenzie Break (1970)

Ian Hendry and Constantin de Goguel still, recently found in Illinois, United States.

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Picture: Reverse side of still

Video: The McKenzie Break original trailer (1970)

Constantin de Goguel (aka Constantine Gregory)

We like to try and celebrate the work of othes who have worked with Ian Hendry, on both sides of the camera and stage. The following is about Constantin de Goguel.

constantinegregory-constantin-de-goguel

Picture: Constantine Gregory, also known as Constantin de Goguel

He was born of a Dutch father and Russian�born mother. On their divorce, he was given his mother's surname of de Goguel. His mother was born in 1920 in Sebastopol with the White Army during the Russian Civil War, and in 1925 was smuggled out to England, where she was brought up. She studied acting briefly under Michael Chekhov at Dartington, but when his school broke up with the outbreak of war, she then later went to America and worked as a personal assistant to Edward James. She married Onno Liebert (Leebaert) in 1941. Liebert was a journalist and broadcaster who escaped the occupied Netherlands on a bicycle.

Gregory came to England with his mother in 1950 and then attended Dartington Hall School (1950�1961), followed by Trinity College, Dublin (1961�1965) where he read Economics and Political Science. He became President of Trinity College Players and in 1965 went with them to the Edinburgh Festival with a hugely successful late night revue directed by Max Stafford-Clarkat the Traverse Theatre founded by Jim Haynes which had then only been going for two years.

His first professional job was as the back legs of Alfred the Horse in the annual Christmas production of Toad of Toad Hall in London's West End. He also understudied Mr Toad, and played Fat-Face the Policeman. Then he followed the usual path of actors in British theatre with stints in repertory at the Opera House, Harrogate, the Theatre Royal Windsor, amongst others, as well as playing a Blue Fairy in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park, where he understudied Oberon. He performed at the Everyman Theatre Liverpool, toured in a musical directed by Michael Bogdanov, who had been a University contemporary. Constantine joined the Royal Shakespeare Company under Trevor Nunn for the "Roman season" of Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra and Titus Andronicus. (He later appeared as Aemelius in Julie Taymor's film, Titus). In Jean-Louis Barrault's acclaimed production of Rabelaisat the Round House Theatre London, Constantine played the leading part of the MC. He also appeared at the Royal Court Theatre in Keith Hack's production of The Good Woman of Szechuanwith Janet Suzman, Ian McDiarmid and Jonathan Kent.

Meanwhile, his film and television career was taking off, thanks largely to his speaking fluent Russian at a time when Cold War spy stories were popular. Finding that he was being type cast as a "foreigner", he took on the professional surname of Gregory, and started getting more varied roles. His facility for accents and languages saw him portray not only Russians, but Americans, Germans, Spaniards and even a Moroccan. This vocal ability made him in demand as a "voice" in recording ADR, or "dubbing" feature films. He has now done this work, as a voice and group director, on over 350 films. This in turn led to being asked to dialogue coach the TV mini-series Mussolini: The Untold Story with George C. Scott and many other stars, including the young Robert Downey, Jr. and Lee Grant. A parallel career to acting stemmed from this when he was asked to dialogue coach on Bernardo Bertolucci's Oscar-winning film The Last Emperor (1987), in which he also played "The Oculist". He worked on two further movies with Bertolucci, Little Buddha (1994) and The Dreamers (2003). Gregory's skills as a dialogue coach have been mostly used with non-Anglo actors who need to act in English, and in establishing dialect conventions with multi-national casts. He has worked with many distinguished directors and international stars in this capacity, as well as the most distinguished actors in many countries, while continuing to act in feature films and TV movies. Constantine has also worked on radio for the BBC and made many audio story recordings, latterly several for Spoken Ink. Gregory has been married and divorced twice, has two daughters and a son, and lives in London and Hove. He has dual nationality UK/US and speaks fluent Russian and French with a knowledge of Italian, Spanish and German.

Source: Constantine Gregory - Wikipedia

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry - Rare Candid Portrait from Police Surgeon (1960) From The Book 'Both Sides Of The Camera' By ABC Television

Picture above: Ian Hendry investigates a car crash as Dr. Geoffrey Brent, Police Surgeon (1960)

Ian Hendry - A Rising Star at ABC Television

With the recent find of the missing episode of The Avengers, 'Tunnel Of Fear', this latest find gives a glimpse into the career of Ian Hendry, shortly before he landed the role as Dr. David Keel.

In 1960, he was given the part of Dr. Geoffrey Brent in a new series titled 'Police Surgeon'. Whilst the series achieved only moderate ratings success, ABC Television were keen to create a new vehicle for his talent - which of course became known as The Avengers. A new book, covering this early series is currently being written by authors Alan Hayes and Richard McGinlay - who have, of course, also written the definitive book on The Avengers, Series 1.

Both Sides Of The Camera - ABC Television (1960)

The following is taken from a lovely book produced by ABC Television to celebrate the early years. 'Both Sides Of The Camera, A Souvenir Book Of Television Programmes And The People Who Make Them' was published in 1960 by Weidenfeld and Nicholson.

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Picture: Ian Hendry on first side of a double page feature titled 'Building a reputation' Photograph by Warwick Bedford

The text from this article is reproduced below:

Building a reputation

Developing young talent has always been an objective of ABC Television. The current drama season brought stardom to Ian Hendry, a young actor who gave a fine performance last Spring in Return To Base, an episode of Inside Story, the hour-long drama series about life in a block of flats which Ted Willis edited for Sunday afternoon viewing. During the Summer, Ian Hendry added to his reputation with John Gregson in Flight From Treason; ABC then gave him his own series with the title role in Police Surgeon, edited by Julian Bond.
Below: Ian Hendry is seen in Inside Story with Margaret Anderson and Ruth Dunning;oppposite: he investigates a car crash as Dr. Geoffrey Brent, Police Surgeon

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Picture: Front Cover - 'Both Sides Of The Camera' By ABC TV (1960). Published By Weidenfeld and Nicholson.

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Picture: Rear Cover - 'Both Sides Of The Camera' By ABC TV (1960). Published By Weidenfeld and Nicholson. The ITA Regions are illustrated as they were in Christmas 1960!

Thanks To Michael Harrison - Sound Crew Member At ABC Television

I'd like to thank Michael for letting me know about this book, without which I'd never have found this feature and photographs of Ian.

Also,�for sharing some of his recollections of working at ABC in those early days. Involved with the sound crew, Michael worked on the first series of The Avengers, including the episodes which were broadcast live, and many other programmes as well. His memories�of how nerve-wracking it was to co-ordinate the pre-recorded sound with the live shows, brings home just how pioneering those early days of television really were.

The picture, below is taken from the front inside cover of the book and shows an ABC Television studio in action during a production. �And if you look very carefully, you can see a young Michael Harrison operating the microphone boom - at the centre of it all!

abc-tv-studio-1960

Picture: ABC Television Studio in action. Michael Harrison operates the microphone boom in the centre of the picture.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry

 

 


David Warner - BBC Radio Interview in which he discusses his life, work and Ian Hendry - who also appeared as Morgan in 'A Suitable Case For Treatment'

Picture above: David Warner from a photoshoot by Rory Lewis

In this BBC interview from 2009, David Warner talks about his life and work including his well known role as Morgan in the film version of 'A Suitable Case For Treatment' (1966). He discusses the challenges of playing the part - a role which Ian Hendry also took on�in the BBC production of 1962.

During this interview [from 8mins 5sec], David refers to this earlier performance and in a few brief but telling words, states that 'Ian Hendry was Morgan'.

We appreciate David's humility, but regardless of comparisons it gives us a glimpse of just how powerful Ian's performance must have been. Sadly, that BBC productions is missing, presumed wiped - but we live in hope that one day it will be discovered.

David Warner - BBC Radio Interview (2009)

 

Morgan, A Suitable Case For Treatment - Official Trailer (1966)

 

David Warner - Actor

David Hattersley Warner (born 29 July 1941) is an English actor who is known for playing both romantic leads and sinister or villainous characters across a range of media, including stage, film, animation, television and video games. He has a worldwide following for his many appearances in the Star Trek TV and feature-film franchise.


Picture: David Warner by acclaimed photographer,�Cecil Beaton (January 1965)

Warner is known for such films as Morgan � A Suitable Case for Treatment, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Tom Jones, The Ballad of Cable Hogue, Cross of Iron, The Omen, Holocaust, Portrait in Evil, Time Bandits, Tron, Titanic, and various characters in the Star Trek franchise including Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country and Star Trek: The Next Generation. In 1981, he won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Special for his portrayal of Pomponius Falco in the television miniseries Masada.

For more information visit:

The Official David Warner Website

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry

 


Wolfgang Suschitzky - Cinematographer and Photographer, Dies Aged 104. His many credits include Get Carter (1971)

Picture above: Wolfgang Suschitzky - Photographer and Cinematographer (2008)

With news of the recent death of the great cinematographer and photographer Wolfgang Suzchitzky - whose work includes the classic film Get Carter (1971) - we pay tribute to his life and work.

Video: Wolfgang Suzchitzky discusses the making of Get Carter (1971)

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Picture:�Wolfgang Suschitzky (1932)

Wolfgang Suschitzky, who has died aged 104, was a distinguished photographer and cinematographer most famous for the Michael Caine crime thriller Get Carter. As a photographer, he specialised in children and animals but his most celebrated work was a series of pictures he took of London in the 1930s.

See: Wolfgang Suschitzky Photography

He frequently worked in Scotland - so much so that he was once given the nickname McSuschitzky. His 1944 film Children of the City looked at poverty and delinquency in Dundee. He also made documentary films for the coal board and shot Ring of Bright Water, the movie based on Gavin Maxwell's life with otters on the West Coast. In 2002, his photography was also the subject of a major exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh.

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Picture: On the set of Get Carter (1971). Michael Caine, George Sewell, Mike Hodges and Wolfgang Suschitzky, Cinematographer.

In his professional life, he was one of the mainstays of the pre- and post-war British film industry, but he was Viennese by birth and upbringing. His parents Wilhelm and Adele were Jews who owned a radical bookshop in Vienna, but the fact that it stocked titles on sexual education and women's rights incurred the wrath of the authorities and the situation only worsened with the rise of fascism in the 1930s.

In an interview with The Herald, Suschitzky spoke of the tension his parents were under at the time. "We had a kind of civil war in Austria in 1934,'' he said. ''The army shot into working-class flats with artillery. My father's position became very difficult, not only as a socialist, but as a Jew. The shop didn't pay its way any more, and he committed suicide. He had been suffering from depression.''

Suschitzky himself left Vienna in 1934 for Amsterdam where he met and married Helena Voute, with whom he opened a photography studio. When she left him, he came to England and began to develop his work as a photographer, encouraged by his sister and fellow photographer Edith Tudor Hart.

His best-known photographs remain those he took of passers-by on Charing Cross Road in London soon after he arrived in the city, but his great passion was photographing animals.

He then started to work as a cinematographer, firstly in the British documentary movement of the 1930s, before moving into feature films and television in the 1950s.

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Picture: Credit Wolfgang Suschitzky

In all he worked on more than 100 films and television programmes in all genres. The Get Carter job came about when the director Mike Hodges saw the Anthony Newley film The Small World of Sammy Lee, which Suschitzky photographed, and realised it had the gritty realism that he wanted.

Suschitzky's other film work included 1969's Ring of Bright Water, which was filmed in Argyll, Entertaining Mr Sloane in 1970, and Theatre of Blood with Vincent Price in 1973. In the 1980s, he was also cinematographer on ITV's adaptation of the Worzel Gummidge books starring Jon Pertwee.

Throughout his television and film career, Suschitzky was always taking still pictures as well, often on the same sets and locations. His political beliefs also led to him charting the rise of CND in the 1950s.

''I've been a socialist all my life and I'm not ashamed of it,'' he said in 2002. ''I was against the nuclear bomb and I was against wars like the Gulf War and I'm still against the war in Afghanistan.''

He also admitted to being enthralled by the Soviet experiment. ''Unfortunately politicians get hold of something and then convert it into something to their advantage. When the Russian Revolution happened we thought it was a wonderful thing and we thought it would change the whole world and we were very enthusiastic in supporting them, but the very good idea of socialism was somehow converted into dictatorship. It took a long time until we realised it.''

After finishing his career in television, Suschitzky officially retired at the age of 80, although he continued to take pictures and sell prints of his old negatives. His reputation underwent something of a resurgence in the 90s and his work was widely exhibited.

Duncan Forbes, the curator of An Exile's Eye, the exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh, said Suschitzky should be considered one of the great classic documentary photographers.

"He was the first photographer in Britain to bring a new informality to animal photography,'' said Forbes, ''and he introduced a much more informal way of seeing children which broke with the format of the rather staid Victorian portrait.''

Suschitzky was more than happy to have lived for most of his life in London, although he said he never felt British no matter how long he remained here. "One is never an Englishman, even if you've lived here for 65 years," he told The Herald. "Unless you go to school here, you don't feel English.

In 2013, he returned to Scotland when his sister Edith Tudor Hart was also the subject of an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. Tudor Hart had gone to become one of the most important female photographers to have worked in the UK; she she died in 1973.

Suschitzky was self-effacing about his own abilities and always saw himself as a craftsman rather than an artist. "I'm quite content to be a craftsman," he said. "I observe things and if I think it would make a good picture I take a picture, rather than arrange things."

Suschitzky was married three times and for the last part of his life lived with his partner Heather Anthony, who had been married to his best friend Zoltan Wegner, who was also a photographer. "He died a few weeks before my third wife died," he said. "So we were both alone and we thought we should be alone together."

He is survived by Ms Anthony, as well as his three children, his nine grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Born: August 29. 1912;�Died: October 7, 2016

Source: Herald Scotland

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Picture: Credit Wolfgang Suschitzky

Wolfgang Suschitzky: Memories From A Lifetime Of Looking

This lovely interview - originally published in January 2016 - was republished as part of a tribute by the The Telegraph.

Eighty years after he fled from the Nazis to London, photographer Wolfgang Suschitzky talks to Gaby Wood about shooting� the past � and the debt he owes to his sister, the secret agent

 

"So, you have come to write my obituary?� Wolfgang Suschitzky asks amiably, as he shows me into his living room in Maida Vale, west London. I have not, but I wonder how many years it�s been since Suschitzky first allowed himself the joke. He is now 103. Judging from photographs, he is a faint version of his former self. Where once he was tall, with the build and temperament of an adventurer, now he is pale and a little stooped, dressed in many layers of brown and speaking softly, in Austrian-accented English. Nevertheless, he is sharp. �I can�t run for a bus anymore, but I can still get about,� he says with some understatement. The previous week he had popped out to see an Indian film at the Southbank.

�How long have you lived here?� I ask, looking at the photographs on his walls � taken by him and by his sister Edith � and at a book in German on the table: Dream and Reality: Vienna 1870-1930.

�Oh, not long,� he says with a smile. �Just 50 years.�

Next week, an exhibition of Suschitzky�s photographs will open at the Photographers� Gallery in London. Though he would go on to become best known as a cameraman � joining the wartime documentary movement and later shooting such films as Ulysses (1967), Entertaining Mr Sloane (1970) and Mike Hodges�s classic British gangster film Get Carter (1971) � Suschitzky has never �been ashamed�, as he puts it, of the work he did as a photographer from the Thirties onwards. His images of London, taken with the keen eye and gentle humility of a recent immigrant, are so evocative you feel they must be stills from films made before the war, mysteriously replayed in your mind�s eye.

Of course, faced with a man of such longevity, what commands your attention most is what he has lived through � the First World War, the Holocaust, the Blitz � all before he was 30. And in Suschitzky�s case, there is an extraordinary family story, of a brother and sister, within the larger waves of history.

Suschitzky was born in 1912, and grew up in a working-class district of Vienna, where his father and uncle had opened the first socialist bookshop. �They were very much ahead of their time,� he says. �Standing up for women�s rights � the same salary for the same job, which still isn�t here, completely. And there were books about the economy of the country. They were written in Viennese dialect. My father sometimes brought a writer home for lunch � my mother was a very good cook � and when he published a book, had a small number specially bound in leather. He kept one of each. Unfortunately my mother had to leave all that behind.�

Wolf�s sister Edith was four years older than him, and, he says, �a great influence on my life�. They shared a room, and it was she who took up photography first, going on to study at the Bauhaus school in Dessau. �Well,� he remembers, �we were interested in modern art. Much of modern art started in Vienna. The Secession, it was called�� There is a pause, and Suschitzky�s mind seems to wander. �I forgot to offer you anything,� he says. �Do you want coffee, juice?�

In May 1933, Edith Suschitzky was arrested as she left a bookshop in Vienna. She was a press photographer, she told police, delivering unopened letters as a favour for a man whose name she could not remember. That bookshop � the Goethe � was a known drop point for the Austrian communist party, and Edith was recognised as a courier. When police searched the home she shared with her parents and her brother Wolfgang, they found a mimeograph machine used for duplicating party memos and political pamphlets, and a translation-in-progress of an English language biography of Lenin.

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Picture: Entertaining Mr. Sloan (1970) - Cinematography by Wolfgang Suzchitzky

That year Adolf Hitler had become chancellor of Germany. It was a dangerous time to be committed to the Left, and a number of political activists were smuggled out with the help of foreigners. A recently radicalised Kim Philby, who met Edith Suschitzky in Vienna that same year, claimed to have six friends hidden in sewers whom he eventually got through to Czechoslovakia. Philby married Edith�s endangered friend Litzi Friedmann in Vienna and brought her to London. Similarly � though those who have read their intercepted letters report that it was clearly more than a marriage of convenience � Edith married Alex Tudor-Hart, a British doctor and Cambridge

Contemporary of Philby�s whom she had known since she first went to London as a student teacher in 1925. Alex and his sister Beatrix were part of a freethinking north London circle of designers and pedagogues. It was perhaps under their influence that Edith had decided to study at the Bauhaus; it was Alex, she once said, who had �laid the foundation of my political education�; and it was certainly thanks to their connections that she received asylum in the UK. In 1933, Alex Tudor-Hart was in Vienna, studying under a well-known orthopaedic surgeon. He and Edith married at the British consulate three months after her arrest. Two months later, they left for London, with as many of her photographic negatives as the Austrian authorities would allow her to retain.

The 21-year-old Wolf was left increasingly exposed: by his sister�s arrest, by the ideas fostered in his father�s bookshop, and also, though they were all committed atheists, by the fact that the family was Jewish. �We saw what was coming very early,� he says. �After the civil war we had a semi-fascist government, based more on Mussolini�s fascism than on Hitler�s, but it was still� Austria was full of Nazis. They were accepted with open arms when they came in. So we knew what was coming.�

After he�d completed a three-year degree in photography, he and his Dutch girlfriend escaped to London with the help of his sister, and married in Hampstead. They briefly moved to Holland, where his wife promptly left him for another man. Suschitzky, who considers this a blessing � �Had she not done so, I would have remained in Holland and perished there� � returned to London.

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Picture: Credit Wolfgang Suschitzky

�Unfortunately, when his two children had left for London, my father shot himself,� Suschitzky recalls. That was in 1934, and Suschitzky, struck by the fact that London had streets dedicated to individual trades, began to roam the bookshops of Charing Cross Road, photographing them partly in tribute to his father. �People rummaging outside on shelves of second-hand books, people trying to find something to read for sixpence, or trying to find a first edition of something, which was quite likely,� he recalls. �He would have been glad to see it, all these bookshops.�

he Charing Cross series remains Suschitzky�s best work as a photographer. With the social conscience of a documentarian and the eye of a German expressionist, he captured not just browsers but shoeblacks, knife-grinders and milkmen, as well as underworld characters at pinball machines, queues of people outside theatres, and a couple in intense conversation at a Lyons Corner House. Given that he would go on to become a film cameraman, it�s striking how many of them suggest a story. The legs of a woman jumping over a puddle in a rain-slicked street seem to be stolen from a shot that will pan upwards to the heroine�s face; a picture of men loitering in the dark beneath a neon sign reading �Foyles� might have been imagined by Fritz Lang. Only Suschitzky�s wit, you feel, could make a bookshop look so much like a brothel.

Meanwhile, Edith worked on rescuing their mother, whom she eventually got out of Austria in 1938 and put up in a small flat in Hove. Suschitzky�s aunt and uncle � his father�s business partner � were sent to Auschwitz.

Suschitzky assisted his sister for a time � she opened a photographic studio when her husband left to heal broken limbs during the Spanish Civil War � and before long he was introduced to a group of people who would become pioneers of the British documentary movement. Politically committed but with little technical knowledge, film-makers such as Paul Rotha relied on Suschitzky�s photographic expertise. He, in turn, was inspired by their determination to �make films that were useful to society�.

Suschitzky was shocked by the degree of poverty in Britain, and became an important witness to the country�s progress. �We made films about steelworks,� he recalls. �We met Nobel Prize winners. We met scientists and writers and heads of state. We went into factories that other people never get any knowledge of � like how plastics are made. We did a monthly magazine about 'workers on the war front�. We saw women making shells for guns, women using lathes. I remember working in Scotland on how they make barrage balloons. To be inside a balloon is an eerie feeling � you�re cut off from the whole world. And people understood that they were needed.� Their work was shown in newsreels, and had, he is certain, an effect. Eventually, he would document the birth of the National Health Service.

During the war Suschitzky got married for a second time, to a woman named Ilona Donath, with whom he had three children. One of them, Peter, has long been a highly respected cinematographer himself, responsible for, among other things, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, The Empire Strikes Back and many films directed by David Cronenberg.

Edith Tudor-Hart had a less happy time. Her marriage broke up when Alex Tudor-Hart returned from the Spanish Civil War, and their young son, Tommy, was diagnosed as schizophrenic (although Suschitzky now suspects his condition was actually autism). �After a time, he outgrew her strength, so she couldn�t manage him anymore. She put him into an institution, where he died in the end, in his 50s.� His sister had a breakdown � she had suffered from �melancholia�, in her own description, for many years. She had little money, and became a housekeeper for the family of a lawyer before eventually setting up a small antiques shop in Brighton.

wolgang-suschitsky-on-set-get-carter-1971

Picture: Wolfgang Suschitzky - On the set of Get Carter (1971)

In the early years, their work had been almost twinned: there was a good deal of overlap in what they chose to reveal. She photographed miners in Wales, he photographed miners in Durham. While she visited a slum in Stepney, he was documenting another in Dundee. He worked for the Ministry of Information; she, for the Ministry of Education.

Edith�s work was more politically opinionated than Wolf�s: she was an activist, he was an observer. �My sister was always more Left-wing,� Suschitzky explains. �I never had any sympathy with communists, who said the party is above everything else, and if they say you should jump out the window, you jump. I didn�t understand that a political party would have such rights over you. I thought, a political party is there to help people get a better life.�

Early one morning in 1951, two MI5 officers burst into Edith Tudor-Hart�s home and interrogated her for an hour while she lay in bed. They were unable to establish the link they sought to prove: that Tudor-Hart had been the Soviet agent who recruited Philby. They planned to interrogate Philby two days later, and wanted to see if she would warn him. For the intervening 48 hours and well beyond, her home was bugged and her telephone tapped; an eight-man team was assigned to watch her.

MI5 files declassified only last year reveal the secret service�s consistent surveillance of Tudor-Hart. They were never able to confirm all their suspicions, despite the fact that Anthony Blunt described her, when he confessed in 1964 to being a double agent, as �the grandmother of us all�.

After her interrogation, she destroyed the negative of a portrait she had taken of Philby in Vienna in 1933, along with all of her prints. When she died of liver cancer in 1973, her negatives came to Wolf. Years later, he printed them himself, for a book about her which he titled The Eye of Conscience.

To what extent, I ask Suschitzky, did MI5�s interest in his sister affect her? �Well, she was aware of it,� he replies. �She felt that she was being followed. She knew some scientists in Cambridge, who were upset that the Americans kept their research on nuclear things all to themselves � didn�t even give the British full reports on how far they got. And they thought the Russians were really allies of the Western powers.�

And what does Suschitzky understand her to have done? �She introduced Russian scientists to other scientists,� he says. �As far as I know. She was very well trained � by Russians, I presume � not to talk too much about what she was doing.� In any case, he adds, whatever she did, she didn�t do it for the money. �She was always badly off. She had to pawn her camera or her typewriter at times. There was no Russian gold involved.�

His sister, Suschitzky reflects, �had a very hard life. And I couldn�t help her much, because I had three children. And she understood that, she never asked me for help.�

I ask him how he feels about his own life. �Well, I call myself a lucky man,� he says. �I�ve had two or three exhibitions called Lucky Man: Wolf Suschitzky. And I was lucky,� he adds. �Very lucky.�

Source: The Telegraph

wolgang-suschitzsky-5

Wolfgang Suschitzky - Born: August 29 1912;�Died: October 7, 2016

 

Our condolences go to the family and friends of Wolfgang Suschitzky.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The Avengers (1961) - Lost Episode 'Tunnel Of Fear' From The Very First Series Rediscovered After 55 Years!

Picture above:�Ian Hendry (as Dr. David Keel) and Patrick Macnee (as John Steed) - promotional photoshoot for the launch of the first series - Soho, London (December 1960)

Article Updated - 6th February 2018:

The Avengers 'Tunnel Of Fear' - Series 1 Episode 20�

After a lot of hard work behind the scenes, it's good to be finally be able to announce the forthcoming release date by Studio Canal, as 9th April 2018.

To Pre-Order On Amazon UK - Click The Link Below

Pre-order DVD on Amazon UK: The Avengers �Tunnel of Fear [Released on 9th April 2018]

 

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Monday 3rd October 2016�is a very special day. I have just received an email from Chris Perry of Kaleidoscope which says:

"Today I have been given a missing episode of the Avengers from 1961 starring your late uncle.
I plan to announce it at 9.30pm tonight on Facebook and we will show it on Saturday 12th November at Birmingham City University".

It's a moment that I know many devoted fans of The Avengers in the UK - and around the world - have longed for and one which I certainly believed would happen one day.

The last major discovery from this series happened some 15 years ago, in April 2001, when the opening act of Hot Snow and the complete episode of Girl on the Trapeze were mysteriously found in the catalogue of holdings in the University of California, Los Angelese (UCLA). Up until that point, only one episode was known to exist, The Frighteners, a copy of which was also discovered at UCLA through an online search by archive television enthusiast Dave Wood.

Chris Perry writes about this latest find on the�Kaleidoscope Facebook Group�page - full post below:

Discovery 63: The Avengers � Tunnel of Fear tx: 5.8.1961
Written by John Kruse, directed by Guy Verney.
with Anthony Bate, Doris Rogers, John Salew and Nancy Roberts.

the-tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-series-1-ian-hendy-patrick-macnee-1961-1 the-tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-series-1-ian-hendy-patrick-macnee-1961-2

 

Pictures: Scans from the discovered film - �Tunnel of Fear, The Avengers (1961)

"Kaleidoscope�s love affair with The Avengers goes back to watching the Channel 4 repeats; and then visiting the Pinewood studios to root around the old ABC archive to see what could be found. �The Frighteners� was found after seeing a clip on Ian Hendry�s This Is Your Life. �Hot Snow� turned up at UCLA. I remember Dave Rogers and I opening cans to find �The Golden Fleece�, which was the last Honor Blackman episode to be found. I also remember our surprise when we persuaded Lumiere to re-master the negs of Rigg and Thorson onto D3 and discovered the prints were longer than the C4 prints. Yes indeed, I have always had a love affair with The Avengers.

 

Now today I am delighted to announce that Kaleidoscope has acquired the long-lost print of �Tunnel of Fear�. We will be screening this rediscovered edition at our November event Missing Believed Wiped Central. We hope to have a guest connected with the show to introduce it as well.

 

We have also acquired a large film collection simultaneously which contains more lost archive gems and I will be announcing each of those new finds all week at 9.30pm.

 

None of this couldn�t have happened without Steve Birt who has proven once again to be a very worthy friend and financial backer to Kaleidoscope.

 

We look forward to you joining us to enter the �Tunnel of Fear� on November 12th 2016 at Birmingham City University. To accommodate the expected rush for tickets we have extended tickets to 250. That is our maximum maximum though. The event time has been extended by an hour and will now finish at 6pm."

Event: Missing Believed Wiped - Birmingham 12th November 2016

To join the Kaleidoscope Facebook Group, click the link below:

Kaleidoscope Facebook Group

BBC2 Newsnight - Feature on Kaleidoscope's Work Including Clip From The Avengers 'Tunnel Of Fear' (1961) - Broadcast 2nd November 2016

Tunnel Of Fear - The Avengers, Series 1, Episode 20

Production completed: 3rd August 1961. First transmission: 5th August 1961

Plot

Top secret information is leaking into Europe from somewhere in Southend and is it a coincidence that Harry Black, a recent escapee from prison, worked in the funfair? Closer examination reveals that the Ghost Train is more scary than it looks and Wickram is arranging the leaks. Trick cigarettes allow Steed to bluff the enemy into submission and Black is proved innocent: he was hypnotised and framed.

tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-ian-hendry-patrick-macnee1b
tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-ian-hendry-patrick-macnee2b
tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-ian-hendry-patrick-macnee3b
tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-ian-hendry-patrick-macnee5b
tunnel-of-fear-the-avengers-ian-hendry-patrick-macnee6b

Pictures above: Stills taken from the original film recording - Tunnel of Fear, The Avengers (1961)

 

Ian Hendry in make-up with Joan Watson - Rare Behind the Scenes Shot

Ian Hendry + Joan Watson The Avengers (1961) In Make-Up

Picture: Ian Hendry in make-up with Joan Watson. The original opening credits board for The Avengers is on the stand to the right.

Ian Hendry and Patrick Macnee Reunion - This Is Your Life (1978)

On 8th March 1978, Patrick Macnee was the special guest on Ian's This Is Your Life. The video below is an extract from the original show, broadcast one week later, where the two reminisce about those early days:

The Avengers Series 1 - The Missing Episodes

A special mention must be given to Richard McGinlay, Alan Hayes and Alys Hayes who have carried out some marvellous research on the first series of The Avengers, culminating in the book:

Two Against The Underworld - The Collected Unauthorised Guide To The Avengers Series 1

Two Against the Underworld brings together six years of research and combines and updates two previously published Hidden Tiger books (The Strange Case of the Missing Episodes andWith Umbrella, Scotch and Cigarettes) to tell the story of The Avengers from both sides of the camera.

 

Avengers-Hendry

 

Picture: Ian Hendry as Dr. David Keel ( illustration by�Shaqui Le Vesconte fro the book, Two Against The Underworld)

Their dedication to detail is inspiring and they must take a lot of credit in 'putting the pieces' together to tell the fascinating story behind the very first series of The Avengers.

Richard and Alan have been interviewed twice now on this website - discussing their work and their personal love of the series.

These interviews�can be found via the links below:

The Avengers Series 1 - A Case Reopened

The Avengers Series 1 - With Umbrella Scotch and Cigarettes

Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee The Avengers-1962

Picture: Ian Hendry (as Dr. David Keel) and Patrick Macnee (as John Steed)

Big Finish - The Avengers Series 1

Also, a special mention for�Big Finish�whose audio productions of the first series has brought new life to the missing episodes.

In their own words:

"The Avengers - The Lost Episodes�recreates the existing scripts on audio with a full cast of actors. Discover, for the first time in over fifty years, the beginnings of a TV legend..."

For more information visit:

Big Finish - The Avengers, Series 1

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 7

Picture: Patrick Macnee, Ingrid Hafner and Ian Hendry in Soho, London

For further reading about the series, see also:

The Avengers - Series 1 Promotional Photoshoot in Soho, London (1960)

Ian Hendry in make-up with Joan Watson (The Avengers, 1961)

Ian Hendry - Original ABC TV Promotional Portrait (The Avengers, 1960/1961)

 

As and when more information becomes available, I'll update you all via this website and the Ian Hendry Facebook page.

It's been a great day - let's raise a glass to�Ian, Patrick and Ingrid, you are in our thoughts.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:�'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry

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Gabriel Hershman Interview - Author Discusses His Latest Biography On The Life Of Albert Finney, Titled 'Strolling Player' And Reveals Why His First Biography On Ian Hendry Was So Important To Him

Picture above: Albert Finney in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960) and the cover of his new biography 'Strolling Player' by Gabriel Hershman.

In this exclusive interview with author Gabriel Hershman, he reveals exactly why his first biography had to be on Ian Hendry and why Albert Finney is the ideal subject for his new book 'Strolling Player, The Life and Career of Albert Finney'.

Towards the end of 2011, I was first contacted by Gabriel Hershman to let me know that he wanted to write a biography on my late uncle, Ian Hendry. It was to be the first (and perhaps only) biography to be published on Ian's life and work. A few months beforehand, I had purchased the domain name ianhendry.com - as I wanted to create a long overdue online tribute. Gabriel's biography on Ian Hendry, however, was in many ways the catalyst that was needed to bring this website into being!

Gabriel has just completed his second biography, this time focussing on the life of the celebrated British actor, Albert Finney. The Gabriel Hersman�website has also recently�been launched recently,�providing the latest updates on this book launch and all his other work.

albert-finney-annie-strolling-master-life-and-career-of-albert-finney-biography-by-gabriel-hershman-1

Picture: Albert Finney in pub behind the Cambridge Theatre, London (1961)

In the following interview, Gabriel Hershman discusses writing, why his first biography on Ian Hendry was so important to him and why Albert Finney is the subject of his latest work.

So Gabriel, could you please tell our readers a little bit more about your writing background and why, in particular, you were so attracted to writing biographies in the first place?

I always enjoyed writing at school and experimented with a novel in my twenties. But I struggled a bit with it. When I moved to Portugal I finally got into journalism full-time and began interviewing actors and entertainers. With my interest in the theatre and cinema - coupled with a kind of innate nosiness about other people's lives! - I had often thought about writing a biography. It was my favourite genre. The first major theatrical biography I read was Melvyn Bragg's life of Richard Burton. I still think that is a model of its kind - analysing Burton's craft as well as his character, paying tribute to him without lurching into over-obsequiousness. It was at the back of my mind ever since then - but very much at the back because a lot of time elapsed before I got to the keyboard! - that I'd enjoy writing a biography. I tend to be introspective at times and find it does me good to lose myself in someone else's story, especially if that person's life is more interesting than mine!

send-in-the-clowns-the-yo-yo-life-of-ian-hendry-by-gabriel-hershman-get-carter-1971-v2

Picture: Ian Hendry on the set of Get Carter (1971), subject of Gabriel Hershman's first biography, Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry.

Your first biography was, of course, based on the life and work of actor Ian Hendry. Could you explain why writing about Ian was so important to you?

Ian Hendry had always fascinated me ever since I first saw him on screen. This would have been around 1985, not long after his death. I remember seeing Theatre of Blood and thinking he was rather good and then The Hill - in which he was absolutely outstanding. The dam really burst when satellite TV came in around the early Nineties and I saw Ian's guest spots in old TV series. His talent bounced off the screen. He had an extraordinary ability to establish a believable character within seconds. I lived near Hampstead at the time and got talking to a few of his associates. That's a euphemism for getting pissed with Ronnie Fraser! When I saw The Lotus Eaters on UK Gold in 1993 I found it compulsive viewing for me. In fact, I seldom ventured out on a Saturday night. Looking back, it must have seemed a bit strange, staying in to watch what was in 1993, a 20-year-old TV series. But I was fascinated by it. Ian's performance holds up extremely well even now and we're talking 45 years down the line. That's the mark of great acting - when a performance still rings true almost half a century later. He had a unique gift of being able to convey deep thoughts with just a look or a grunt.

How do you aim to differentiate your biographies from the many others that are published each year - especially those within the show-business genre?

I think that most show-business biographies and autobiographies fall down because they don't talk enough about acting. Yes, I'm only human and interested that a celebrity had a steamy affair with a famous married actress or that he 'battled' drink and drugs. BUT I'm also interested in how actors prepare for roles, how they make their craft seem spontaneous and why their performances are so effective - if they are. I like to analyse and appraise each of their major roles.

Picture: Albert Finney in Annie (1982)

Your latest biography is based on the life of actor Albert Finney and is due to be published by The History Press on 5 January 2017. Could you expand upon the criteria you use in drawing up a short-list of candidates and why Finney was your ideal choice?

I'd only be interested in writing about a very talented actor. Ian Hendry definitely qualified on that score. But for my second book I wanted an international star. Finney had always been at the back of my mind. Perhaps more than any other post-war movie star Finney revolutionised British film. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning changed everything. It was the cinematic equivalent of the Beatles. Finney was a very important figure in that so-called New Wave. I hope that in addition to giving an account of Finney's life I've also succeeded in explaining why he was important. The Finney Factor if you like - to paraphrase Boris Johnson's recent work on Churchill, the Churchill Factor. It helped that I'd seen Finney on stage several times.
Another important point is that, back in the period I'm talking about (the 1980s and 1990s), seeing someone like Finney - or O'Toole or Hopkins - on stage was a truly MAJOR event, one you would remember forever and talk about again and again. Sadly, I don't think you can say the same nowadays about any current star. Why is this?

The greatest play I ever saw on the London stage was Orphans in 1986, starring Finney. I came out of the theatre with tears in my eyes. You could feel the electricity permeating the theatre. Obviously some of that was due to the great writing of the playwright, Lyle Kessler, but a lot of the credit must go to Finney. And, as Kessler said to me when I interviewed him, who are today's Finneys and Pacinos?

night-must-fall-albert-finney-1964-albert-finney-strolling-master-life-and-career-of-albert-finney-biography-by-gabriel-hershman

Picture: Albert Finney in Night Must Fall (1964)

What were the biggest challenges that you encountered in writing this book and what were the biggest highlights and surprises?

It's difficult writing a book about someone who is still alive because sometimes people are reluctant to speak. But I discovered that Finney was perhaps the quintessential professional. Not only was he supremely fastidious and well-prepared for every role but he was always careful to make everyone around him feel comfortable. The biggest surprise perhaps lay in discovering Finney's true nature. He's clearly a very popular, lovable fellow, universally respected in the business. Whereas I'd always pictured a scowling, rather angry figure. That couldn't have been further from the truth. But that's partly because his performance in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning was so good.

Picture: Albert Finney

If you had to recommend five of Finney's most significant performances for someone who is unfamiliar with his work to watch, which ones would they be and why?

1. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. It's a remarkably self-assured performance from a 23-year-old.

2. The Dresser I'd pick because it contains Finney's finest screen performance. Don't be deceived by the ranting. It's a performance of infinite subtlety.

3. The Playboys I'd pick because he really breaks your heart. It's an underrated film which has a lot to say about unrequited love, lust, loneliness and the human condition.

4. His Churchill in The Gathering Storm was absolutely brilliant and spot-on.

5. Also the screen version of Orphans - if only because it captures for posterity Finney's greatest stage role.

Video above: Original Trailer For Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960)

And lastly Gabriel, have you drawn up a short-list for your next biography and could you give our readers any hints as to who it might be on?!

I can give you more than a hint. Barring some unforeseen disaster I'd really like to write about the late Nicol Williamson. This was a guy who had the talent and danger to become an international superstar, a man who even brought his Hamlet to the White House at the invitation of President Richard Nixon! And yet, today, Williamson is curiously overlooked. I want to ensure he has a proper tribute.

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A big thanks to Gabriel Hershman for discussing his work and thoughts with us.

Book Review - Mail On Sunday

A glowing review by Kathryn Hughes - Mail On Sunday 29th January 2017:

 

For those of you who are interested in buying this biography, please click on the link or image below�for more details:

Order -> Strolling Player - The Life and Career of Albert Finney

strolling-player-the-life-and-career-of-albert-finney-by-gabriel-hersman-author-v1

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The Informer (1967) - Rare Still Found From 'Your Secret's Are Safe With Us, Mr Lambert' Starring Ian Hendry + Jane Blackburn [Dir. Ridley Scott]

Picture above: The Informer (1967) - rare Anglia Television still from 'Your Secret's Are Safe With Us, Mr Lambert' starring Ian Hendry + Jane Blackburn

In his early career, Sir Ridley Scott directed two episodes of The Informer. This rare still - which was only discovered recently in the archives of a now defunct newspaper - is from one of those episodes. 'Your Secrets Are Safe With Us, Mr. Lambert' was first broadcast on 15th November 1967.

There is an extract below, from when Sir Ridley Scott�was interviewed by Steve Wright on BBC Radio 2, where he briefly discusses the show and working with Ian Hendry.

Jane Blackburn�-�who is also featured in this still - is best known for Prick Up Your Ears (1987), Subterfuge (1968) and The Passenger (1971).

the-informer-anglia-television-your-secrets-are-safe-with-me-mr-lambert-ian-hendry-jane-blackburn-15th-november-1967-2 the-informer-anglia-television-your-secrets-are-safe-with-me-mr-lambert-ian-hendry-jane-blackburn-15th-november-1967-3

Pictures above: Ian Hendry and Jane Blackburn - The Informer (1967) - �Anglia Television Reference Still

Cast

Ian Hendry -�Alex Lambert
Heather Sears - Helen Lambert
Neil Hallett - Det. Sgt. Piper
Jean Marsh - Sylvia Parrish
Redmond Bailey - Charlie
Jane Blackburn - Julia Devas
Peter Copley - Richard Edwards
Keith Grenville - Policeman
Jack Hedley - John Harlton
Peter Hughes - Major Read
Frieda Knorr - Alicia Coburn
Penelope Lee - Peggy Harlton
Robert Russell - Webster

Directed by:

Ridley Scott

Writing Credits:

Geoffrey Bellman - Creator

John Whitney - Creator

John Tyler - Writer

Sir Ridley Scott On The Informer + Ian Hendry

Extract of a Sir Ridley Scott interview by Steve Wright (BBC Radio 2- 22nd December 2014) in which he discusses his early career and mentions working with Ian Hendry on the series The Informer. He actually says The Insider in the interview, but heck it was back in the 60's!

Theme Tune - Superperformance by David Lindup

This brilliant theme by David Lindup was first used back in the 60's for the series The Informer starring Ian Hendry. It was later used by The Monty Python team in the sketch 'The Bishop'!

To find out more about this series.

See also:

The Informer (1966-1967) - Screenplay + Article

The Informer (1966-67) - Stills From The Series

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


'This Is My Street' (1964) Rare Original Quad Poster Prototype Artwork By Tom Chantrell - Shared With Us By Owner

Picture above: Highly finished prototype artwork (17 3/4"x 22 1/2") - by Tom Chantrell - for the Quad poster for This Is My Street (1964)

Every so now and then, I am contacted by someone who makes the running of this website so worthwhile. I received an email from Terry Doyle, a self-confessed admirer of the work of artist and illustrator Tom Chantrell - probably the most famous of all 20th Century British cinema poster artists.

Terry had acquired the original finished prototype artwork for the film, This Is My Street (1964), which starred Ian Hendry alongside June Ritchie - the second time that the two had worked together, following on from Live Now, Pay Later released in 1962.

Terry kindly offered to share this artwork with us and has given permission to re-publish it here.

The Tom Chantrell website describe this artwork as:

"A really sumptuous piece, this being highly finished prototype artwork (17 3/4"x 22 1/2") for the Quad poster for the 1964 "kitchen-sink" drama, "This Is My Street" (the prototype nature of the piece revealed by the scribbled cast & credits notations on the bottom rim - the artwork otherwise looking completely finished). The artwork is on artboard & set in a mount with a protective overlay. For the purpose of comparison, we also show the finished Quad."

 

This-Is-My-Street-Ian-hendry

 

Picture above: Final artwork for Quad poster, including slight changes to background artwork, font size of ' Peter Rogers', typed credits replacing the handwritten ones at the bottom of poster and a slight change to June Ritchie's eyes!

To visit the Tom Chantrell website and see a side by side comparison of this artwork with the finished poster click here.

Ian Hendry - The Humphrey Bogart Influence?

This poster has always been one of my favourites and I've always thought that there was a certain 'Humphrey Bogart feel' to the way that Ian was depicted. The following may help to perhaps explain why. Whilst researching his biography on Ian Hendry, Gabriel Hershman uncovered a quote from a review in the Daily Express in 1963, which may add credence to this idea:

"....the brilliant young actor whose versatility has already had him compared with both Chaplin and tough-guy Humphrey Bogart.�

- The Daily Express on Ian Hendry

humhrey bogart

 

Picture: Humphrey Bogart (undated) - a possible influence on the This Is My Street artwork?

It's interesting to learn about the way Tom worked:

"Chantrell did not see the films he drew for; he would receive a plot line and a handful of stills and use friends and family for poses. Examples of this were taking photographs of himself trying to look like a vampire for Dracula Has Risen from the Grave and his wife Shirley held a plastic sword in the back garden to pose for Princess Leia on the original Star Wars poster. Chantrell's posters were often produced prior to the film being made in order to raise money from investors."

Source: Tom Chantrell in Wikipedia

So there is a distinct possibility that the marketing team prepared a brief for Tom Chantrell, with press reviews including the one written for the Daily Express in the previous year. We will, perhaps, never know for certain but it adds to the story and I do like to think that there is a Humphrey Bogart connection somewhere in all of this!

Tom Chantrell - Film Poster Artist and Illustrator

Tom Chantrell - born Thomas William Chantrell in Manchester on December 20, 1916 - July 15, 2001.

The son of a trapeze artist, Chantrell was the youngest of nine children. He left Manchester Art College and went into advertising, eventually starting in 1933 at Allardyce Palmer who had accounts with Warner Brothers and 20th Century Fox. In 1938 he designed his first film poster The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse.

He continued with posters until World War II service with the Royal Engineers bomb disposal units. After demobilisation he returned to Allardyce Palmer eventually doing over 7,000 film posters.

Tom Chantrell Portrait

Picture above: Tom Chantrell

The Tom Chantrell website has a great online biography about him, written by Sim Branaghan, which is well worth a read.

Sim Branaghan sets the scene at the beginning of his in-depth piece on Tom Chantrell:

"What links the films Brighton Rock, Summer Holiday, One Million Years BC, Gonks Go Beat, East of Eden, Carry On Screaming, Bonnie and Clyde, Let's Make Love, Star Wars, Housewives On the Job, Far From the Madding Crowdand Hellcat Mud Wrestlers? I'll give you a clue, it isn't Thomas Hardy. In fact it is the unassuming Manchester artist Tom Chantrell, who painted these and many hundreds of other classic film posters in a stunning career that spanned half a century, and took in what most would consider the great post-war Golden Age of popular cinema."

The biography�provides some great insights into Tom Chantrell's life and his work within a fascinating industry. Rather than rewrite or 'borrow' from this text, I suggest that if you are interested, that you take a few minutes to read the biography in full by clicking here.

Selected Works - Tom Chantrell

 

Star Wars 1977 Tom Chantrell

Picture above: Star Wars (1977) - poster artwork by Tom Chantrell

One Million Years BC Poster Tom Chantrell

Picture above: One Million Years BC�(1965) - poster artwork by Tom Chantrell

Bad Man's River

Picture above: Bad Man's River�(1971) - poster artwork by Tom Chantrell

Guns At Batasi Tom Chantrell

Picture above: Guns at Batasi�(1964) - poster artwork by Tom Chantrell

Death in the Sun Quad

Picture above: Death in the Sun�(1976) - poster artwork by Tom Chantrell

British Film Posters: An Illustrated History

For those of you interested in exploring the wonderful world of the British film poster, there is a great book by Sim Branaghan called 'British Film Posters: An Illustrated History'.

It's described as:

"The first complete history of illustrated film posters in the UK covers every aspect of design, printing and display from the Victorian era to the arrival of DeskTop Publishing in the 1980s. British Film Posters examins the contribution 'vintage' film posters have made to British popular art of the 20th century. "

British Film Posters: An Illustrated History Sim Branaghan

The book is available to purchase on Amazon and from the Tom Chantrell site as well.

And if you are interested in purchaing some of Tom Chantrell's artwork yourself, then check out their latest listings here.

And finally, a big thank you to Terry for sharing his artwork with us and for giving us permission to publish it on the site.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Tom Clegg - Director - A Tribute: The Sweeney, McVicar + Much Much More

Picture above: Tom Clegg, Director

For many, the recent death of Tom Clegg will bring back vivid memories of landmark TV series from the 70s and 80s - most notably The Sweeney, which he directed from 1975-1982.

Tom had a long and illustrious career and worked with Ian Hendry on several occasions. Gabriel Hershman was fortunate to be able to interview him when researching Ian's�biography - which we cover in more detail later on.

Tom Clegg - Obituary - The Telegraph, 3rd August 2016

Tom Clegg, who has died aged 81, directed high-octane television dramas including The Sweeney (ITV, 1975-82) and was a master of bringing exciting all-action sequences to television and cinema screens.

sweeney_drag act 1978 Tom Clegg

Picture: The Sweeney 'Drag Act' (1978). Directed by Tom Clegg.

Starring John Thaw and Dennis Waterman as two bruising detectives with Scotland Yard�s Flying Squad, The Sweeney was developed from a 1974 pilot episode, Regan, which Clegg also shot.

The-Sweeney- Tom Clegg Director

Picture: John Thaw and Dennis Waterman - The Sweeney

He remained one of the principal directors throughout four television series and on the second of two spin-off feature films, Sweeney 2 (1978), collaborating with the scriptwriter Troy Kennedy Martin, who wrote the screenplay for The Italian Job (1969).

For ITV Clegg went on to direct Sharpe (1993-1998), an action-packed period drama about an officer in the Napoleonic Wars starring Sean Bean in the title role, Bean having replaced Paul McGann, who had to withdraw having injured his knee playing football two weeks into the filming schedule.

Tom Clegg Director Sharpe Sean Bean

Picture: Tom Clegg and Sean Bean - Sharpe

Based on the novels by Bernard Cornwell, Sharpe was produced by Central Television and shot mainly in Turkey and the Crimea. Clegg also directed two made-for-television film spin-offs, Sharpe�s Rifles and Sharpe�s Eagles (both 1993).

Thomas Harrison Clegg was born on October 16 1934 at Kirkham, Lancashire, and educated at the grammar school there. His parents ran a shop making and repairing clogs, boots and shoes. Between 1952 and 1954 he served his National Service with the RAF in Singapore, an experience that inspired a lifelong love of travel, before going to art college to study Photography, gaining a City and Guilds certificate.

In the 1960s Clegg established himself as a television cameraman, first with Granada and then ABC Television at Teddington Studios.

As well as The Sweeney, during the 1970s Clegg also directed episodes for television series Van der Valk, Space 1999, The Return of the Saint and The Professionals. In 1973 he made Children of the Full Moon in the Hammer House of Horror series with Christopher Cazenove and Diana Dors. �The good thing about directing horror is there are no limits,� he explained. �It was a challenge, something all directors look for.� In 1980 he directed the feature film McVicar, based on the exploits of the armed robber John McVicar (played by Roger Daltrey of The Who) and his escape from prison.

Clegg worked on the script with McVicar, who remained on the set as a consultant during the nine-week shoot at Pinewood Studios, where a replica of Durham Prison was built. With its harsh realism, violent fights and gripping bank robbery, the film was redolent of Clegg�s days on The Sweeney.

The following year he directed A Captain�s Tale for Tyne-Tees Television, dramatising West Auckland�s remarkable journey from small town amateur football side to giant-killing World Cup winners. The film had a cast of A-list actors, including the Sweeney star Dennis Waterman and Tim Healy from Auf Wiedersehen Pet, and led to Clegg�s third feature, G�Ole!, Fifa�s official film of the 1982 World Cup, narrated by Sean Connery.

Clegg returned to Euston Films to direct a few episodes of Minder, working again with Dennis Waterman. His other television work in the 1980s included episodes of Bergerac and The Chinese Detective.

Bravo Two Zero Tom Clegg 1999

Picture: Filming during the making of Bravo Two Zero (1999). Directed by Tom Clegg.

He reunited with Sean Bean and the writer Troy Kennedy Martin on Bravo Two Zero in 1999, based on the bestselling book of the same name by Andy McNab. Originally broadcast in two parts, the film portrayed real life events from the perspective of McNab, commander of a British SAS patrol searching for Iraqi Scud missile launchers during the 1991 Gulf War. In fact it was mostly filmed on the fringes of the Kalahari desert in South Africa�s Northern Cape Province.

Before retiring Clegg was on location again, this time in India, shooting Sharpe�s Peril, another Sharpe adventure for ITV, but one not based on a Bernard Cornwell novel.

Tom Clegg married, in 1957, Audrey Harrold, a hair and make-up artist for films, who predeceased him in April. Although separated they never divorced and remained close companions. Their two daughters survive him.

Tom Clegg, born October 16 1934, died July 24 2016

Source: Tom Clegg - The Telegraph

Tom Clegg - Other Notable Work + McVicar

 

The following is an extract from the FilmNav website - which has a feature article on Tom Clegg's work:

 

Throughout the 70's Clegg directed many other episodes for other TV series � 2 episodes of�Van de Valk, 5 episodes of�Space 1999, The Return of the Saint, The Professionals and 2 episodes of Hammer House of Horror.

 

I asked Clegg why he had chosen to direct such diverse material as the Hammer Horror�s, which was a far cry from the gritty realism of The Sweeney, to which he replied; ` The good thing about directing horror is there is no limits. It was a challenge, something all directors look for�.

 

It was during this period when Tom Clegg first met Roger Daltrey, Bill Curbishley and Roy Baird, who had a project in mind for one of their Who Films productions, called McVicar, based on real life prison convict John McVicar, and his escape from Durham prison. Clegg would work closely with John McVicar on the script, and once it was completed shooting began at Pinewood Studios, where a replica of Durham prison was constructed. Other locations included London, and Maidenhead (the railway bridge scene where McVicar hides after his escape.) The budget was �1.4 million and filming ran for 9 weeks, with McVicar permanently on set as a consultant.

 

The film carried many traits from Clegg�s days on The Sweeney � the harsh realism, violent fights, thrilling bank robbery and a tragic ending (something which many of Clegg�s Sweeney episodes concluded with). It would also inspire another prison film years later � The Shawshank Redemption.

Tom Clegg: Working With Ian Hendry

Tom Clegg and Ian Hendry met and worked together several times including the very first episode of The Sweeney 'Ringer' (1975), directed by Terry Green, in which Ian was�the first person to appear on camera in the series. They also worked together on Van Der Valk 'Gold Plated Delinquents' (1977) and the film, McVicar (1980) in which Roger Daltrey played the lead.

McVicar (1980) Ian hendry

Picture: Ian Hendry as Hitchens - McVicar (1980). Directed by Tom Clegg.

When asked by Gabriel Hershman about working with Ian Hendry, Tom Clegg responded:

Ian had more talent in one little finger than most actors do in their whole bodies.

We salute the life and work of Tom Clegg and his great contribution to our collective TV and film memory. Our condolences go to his family and friends.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The Jerusalem File (1972) - Donald Pleasence + Nicol Williamson + Bruce Davison + Daria Halprin + Ian Hendry [+ Full Film Download Link]

Picture�above:� Original MGM Promotional Still - Ian Hendry + Nicol Williamson - The Jersusalem File (1972)

The Jerusalem File (1972) - Rare Film�Rediscovered

The Jerusalem File (1972)�is a very difficult film to find...and that's coming from the mouth of the director John Flynn when interviewed by�Harvey F. Chartrand for�Shock Cinema (2005).

Fortunately, with the help of Gabriel Hershman, we have managed to locate a copy of the complete film (albeit�with Finnish subtitles!). We've included a couple of the key scenes from the film in this post - which feature Ian Hendry -�but�If you want to download the full film, you can do so from the link below:

Download (Secure Dropbox File)�>�The Jerusalem File (1972)

In his biography on Ian Hendry, Gabriel Hershman mentions several great anecdotes about this film, including the evening Nicol Williamson became more than a little worse for drink, and tried to throw fellow guest Bob Dylan off a balcony!

Set in the months following the 6-day-war this is the story of an attempt by young Israelis and Arabs to meet for a free political discussion. Interwoven are a love story, intrigue, strife and killings.

Video: The Jerusalem File (1972) Scene #1 | Donald Pleasence, Ian Hendry, Nicol Wiliamson + Bruce Davison

The Jerusalem File (1972) Donald Pleasance

Picture above: The Jerusalem File (1972) - Donald Pleasence

New York Times Review

'The Jerusalem File' Arrives

By A.H. Weiler -�Published: February 3, 1972
The dedication of idealistic Israeli and Arab youth to achieve understanding and stop internecine strife in the Holy Land after the six-day war is merely indicated melodramatically in "The Jerusalem File," which opened yesterday at the R.K.O. 59th Street Twin Theater.

The importance of the issues and the character of its principals are, sadly enough, only shadowy footnotes to the sporadic shootings and Raoul Coutard's color photography of teeming Jerusalem and the sun-drenched, arid archeological digs where it was shot with the vivid authenticity he captured in "Z" and some of the Godard films.

"The Jerusalem File" is a manhunt, essentially, despite Troy Kennedy Martin's script, which bristles with implications but cries for fuller explanations and John Flynn's energetic direction. Involved are Bruce Davison, as a seemingly apolitical American archeology student caught in the literal and political crossfire; Zeev Revah, once his classmate at Yale and now an Arab leader on the run from rival, dissident Arab terrorists, and Donald Pleasence, as an Israeli itelligence officer trailing Revah and Davison in order to end the clashes.

There also are Nicol Williamson, as a dourly realistic archeology professor anxious to achieve peace among the embattled; Daria Halprin, as a curvaceous Israeli student-activist amorously torn between Williamson and Davison, and Koya Yair Rubin, as the Israeli student-militant leader seeking a clandestine meeting with Revah through Davison, in order to settle all the unpleasantness.

Aside from their seriousness of purpose, they are largely two-dimensional characters, with the exception of Donald Pleasence, who emerges as a convincingly human, if implacable, sleuth. A basic weakness of "The Jerusalem File" is perhaps underlined best by Mr. Williamson, when he snaps, "You're playing at politics and you're no good at it."

The politics, the disparate motivations and the implicit drama of youth defeated by a world they don't want are only vaguely projected and are secondary to the chase and shoot-em-up action of "The Jerusalem File."

The Cast

THE JERUSALEM FILE, directed by John Flynn; screenplay by Troy Kennedy Martin; director of photography, Raoul Coutard; editor, Norman Wanstall; music by John Scott; produced by Ram Ben Efraim; released by Metro-Gold-wyn-Mayer. At the R.K.O. 59th Street East Twin I Theater, east of Third Avenue. Running time: 96 minutes. (The Motion Picture Association of America's Production Code and Rating Administration classifies this film: "GP�all ages admitted, parental guidance suggested.")

David . . . . . Bruce Davison
Lang . . . . . Nicol Williamson
Nurit . . . . . Daria Halprin
Samuels . . . . . Donald Pleasence
Mayers . . . . . Ian Hendry
Barak . . . . . Koya Yair Rubin
Raschid . . . . . Zeev Revah
Herzen . . . . . David Smader
Allouli . . . . . Jack Cohen

Source: New York Times

Video: The Jerusalem File (1972) Scene #2 | Ian Hendry, Nicol Wiliamson + Daria Halprin

The Jerusalem File (1972) Bruce Davison

Picture above: The Jerusalem File (1972) - Bruce Davison

The Jerusalem File (1972) Daria Halprin

Picture above: The Jerusalem File (1972) - Daria Halprin

Picture above: The Jerusalem File (1972) - Donald Pleasence

John Flynn - Director

John Flynn Director

Picture above: John Flynn - Director (undated)

The following extract from a lengthy article and interview first appeared in Shock Cinema in 2005 and is reproduced on the Foco Website

John Flynn - Out Of Action
Article and interview by Harvey F. Chartrand (Shock Cinema n� 29, fall 2005, pp. 26-29+46)

Veteran director John Flynn is known for his taut, economical and well-scripted action pictures. He is certainly one of the most underrated directors in crime cinema today.

A prot�g� of Hollywood legends Robert Wise and J. Lee Thompson, Flynn learned his craft well by observing these masters at work, before tackling his first solo directing assignment in 1967 - The Sergeant, in which Rod Steiger gave an anguished performance as a macho Army sergeant who is horrified by his own feelings of attraction to another man (John Phillip Law). Sadly, this dark and courageous drama has yet to be released on VHS, let alone DVD!

Flynn�s second film, the suspense story The Jerusalem File (1972), is equally obscure. Perhaps for political reasons, this exotic thriller about an idealistic American archaeology student (Bruce Davison) caught in the Arab-Israeli crossfire, is rarely seen on TV. Nor has The Jerusalem File been issued on VHS or DVD, despite the presence in supporting roles of Nicol Williamson, Donald Pleasence and Ian Hendry. (Zabriskie Point�s Daria Halprin also appears here in her final film role.) Set in the Holy City after the Six Day War, the film is one of the few Hollywood productions to have been shot entirely on location in and around Jerusalem.

Flynn went on to direct 15 more pictures, including the hardboiled The Outfit (1973), praised as one of the best films based on a Richard Stark �Parker novel� by the author himself, and the grim revenge saga Rolling Thunder (1977), which so impressed the young director Quentin Tarantino that he named his short-lived film release company (Rolling Thunder Pictures) after it. Rolling Thunder also made Tarantino�s list of his top 25 favorite movies.

Since 1990, Flynn has kept busy making excellent low-budgeters for U.S. cable networks or the direct-to-video market. His last film to date is 2001�s Protection, a witness relocation drama with a twist, starring Stephen Baldwin, Peter Gallagher and a cast of Canadian supporting players.

According to film writer Matthew Wilder, John Flynn could give today�s neo-noir directors seminars in the beauties of haiku-like plainspokenness. Shock Cinema agrees

SC: In the early seventies, you spent seven months in Israel preparing and filming the suspense story The Jerusalem File. What is your most vivid recollection from this shoot in the Holy Lands?

JF: I met writer Troy Kennedy Martin (The Italian Job, Kelly�s Heroes) and we became pals. He rewrote a bad script called The Jerusalem File, making it quite good. I signed on to direct the picture, because I loved the script and it was a chance to return to Israel for a few months. I stayed at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, further refining the script while waiting for the production money to come in. All the foreign journalists congregated in the bar of that hotel. So I�d be sitting there in that cavern, as they called it, with all these gentlemen of the press, getting the inside dope on what was really happening in Israel.

John Flynn (March 14, 1932 � April 4, 2007) - read more in Wikipedia

Ian Hendry The Jerusalem File - 1971

Picture above: The Jerusalem File (1972) - Ian Hendry

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


ATV Play 'We're Strangers Here' (1973) - Ian Hendry + Geraldine McEwan - Writer: Eric Chappell

Picture: Ian Hendry and Geraldine McEwan - Signed Still from We're Strangers Here by Eric Chappell. ATV production.

We're Strangers Here

First performed on TV with Geraldine McEwen and Ian Hendry as a two-hander and subsequently as a four-hander at the Theatre Royal, Windsor, the play eventually became the popular sitcom Duty Free. The play, like the series, deals with two warring couples on holiday in Spain. As in the original play the scene is set in the sixties and maybe played as a two-hander or four-hander and as a double bill or two one acts.

Characters: Male 2 (40's) Female 2 (40's)

Set: A Hotel Bedroom on the Costa del Sol.

Amateur and repertory rights with Josef Weinberger Ltd.

For all other rights contact / Eric Chappell Productions Ltd.

Eric Chappell - Writer

 

Extract from Eric Chappell's website:

"Eric Chappell took up full time writing in 1973 after his first stage play, The Banana Box, was produced at the Apollo Theatre, London. The play later inspired the classic TV comedy Rising Damp, winner of the BAFTA award for best situation comedy. In 1979 Eric's screen version won the Evening Standard Film award for best comedy.

 

Other television successes include The Squirrels, The Bounder, Home to Roost (all of which won PYE TV awards), Only When I Laugh, Duty Free, Singles, Fiddlers Three and Haggard.

 

Eric has written over 200 television comedy scripts and more than 20 stage plays which are performed worldwide. He is unquestionably one of the top writers of comedy in Britain today."

Geraldine McEwan

 

Geraldine McEwan (1932 - 2015) was one of England's most talented and versatile actresses. Her extensive theatre career was marked along the way with memorable performances that took risks and broke new ground, such as award-winning productions of�The Rivals, The Way of the World, and�The Chairs.�

She starred along side Laurence Olivier in numerous stage plays, including�Love for Love, The Entertainer, The Dance of Death, and�A Flea in Her Ear.�Geraldine originated the female role in�Joe Orton's Loot.�
geraldine mcewan laurence olivier air canada
�
Picture: Geraldine McEwan and Laurence Olivier
�
Her numerous television credits include the highly acclaimed�Barchester Chronicles�with Alan Rickman,�The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,�Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, the charming�Mulberry, Marple, and the immensely popular�Mapp and Lucia�with devotees around the world.
�
Her film work includes�The Dance of Death�with Laurence Olivier,�Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves�with Alan Rickman,�Henry V and Love's Labour's Lost, both with Kenneth Branagh,�Vanity Fair, and�The Magdalene Sisters.�Directed by Peter Mullan, the film won the Venice Film Festival Golden Lion award, a Toronto Film Festival award and received two 2003 BAFTA nominations. In February 2004, it received awards as Best British Film and Best British Director at the London Film Critics Awards Ceremony.
�
In 2004, Geraldine was chosen as the new�Agatha Christie sleuth, Jane Marple�and �filmed twelve 2 hour mysteries for ITV/PBS/Chorion before retiring from the role in 2007.

Biography

Geraldine McEwan was born in Old Windsor, England and made her theatre debut at the age of 14 at the Theatre Royal in Windsor. �By the age of 18 she was starring in London's West End in several long-running popular productions. During the 1950's she acted with the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-Upon-Avon and joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1961.
�
She had leading roles as Beatrice in�Much Ado About Nothing�with Christopher Plummer, Ophelia in�Hamlet, The Princess of France in�Love's Labour's Lost, Marina in�Pericles�and played opposite Dorothy Tutin in�Twelfth Night�which also toured Moscow and Leningrad.
�
Miss McEwan originated the female lead role in Joe Orton's�Loot, captivated Broadway with productions of�The School for Scandal, The Private Ear and the Public Eye, and most recently,�The Chairs,�earning her a Tony nomination for best actress.
�
As a member of the Royal National Theatre, acting along side Albert Finney, and Laurence Olivier, Geraldine dominated the 1960's and 70's with memorable roles including�Look After Lulu, The Dance of Death, Love for Love, A Flea in Her Ear, Chez Nous, Home and Beauty, The Browning Version & Harlequinade, On Approval, Oh Coward!, and�The White Devil.
�
In 1976 she had the distinction of being nominated for an Olivier Award in two separate�categories. During one season, she could be seen starring weekly in three separate productions for the National.
�
In 1983 she won the Evening Standard Best Actress Award for�The Rivals�and in 1985 her role as Lucia in�Mapp and Lucia, (based on the popular books of E.F. Benson) resulted in what can only be described as a cult following with several websites dedicated to the TV series and works of E.F. Benson.
�
Miss McEwan closed out the 80's flicking French phrases at warp speed with Emma Thompson in Branagh's monumental film�Henry V.�The brief scene of Alice (McEwan) teaching The Princess of France (Thompson) a few English phrases should be shown to every drama class as an example of creative, comic acting. It was beautifully crafted. In 1983 she helped establish the�Theatre of Comedy�and was a founder member along side Richard Briers, Judi Dench, Tom Conti, �Nigel Hawthorne, Maureen Lipman, John Mortimer and others.
�
During the 1990's her career went full throttle! In 1991 she won the BAFTA Best Actress Award for her intense and powerful performance as the Mother in�Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit. In 1995 she won the Evening Standard Best Actress Award for what has become the defining performance of Lady Wishfort in�The Way of the World. �
�
In 1998,�her stunning and physically demanding performance in�The Chairs, directed by Simon McBurney played to a packed Duke of York's Theatre every night. The play then transferred from the West End to Broadway, thrilling American audiences and critics. McEwan was nominated for a Tony Award in the Best Actress Category.
�
In 1999, Geraldine McEwan was a brilliant and fabulously shocking Judith Bliss in a controversial revival of Noel Coward's�Hay Fever.
Also in 1999, Geraldine delighted�Red Dwarf�audiences as Cassandra, a shimmering techno-vision. Ken Branagh's 2000 film,�Love's Labour's Lost�included a tap-dancing, Gershwin-singing McEwan as Holofernia.
�
In 2003, she accepted the role of Mrs. Gotobed in�Carrie's War. Filmed in Wales, the production has earned 8 Bafta Cymru nominations.
�
As Sister Bridget in Peter Mullan's brilliant film,�The Magdalene Sisters�(2003), Geraldine gave a remarkable performance as the chilling and complicated head nun of a Magdalene Laundry. Directed by Peter Mullan, the film won the prestigious Venice Film Festival Golden Lion award, a Toronto Film Festival award and received two 2003 BAFTA nominations. In February 2004, it received awards as Best British Film and Best British Director at the London Film Critics Awards Ceremony.
�
Later in 2003, McEwan accepted a small role in Mira Nair's�Vanity Fair�and created a memorable, scene-stealing Lady Southdown.
�
In 2004, Geraldine was chosen as the new�Jane Marple�This enormously successful Agatha Christie series of 12 films was shown worldwide.
�
Throughout this expansive and demanding career Geraldine had a long, successful marriage to Hugh Cruttwell (d.2002), former principal of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. They had two children, Greg�and Claudia, both writers, and seven grandchildren.
For more details visit the excellent official website:
and:

Duty Free

The play, We're Strangers Here, was developed into the TV series Duty Free.
�
Duty Free is about two British couples, David and Amy Pearce and Robert and Linda Cochran, who meet while holidaying at the same Spanish hotel in Marbella and the interruptive affair conducted by David Pearce and Linda Cochran during their break. Another recurring character is the hotel waiter Carlos.
�
Although set in Spain, the show was filmed entirely in the Leeds Studios � only for the concluding Christmas special was the budget found to film some scenes in Spain at the Don Carlos Hotel & Spa.
�
Like many British sitcoms, there was a class-related tension between the two; with the Pearces working-class socialists from Northampton, and the Cochrans a more affluent, middle-class Conservative couple from Henley-on-Thames in Oxfordshire. The character of David Pearce, much to his wife's chagrin, became uncomfortable with his own status and politics after meeting the Cochrans and tried to change his outlook.
�
Until next time,
�

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Rare Promotional Still - Ian Hendry + June Ritchie In This Is My Street (1964)

Picture above: Ian Hendry + June Ritchie In This Is My Street (1964)

This Is My Street is a 1964 British drama film directed by Sidney Hayers and starring Ian Hendry, June Ritchie, Avice Landone, John Hurt and Meredith Edwards. A bored housewife living in a run down inner city house begins an affair with the lodger, a salesman. The second film featuring Ian and June Ritchie - the first of course being Live Now Play Later (1962)

Video above: This Is My Street (1964) - Promotional Video

This Is My Street Ian Hendry

This Is My Street Ian Hendry (1963)

Picture: Original Film Posters - This Is My Street (1964)

"Ian Hendry, June Ritchie, John Hurt and future Randall and Hopkirk stars Annette Andr� and Mike Pratt feature among an outstanding cast in this mid-sixties realist drama from noted director Sidney Hayers.

Jubilee Close, a drab street of decaying houses in London's Battersea, is home to a cross-section of working-class families. Yearning to escape from this depressing environment is the pretty, ambitious Margery Graham; the victim of an enforced marriage, she is tied to a lazy, boorish husband and young daughter. Margery lives next door to her widowed mother who, in order to make ends meet, has taken in a lodger, Harry � a slick, unscrupulous salesman with a roving eye and a more-than-neighbourly interest in Margery..."

See also:

Ian Hendry - This Is My Street (1964) Promotional Still

Ian Hendry + June Ritchie - Open Top Car Promotional Still

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Roy Thinnes + Lynn Loring - Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun AKA Doppleganger (1969) Universal Pictures Rare Promotional Photograph

Picture above (l-r): Roy Thinnes, Lynn Loring and Ian Hendry

The still (see above) formed part of a series of black and white photographs taken for promotion of the film. Whilst many of the others are much more frequently seen, this is the first time I have come across this particular one - a much more relaxed and candid shot.

Ian Hendry And Roy Thinnes In 'Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun'
'

Picture (l-r): Ian Hendry + Roy Thinnes

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969)

Doppelg�nger is a 1969 British science fiction film directed by Robert Parrish and starring Roy Thinnes, Ian Hendry, Lynn Loring and Patrick Wymark. Outside Europe, it is known as Journey to the Far Side of the Sun, which is now the more popular title. In the film, a joint European-NASA mission to investigate a planet in a position parallel to Earth, behind the Sun, ends in disaster with the death of one of the astronauts (Hendry). His colleague (Thinnes) discovers that the planet is a mirror image of Earth.

The first major live-action film of Century 21 writers-producers Gerry and Sylvia Anderson,noted for Thunderbirds and other 1960s "Supermarionation" puppet television series, shooting for Doppelg�nger ran from July to October 1968. Using Pinewood Studios as the principal production base, Parrish also filmed on location in both England and Portugal. The professional relationship between the Andersons and their director became strained as the shooting progressed, while creative disagreements with cinematographer John Read resulted in his resignation from Century 21.

Video: Original Trailer

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun Doppleganger 1969 Poster

Picture: Poster - Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969)

Ian Hendry Roy Thinnes Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun Doppelganger 1969

Picture: Lobby Card - Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969)

See also:

Ian Hendry + Loni Von Friedl - Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969) - Rare Promotional Still

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969) - Show Guide + Stills

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969) - Definitive BluRay/ DVD Release

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Rare Promotional Still - Tommy Cooper + Ian Hendry - Thames Television (1975)

Picture above: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Cooper (1975). Thames Television - Original Promotional Still

Every so now and then, a lovely piece of memorabilia turns up from a 'vault' somewhere that gives us another glimpse into the 'golden age' of television. Discovered recently is a now defunct newspaper's archive, this black and white still captures a moment from the Cooper Show in 1975 - in which Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry starred in a sketch together.

Ian had many friends from the world of comedy and in his biography on Ian, Gabriel Hershman recalls how Ian often preferred the company of comedians than actors. There were exceptions of course, Ronnie Fraser was a very close friend and an actor - but his personality and lifestyle often bore the hallmarks of light comedy!

Ian had been friends with Tommy Cooper for sometime and that led to the two working together as Royston Mayoh recalls below. The two remained firm friends and Tommy would appear with him again, this time as a special guest on Ian's This Is Your Life in 1978

Ian Hendry Tommy Cooper 1976 Rear Thames TV

Picture above: Description on back of photograph - Tommy Cooper + Ian Hendry (1975)

According to the ratings from 1975 - listed on the Fifties Web website�- The Tommy Cooper Hour came in at number 16, just ahead of The Two Ronnies!

TV Ratings - 1975

1. Royal Variety Performance (ITV)
2. Benny Hill (ITV)
3. European Football (BBC)
4. Miss World 1975 (BBC)
5. Love Thy Neighbor (ITV)
6. This is Your Life (ITV)
7. Dr No (ITV)
8. Dad�s Army (BBC)
9. Generation Game (BBC)
10. The Sweeney (ITV) 11. Cilla�s Comedy Six (ITV)
12. Coronation Street (ITV)
13. Edward the Seventh (ITV)
14. Man About the House (ITV)
15. Bless This House (ITV)
16. Tommy Cooper Hour (ITV)
17. The Two Ronnies (BBC)
18. My Old Man (ITV)
19. News at Ten (ITV)
20. Upstairs Downstairs (ITV)

It's interesting to note that 'homes in millions' was used back then - rather than the more modern 'viewers in millions' - with the data being compiled from the Audits of Great Britain (AGB) from 1972-1981. The Crossroads Network website provides some very detailed listings and viewing figures of the top shows from the 70's - fascinating reading.

With only three main TV channels available, viewing figures for programmes in the 70's were far in excess of those achieved by domestic television today. By autumn 1978 the Tommy Cooper show was reaching an estimated 13.2 million households. When Ian was featured on This Is Your Life in March 1978, Thames Television was regularly achieving viewing figures of between 15 to 19 million households for the show - quite some reach.

Ian Hendry + Tommy Cooper + Royston Mayoh (Executive Producer)

Recently, whilst I was carrying out so research on Ians' This Is Your Life (1978) I was put in touch with Royston Mayoh, who was one of the Executive Producers for the show.

He was kind enough to send me an account of the time he worked with Ian Hendry and Tommy Cooper on the Cooper Show in 1975 - which we've reproduced it in full below.

Ian-Hendry-This-Is-Your-Life-1978-Tommy-Cooper-3

Picture: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Cooper (1975)

Despite being cast frequently in 'serious' roles or as the villain in his TV and Film - Ian's loved comedy and comedians. Whilst studying at the Central School of Speech + Drama in London he met and became close friends with Coco The Clown - and became his stooge learning many of the tricks of the trade. He was a clown at heart. That experience and memory of the circus and working with Coco would stay with him for the rest of his life.

Indeed that deep of love of comedy was reflected in a comment by Dame Judi Dench - who was two years below Ian at Central School of Speech + Drama. Whilst Gabriel Hershman was carrying out research for his biography on Ian, she told him that:

"I think he was the first student I had ever seen whom I believed had been born an actor. He was wonderful at light comedy and we all looked up to him and admired him enormously."

Video above: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Policeman Sketch (Cooper 1975)

Royston Mayoh: Recalls Working With Ian Hendry + Tommy Copper (+ an anecdote from Victor Spinetti)

 

Firstly, a big thank you to Royston Mayoh for allowing us to reproduce his account in full for the website:

"I only ever worked with your uncle once, and that was on the TOMMY COOPER SHOW.

As I recall it your Uncle's agent contacted Tommy's agent to let him know that Ian had been waxing lyrical about what bliss it would be to work with Tom.

As these things tend to do, it all got mixed up somewhere within the casting department and my Head of Department called me up with ' ...what's all this about Ian Hendry? You haven't got that sort of money,especially as the show sells so well overseas....' I explained that I didn't know what he was talking about which was true, so Philip Jones got the head of casting on the phone there and then to check the veracity of the rumour/story/wish/fact or whatever it was..........

[At this point you should know that IAN HENDRY was an enormous star, who (in much kinder times) had taken a 'break' away! So he had been out of the public eye for while]

..............[Edit: Name removed by request] was incandescent with rage and complained bitterly that MIFF FERRY ( Toms agent) was attempting to 'cast' the show outside of the normal lines of communication and that she had found out by accident and was NOT happy about it because this had totally denied her the right to negotiate a fee, so now we would be duty bound to pay top dollar! At which point I jumped in and asked from whom she had heard about it ? It turned out to be the Barman at THE ANGLERS Teddington who had announced that IAN HENDRY was back doing DANGER MAN alongside TOMMY COOPER who was playing STEED from THE�AVENGERS. The barman had heard this from the horses mouth Tommy himself, who often frequented this pub that he affectionately called ' THE AGGLERS'

Ian-Hendry-This-Is-Your-Life-1978-Tommy-Cooper

Picture: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Cooper (1975)

There were other rumours too that the contract THAMES had with Ian specified that IF it was discovered that IAN HENDRY had 'come off the wagon' and was 'drunk' then all bets were OFF.

NOW I can tell you that, as the producer of the Show, these notes and observations are complete RUBBISH.

NO such contract was ever drawn up or , to my knowledge, even discussed by anyone connected to the TOMMY COOPER HOUR. I would have known, because unlike today's regime, the 'producer' had to know every aspect as there was NIT ONE aspect of the production that the ' Producer' wasn't RESPONSIBLE for.

The contractual details including RIDERS and FEE and also any background notes which may have 'lead' to the booking, including my own casting preferences, we're all included in a P.asT. ( production as transmitted) form , which was signed by both the Producer AND the Director before any payments could be actioned .

As I was both Producer and Director , I would have signed your Uncles contract twice.
He learnt the part, he brought a new characterisation, and comedy , to the role that even surprised the writer DICK HILLS, he and Tom got on like a house on fire, and the whole experience was one of sheer joy.

I do also remember, my friend, VICTOR SPINETTI banging on about what a superb actor IAN HENDRY was , and made much about his 'eye contact' which Victor had described as rather like someone leaning in and inviting your soul to come out to play !

That, as they say, is that !

Thank you for providing the opportunity of reminding myself about the time I worked with your uncle IAN HENDRY.

Yours most sincerely

ROYSTON MAYOH

__________________________________________________________

Victor Spinetti - In Short

The comment by Victor Spinetti intrigued me and I wanted to find out more about this actor's life.

File photo dated 18/6/1968 of Victor Spinetti with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The veteran actor, whose notable roles included appearances in three Beatles films, has died at the age of 82. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Tuesday June 19, 2012. See PA story DEATH Spinetti. Photo credit should read: PA Wire

Picture: Victor Spinetti with John Lennon and Yoko Ono

Victor-Spinetti

Picture: Victor Spinetti

The following is an extract from Victor Spinetti's obituary published by The Guardian:

"Victor Spinetti was an outrageously talented Welsh actor and raconteur who made his name with Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop and found fame and fortune as a friend and colleague of the Beatles, appearing in three of their five films, and with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in Franco Zeffirelli's The Taming of the Shrew (1967).

It was while he was giving his brilliantly articulated and hilarious "turn" as the gobbledegook-shouting drill sergeant in Oh, What a Lovely War! in the West End in 1963 � he won a Tony for the performance when the show went to Broadway � that the Beatles visited him backstage and invited him to appear in A Hard Day's Night (1964).

"George Harrison later said that his mother would refuse to go and see the group's films unless Spinetti was in them..."

 

These, and other tales of the stars, would be recounted by Spinetti himself in his one-man shows, and in the wonderful autobiography he wrote, Up Front (2006), with the help of another Littlewood associate, Peter Rankin."

A wonderfully colourful character, Spinetti was in his element when the 60's arrived:

"He was more than ready for the swinging 60s, living a champagne lifestyle and dressing colourfully, even when he could not pay all the bills. And if that happened, he told me, he "spanked old gentlemen for money" so he could buy Christmas presents. "My dear old mother told me that, if she'd known at the time, she would have come along and given me a hand!"

After his New York success and the first two Beatles films � Richard Lester's Help! followed A Hard Day's Night in 1965 � he played opposite Jack Klugman in Neil Simon's The Odd Couple at the Queen's in 1966 and then accepted an invitation from the critic Kenneth Tynan to co-write and direct John Lennon's zany, poetic In His Own Write at the National (then based at the Old Vic) in 1968.

Until next time

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The Avengers Promotional Photoshoot In Soho, London - Ian Hendry + Patrick Macnee + Ingrid Hafner (5th December 1960 ABC TV)

Picture above: Ian Hendry and Patrick Macnee - Berwick Street Market, Soho, London

As production began on the very first series of The Avengers, the thoughts of the team turned to how the title sequence would be portrayed.

It was decided that the sequence would comprise of photographic stills, and that these images would be specially shot on location.

In their excellent book 'Two Against The Underworld - The Collected Unauthorised Guide To The Avengers Series 1', Alan Hayes, Alys Hayes and Richard McGinlay expertly tell the detailed story behind the creation of The Avengers, including the background to this particular photoshoot:

Extract:

"Consequently, on Monday 5th December 1960, a small team including Ian Hendry, Patrick Macnee, Ingrid Hafner and an ABC photographer travelled into central London and headed towards the district of Soho, W1. With Hendry and Macnee dressed in sandstone-coloured trench coats, somewhat stereotypical apparel for sleuths of the era, photographs were posed in a variety of somewhat seedy, run-down settings. Among these was Moroni�s newsagents at 68 Old Compton Street, an outlet that specialised in imported European and American newspapers and magazines for more than 40 years. It was at this location that the oft-seen images of Keel and Steed smoking cigarettes by racks of newspapers were taken."

This book can be purchased here.

The other notable locations from this photoshoot include those taken outside Del Monico�s off licence, at 64 Old Compton Street, Berwick Street Market and Bourchier Street - a narrow side road off Dean Street, W1 - and a small car park on waste ground off Bourchier Street.

The Avengers Promotional Photographs - Soho, London - 5th December 1960

 

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 1

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 2

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 22

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 3

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 4

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 6

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 5

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 7

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 8

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 9

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 10

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 11

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 12

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 13

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 14

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 15

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 16

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 17

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 18

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 19

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 20

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 21

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 24

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 25

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 26

The Avengers December 1960 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee Ingrid Hafner ABC TV Soho London 23

Source: Leonard White Collection

Video: The Avengers - Opening and Closing Sequences

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry - 'Star Special' June and School Friend Magazine 10th December 1966

Picture: Cover of June and School Friend Magazine - 10th December 1966

An innocent, pre-to-early teen magazine/comic for girls in the mid 1960's.

June and School friend fact: "Schoolfriend" was the biggest-selling girls' comic throughout the '50s, followed closely by the slightly more modern "June", then publishers Fleetway combined the two in the 1960s, keeping the most popular features of each.

The stories in the annual were typified by uplifting tales of triumph over terrible adversity or heart-wrenching ordeals. Of course there was also the staple of all Girls magazines - Fashion, advice, competitions and pinups of beautifully groomed dogs.

This edition from 10th December 1966 featured a Star Special on Ian Hendry. Some notable points�included are that he went to school at Culford, Sussex (should of course have been Suffolk), that he starred in Casino Royale ( well he did but ended up - with several others notable actors - on the cutting room floor!) and that he had 'a part' in The Avengers. The latter being a slight understatement as the series was created as a new vehicle for him, in which he starred of course as the lead Dr. David Keel.

Ian Hendry Star Special June and School Friend Magazine 10th December 1966 2JPG

June and School Friend Magazine

 

The School Friend was published by Amalgamated Press as a story paper for girls from 1919 to 1929, when it was renamed The Schoolgirl, and continued until 1940.

 

School_Friend October 13th 1923

 

Picture: Cover of School Friend Magazine - October 13th 1923

School Friend was revived as a comic in 1950, publishing a mixture of comic strips and prose stories, and was published by AP, then Fleetway and IPC. It had a circulation of c.945,000 in the mid-50's, dropping to about 445,000 in 1961. It ran until 1965, when it was merged with June magazine, becoming June and School Friend. The Editor of June and School Friend was Mavis Miller. Art Editor: Colin Parker. Sub-editors: Terence Magee, Jackie Davies. Art Assistants: Ken "Sherry" Sherrington, Roger Prickett

Art Agencies used were run by Dick and Jack Wall; Temple Art Agency by Danny and Pat Kelleher; Bardon Art Associates by Barry Coker; Creaciones Ilustradas by Luis Llorente

Series included:

"Babs and the Family"
"Bessie Bunter" (Billy Bunter's sister), written by Jim Storrie
"Cherry and the Children", drawn by John Armstrong
"Dilly Dreem"
"Jill Crusoe", written by Johnny Johnson and drawn by Roland Davies
"Kim - Dog of Mystery"
"Lucky's Living Doll" (written by Frank Redpath and drawn by Robert MacGillivray)
"My Friend Sara"
"Scamp" (Harry Hargreaves)
"The Silent Three", written by Horace Boyten and Stewart Pride, drawn by Evelyn Flinders
"The Strangest Stories Ever Told", a pipe-smoking teller of spooky stories (various writers such as Scott Goodall, Len Wenn, Terence Magee and various artists)
"Terry Brent", drawn by C. L. Doughty
"Sindy", the famous toy doll, written by Cecil Graveney

There was also a School Friend Picture Library, published from 1962 to 1965, when it became June and School Friend Picture Library, and then June and School Friend and Princess Picture Library in 1966.

A companion paper was Lindy, published in 1975 and folding 6 months later. The Editor was Norman Worker. One of the stories was "Hard Days For Hilda", written by Terence Magee.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Sylvia Anderson - 27th March 1927 � 16th March 2016

Picture above: Sylvia Anderson with the puppet, Lady Penelope and then husband, Gerry Anderson.

Thunderbirds co-creator Sylvia Anderson, best known for voicing Lady Penelope in the hit TV show, has died aged 88.

Anderson voiced Lady Penelope in Thunderbirds from it's debut in 1965 until 1968.

Video: Lady Penelope Stops The Hood's Car - Thunderbirds

She worked with Ian Hendry on the film Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun - as one of the screenwriters and producers, alongside her then husband,�Gerry Anderson. Donald James and Tony Williamson are also credited for the screenplay. The spaceship in the film is clearly influenced by their earlier creation,�Thunderbird 2.

 

Thunderbirds 2 Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun 1969

Sylvia Anderson

Sylvia Anderson (n�e Thamm, 27 March 1927 � 16 March 2016) was a British television and film producer, writer and voice�actress, well known for her collaborations with Gerry Anderson, her husband between 1960 and 1981.[2]In addition to serving as co-creator and co-writer on their TV series during the 1960s and early 1970s, Sylvia's primary contribution was character development and costume design.��She regularly directed the bi-weekly voice recording sessions, and provided the voices of many female and child characters, in particular Lady Penelope in�Thunderbirds. The Andersons divorced at the start of the 1980s following a five-year separation.

After graduating from the London School of Economics with a degree in economics and sociology, Sylvia Thamm became a social worker and emigrated to the United States to live with her first husband, an American golfer.Returning to the UK with a daughter, she joined the newly founded and short-lived Polytechnic Films as a secretary in 1957.There, Thamm would meet Gerry Anderson, an editor and director. That year, when Anderson and his business partner Arthur Provis created AP Films following Polytechnic's collapse, she joined them on the board of directors of the new company, alongside their colleagues John Read and Reg Hill. In 1960, Thamm and Anderson married, after which she played a wider role in production duties.

The Andersons' creative partnership ended when their marriage broke down during the production of the first series of Space: 1999 in 1975. Gerry announced his intention to separate on the evening of the wrap party,following which Sylvia ceased her involvement with the company, which by this time had twice been renamed and was now called Group Three. In 1983, she published a novel, Love and Hisses, and in 1994 reprised her role as the voice of Lady Penelope for an episode of the sitcom Absolutely Fabulous. She worked as a London-based talent scout for the American TV network HBO for 30 years.

Anderson's autobiography, Yes M'Lady, was first published in 1991; in 2007, it was re-published as My FAB Years with new material to bring it up to date with the latest developments in her life, such as her role as a production consultant for the 2004 live-action film adaptation of Thunderbirds. Of the film, Anderson commented, "I'm personally thrilled that the production team have paid us the great compliment of bringing to life our original concept for the big screen. If we had made it ourselves (and we have had over 30 years to do it!) we could not have improved on this new version. It is a great tribute to the original creative team who inspired the movie all those years ago. It was a personal thrill for me to see my characters come to life on the big screen."My FAB Years was re-released as a spoken CD, narrated by Anderson, in 2010.

Co-founders of adventure series Stingray, Gerry and Sylvia Andersone

Picture: Co-founders of adventure series Stingray, Gerry and Sylvia Anderson with some of the puppets

In 2013, Anderson was working with her daughter Jacqueline Dee, a jazz singer, on a concept for a new TV series named "The Last Station". They have set up a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo for followers to contribute and be a part of the new series.

Obituary - The Guardian

A producer and writer, Anderson created the Supermarionation puppet series with her husband, Gerry. She died at her home in Bray, Buckinghamshire, following a short illness, her daughter Dee Anderson said.

�Sylvia was a mother and a legend. Her intelligence was phenomenal but her creativity and tenacity unchallenged,� her daughter said. �She was a force in every way, and will be sadly missed.�

 

Lady-Penelope-from-Thunderbirds + Parker

Picture: Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward and Parker in Thunderbirds.

Gerry Anderson died in 2012 aged 83 after suffering from Alzheimer�s disease.

As well as voicing Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward in Thunderbirds from its debut in 1965 until 1968, Sylvia Anderson also worked on Joe 90, Captain Scarlet and Stingray.

Born in south London to a boxing champion and a dressmaker, she went on to have a career in television spanning five decades. She recently worked as head of programming for HBO in the UK and had been writing a show with her daughter entitled The Last Station.

Dee Anderson said her mother �would always find time to take care of people who were suffering or in need of support�. The pair had planned a charity ball for Breast Cancer Care, which will go ahead in May in Sylvia�s memory.

She is survived by her daughter, who is a singer-songwriter, son Gerry Anderson Jr, an anaesthetist, four grandchildren and one great-granddaughter.

Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward

She was an aristocrat, a secret agent and, frankly, the subject of many a schoolboy crush in the late sixties and seventies.

An original Lady Penelope puppet�from the Thunderbirds television programmes was�expected to fetch up to �10,000 at auction in 2011.�Since the mid-60s the 50cm (20ins) high puppet, which has a head full of electronics allowing the mouth to move, has been in the care of her maker, Christine Glanville.

The marionette was one of the stand-out characters in Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's beloved adventure series. Always perfectly turned out, Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward was wont to travel in a pink six-wheeled Rolls Royce, usually driven by her chauffeur Parker.

She lived in a splendid stately home in the British countryside and communicated with International Rescue, the secretive do-gooders based on the tropical hideaway of Tracy Island, via a device hidden in her teapot.

The characters Lady Penelope and Parker were designed to play up to an American audience's perception of the British upper class. Her face was based on the character from a shampoo advert of the day.

Our thoughts and condolences go to the family and friends of Sylvia Anderson.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Get Carter (1971) - Original Screenplay [PDF Download]

Picture above: Ted Lewis typing on set. Ted wrote the novel �Jack�s Return Home� which formed the basis for the film. Michael Caine and Ian Hendry in the distance. Wallsend/ Hebburn Ferry Landing. Get Carter (1971)

Get Carter (1971) - Original Screenplay [PDF Download]

Screenplay: By Mike Hodges (based on the novel by Ted Lewis �Jack�s Return Home�

Get Carter 1971 - Screenplay

Download >>>�Get Carter - Screenplay [1971]

 

Cinephilia and Beyond website has a very good article entitled "Why Mike Hodges Uncompromising Gangster Film Gained Cult Following" - with an exclusive interview with Mike Hodges by the DLD College, London and a short documentary with cinematographer Wolfgang Suschitzky. Well worth a visit!

See also:��Get Carter (1971) - Cinephilia and Beyond

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Leonard White - British Actor and Television Producer - 5th November 1916 � 2nd January 2016

Picture above: Leonard White - British Actor and Television Producer

Leonard White (5 November 1916 � 2 January 2016) was a British actor and television producer. In the latter role he was responsible for The Avengers and Armchair Theatre. Whilst researching his biography on Ian Hendry, Gabriel Hershman was very grateful to Leonard for his help in filling in much of the background with regards to the creation of Police Surgeon (1960) and The Avengers (1960)

He published a memoir, Armchair Theatre: The Lost Years, in 2003, and the first volume of his autobiography, Many Moons and a Few Stars, in 2010.

Here we pay tribute and reflect on his life and his great contribution to television.

The following obituary was first published in The Telegraph on 18th February 2016 - with additional pictures added of Ian Hendry, from Police Surgeon and The Avengers.

Leonard White, who has died aged 99, was a television producer responsible for the first 40 episodes of the cult �spy-fi� caper The Avengers, whose camp adventures helped to define 1960s television.

Ian-Hendry-Police-Surgeon-TV-Times-Cover-October-2nd-8th-1960-copy-820x1174

Picture: Ian Hendry in Police Surgeon - TV Times Cover October 2nd 1960

White was working in Canada when he was lured back to Britain by Sydney Newman, head of drama at ABC Television, to work on the series Police Surgeon (1960), starring Ian Hendry as Dr Geoffrey Brent. Police Surgeon did reasonably well but at the end of its run Newman decided that there would be no more series.

Instead White and the ABC drama team were asked to work up a new series based around Hendry�s acting talents. The result was The Avengers, in which Hendry played a doctor, Dr Keel, who becomes involved in dangerous escapades. To support this plot line they postulated a mysterious, debonair figure who would co-opt Keel into helping in various adventures. That character was John Steed, played by Patrick Macnee, whom White had known from Toronto. Initially Keel was the main character and Steed quite a peripheral figure.
The first series got off to a rocky start with the critics, but soon began to creep up the ratings.

Ian-Hendry-Dr-David-Keel-Patrick-Macnee-John-Steed-The-Avengers-TV-Series-1-1961

Picture: Ian Hendry and Patrick Macnee - The Avengers (1960)

After the first 26 episodes, however, an actors� strike intervened, forcing it off the air from the end of 1961 until September the following year. Then, as the strike neared its end, Hendry announced that he was moving on. Up against the clock, White and his team decided to enlarge the role of the Steed character and to introduce three new assistants, including the �anthropologist� Cathy Gale, played by Honor Blackman.

B3NBT5 Honor Blackman and Patrick MacNee 1963 in TV Programme The Avengers mirrorpix

Picture: Honor Blackman and Patrick Macnee in The Avengers. Photo: Trinity Mirror / Mirrorpix / Alamy

�We decided to make her a compelling, brilliant woman, a match for any man,� White recalled. �We were hearing stories from the Mau Mau uprising of farmers being killed and their wives ably taking over the running of the farm � doing physical work, maintaining the machinery and taking up arms. This is the sort of woman we envisaged Cathy Gale to be. We even gave her an African background: she had married a white African farmer and gone to live on his farm, where he had been killed and she had carried on.�

Later, so the legend goes, she returned to England, got a PhD in anthropology and a job as curator in a museum. A chance meeting with Steed, in which he elicits her help in a case involving black magic, introduces her to the world of espionage.

The new-style Avengers proved a winner, and the introduction of a female lead was well received by the public. The leather catsuit-wearing Cathy won a devoted following and her flirtatious banter with Steed made the dialogue sparkle. She would be followed in turn by Diana Rigg and Linda Thorson. A huge cult hit, The Avengers ran from 1960 to 1969 and was shown in more than 70 countries.
After 40 episodes, however, White moved on to other projects.

Leonard White was born on November 5 1916 at Newhaven, East Sussex, where his father ran a bookmakers and his mother a newsagents. He was educated at the local Council School for Boys, where he was taken under the wing of an energetic headmaster, who established a company of all-boy Shakespeare Players. �I didn�t want anything to do with it. The thought of acting, of going on stage, scared me stiff,� White recalled. �I even got my mother to write a note to the headmaster telling him that I did not want to do it and asking that I be excused. He threw that note into his waste paper basket.�

White was horrified when, for his first part, he was cast as Lady Macbeth in the sleep-walking scene: �The funny thing was that after doing it � been made to do it � I didn�t want to do anything else but be an actor.�

After leaving school aged 16, he got a job as a customs-entry clerk with a French transport company, but he continued to act in his spare time at an old chapel which the headmaster had bought with his own money and where he had established a boys� club and staged productions of Shakespeare.

Soon White moved to London where he got a job in a shipping company in the City and joined the Tavistock Repertory Company, a semi-professional company based in Bloomsbury.

Called up into the Army at the outbreak of the Second World War, he was selected to be an instructor in Signals and, after the end of the war in Europe, returned to the stage after securing a transfer to the Army Bureau of Current Affairs Play Unit.

After demob White called upon a director he knew who had been appointed manager of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre at Stratford-upon-Avon. Within a few days he was rehearsing for the 1946 season in a production of Cymbeline.

He went on to work alongside such actors as Ralph Richardson, Laurence Olivier and Michael Redgrave, and as an understudy to Dirk Bogarde. He also appeared in West End shows, most memorably as one of the original leads in Christopher Fry�s A Sleep of Prisoners (1951), also starring Denholm Elliott and Stanley Baker.

Leonard White Denholm Elliott Stanley Baker

Picture: Leonard White, Denholm Elliott and Stanley Baker - A Sleep Of Prisoners (1953)

He then began to think of directing. Peter Hall took him on as an actor at the Oxford Playhouse with a promise that he could direct one play per season. Shortly afterwards Hall moved to the Arts Theatre in London and White was appointed director of the Oxford Playhouse in his stead. In the meantime, in 1953 White had been invited to direct (and act in) the Canadian premiere of A Sleep of Prisoners in Toronto. He cast Patrick Macnee and took the opportunity later that decade to take part in a training course run by CBC Television.
After 40 episodes of The Avengers, White won further acclaim as producer of ITV�s Armchair Theatre, and went on to work on many other productions, both for ITV and the BBC.

In 2002 he published a memoir, Armchair Theatre: The Lost Years, followed, in 2010, by an account of his early life, Many Moons and a Few Stars.

In 1942 White married Margaret Kent, who died in 2013. They had two sons, both of whom predeceased him. He is survived by his niece and five grandchildren.

Leonard White, born 5th November 1916, died 2nd January 2016

Our thoughts and condolences go to the family and friends of Leonard White.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


100th Celebratory Post - Restrospective Of 10 Key Highlights + Discoveries From The Official Website Of Ian Hendry

Video above: Ian Hendry - 30th Anniversary Tribute

To celebrate the 100th post on the Official Website of Ian Hendry, we have compiled 10 highlights from the first 3 years. Enjoy!

#1 - An Idea, A Biography And A Website

At the end of 2011, I was contacted for the first time by Gabriel Hershman who told me that he was planning to write the first ever biography on Ian Hendry. Months of hard work, interviews and research followed, resulting in a tremendous record of the life and work of Ian Hendry.

This website and the Ian Hendry Facebook Page followed shortly afterwards.

Send-In-The-Clowns-The-Yo-Yo-Life-of-Ian-Hendry-by-Gabriel-Hershman-27

See also:

Ian Hendry Biography By Gabriel Hershman

#2 - Picture Post (1954) - First Ever Article Featuring Ian Hendry

In 2013, I was contacted by a kind lady who had come across this classic Picture Post magazine from March 1954. It contained the very first article featuring Ian Hendry, whilst he was studying at the Central School of Speech + Drama. Keen to reunite it with the family, she posted it off - as a gift - the very next day!

Originally, the cover was to feature photograph from the article on the school - that is until Elizabeth Taylor arrived at the 11th hour with her new film release! The cover that might have been in shown below.

Picture Post 27 March 1954 Elizabeth Taylor Cover copy

Picture: Original Picture Post Cover - Elizabeth Taylor (March 1954)

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Picture: Picture Post - With Ian Hendry. The Cover That Might Have Been!

See also:

Ian Hendry Picture Post - March 1954

#3 - A TV Discovery - Dial M For Murder 'Contract' (1974)

This copy of the original transmission recording was sent to me following a contact message through the website. Ian Hendry and Robert Lang play a gay couple who earn a living as contract killers. Enjoy!

#4 - A Play Is Found - The Crossfire (1967)

Another example of someone contacting the website with a copy of a 'lost' ITV play. Peter Wyngarde - who also starred - contacted me recently and I was able to send him a copy of the play, which he had not seen in over 40 years!

See also:

The Crossfire (1967) - Ian Hendry

#4 - Portraits Of The Original Avenger

Two classic early portraits of Ian Hendry - from The Avengers - also came to light. The second one includes one of the opening credit boards used for The Avengers.

Ian Hendry Avengers 1961 Press

Picture: Ian Hendry - Original Promotional Portait For The Avengers (1961) - ABC TV

Ian Hendry + Joan Watson The Avengers (1961) In Make-Up

Picture: Ian Hendry - 'Make-Up' Portait From The Avengers (1961) - ABC TV

See also:

The Avengers (1961) - Ian Hendry

#5 - A Study - At The Racecourse Scene, Get Carter (1971)

A detailed study of one of the memorable scenes from the classic film, Get Carter (1971). The racecourse scene features the classic eyes like 'piss-holes in the snow' line!

 

See also:

Get Carter (1971) - At The Racecourse, Ian Hendry + Michael Caine

#6 - An Anniversary - Ian Hendry 30th Anniversary Tribute

24th December 2014, marked the 30th anniversary since the loss of Ian Hendry. The video below was released as a tribute to his life + work.

 

See also:

Ian Hendry - 30th Anniversary Tribute

#7 - Another Discovery - Theme Tune From The Informer (1966-1967)

Ian Hendry played the lead role as a debarred lawyer (Alex Lambert ) in the two series of The Informer (1966-1967). Only two master prints are known to exist - both held at the BFI. Sir Ridley Scott directed two of the episodes and described it as very good and Ian Hendry as 'spectacular'. The original theme tune and stills have been located and this video gives a flavour of what we are all missing - the music is spectacular too!

 

See also:

Ian Hendry - Stills From The Informer (1966-1967)

Ian Hendry - Theme Tune and Script From The Informer (1966-1967)

#8 - A Sad Loss - Patrick Macnee

25th June 2015 marked the end of an era, with the sad loss of Patrick Macnee at the age of 95. The Avengers was originally created as a vehicle for Ian Hendry, with Patrick as his side-kick John Steed. Patrick would of course go on to become synonymous with the series - after Ian left to pursue opportunities in film. The friends would re-unite to recall those early days, many years later, on Ian's This Is Your Life (1978).

patrick-macnee-ian hendry

See also:

Patrick Macnee - In Memory

#9 - Researching The Past - The Avengers, Series 1

The advent of self-publishing has opened up new opportunities for people to research and publish material that they are passionate about. Fine examples of this are the books on The Avengers, written by Richard McGinlay, Alan Hayes and Alys Hayes. Real labours of love, they have retold the story of the creation of The Avengers - and Series 1 - in tremendous detail.

avengers-hendry

Two Against The Underworld The Avengers Series 1 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee

See also:

New Book: The Avengers Series 1 � Two Against The Underworld: The Collected Unauthorised Guide To The Avengers Series 1

#10 - Early Years - Sports Day At Culford School (1947)

A chance discovery of a 16mm reel of black and white film on eBay, revealed footage of Ian Hendry - and his brother Donald - at the Culford Sports Day in 1947! Ian was just 16 years old at the time and this is thought to be the earliest record of him on film.

 

See also:

Ian Hendry - Sports Day at Culford School (1947)

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The Hill (1965) - Harry Andrews (as Sergeant Major Wilson) + Ian Hendry (as Staff Sergeant Williams) + Sean Connery (as Joe Roberts)

Picture above: The Hill (1965) - Harry Andrews (as Sergeant Major Wilson) + Ian Hendry (as Staff Sgt. Williams) + Sean Connery (as Joe Roberts)

This still from the film gives a fine example of how the cinematography of Oswald Morris and the direction of Sidney Lumet combined brilliantly to capture the intensity of the characters and their interactions, as well as reflecting the stark nature of the setting.

See also:

The Hill (1965) - 50th Anniversary Tribute
What Woody Allen Thinks of The Hill (1965)

Video above: The Hill (1965) - Original Trailer

Given the strength of the cast and their performances, it is perhaps more than a little surprising that when the awards season came around, that the film didn't fair better. In Gabriel Hershman's biography on Ian Hendry, Michael Jayston commented that:

"Ian should have received an Oscar nomination. God only knows what the competition was that year or what people were thinking of. It was a terrible oversight that he wasn't."

These are the nominations that the film received - and the winners.

BAFTA Awards

Winner Best British Cinematography (Oswald Morris)
Nominee Best Film (Kenneth Hyman)
Nominee Best British Film (Kenneth Hyman)
Nominee Best British Actor (Harry Andrews)
Nominee Best British Screenplay (Ray Rigby)
Nominee Best British Art Direction (Herbert Smith)

Cannes Film Festival
Winner Best Screenplay at the 1965 Festival (Ray Rigby)

National Board of Review
Winner Best Supporting Actor (Harry Andrews)
Writers' Guild of Great Britain[edit]
Winner Best British Dramatic Screenplay Award (Ray Rigby)

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Get Carter (1971) Original MGM Promotional Still - Michael Caine (Jack Carter) + Ian Hendry (Eric Paice)

Picture above: Get Carter (1971) Original MGM Still - Michael Caine + Ian Hendry

Promotional still for Get Carter (1971) - from the U.S.

The racecourse scene is, of course, where this memorable line by Jack Carter (Caine) came from:

Do you know, I�d almost forgotten what your eyes look like, they�re still the same, piss-holes in the snow.

For a detailed analysis of the racecourse scene in Get Carter, see the article below.

See also:

The Racecourse Scene - Get Carter (1971)

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Get Carter (1971) - MGM Promotional Still - Ian Hendry As Eric Paice

Picture above: Ian Hendry as Eric Paice in Get Carter (1971)

Ian Hendry as Paice Get carter 1971jpg

Picture: Rear of promotional still

Video above: This also gives me another opportunity to showcase Chris Williams prowess on guitar! Get Carter - the alternative opening...

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Get Carter (1971) - Roy Budd Theme Tune + Opening Revisited! [Video]

Video above:�Get Carter (1971) - Roy Budd Theme Tune + Opening Revisited!

 

Thanks to Chris Williams for the great guitar version of the haunting Roy Budd theme tune!

Get Carter 1971 Behind The Scenes Michael Caine Ian Hendry 26

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Tony Read - Obituary Of The Television Screenwriter, Producer And A Fellow Student And Friend Of Ian Hendry

Tony Read �was a fellow student and friend of Ian Hendry, in those early days at Central School of Speech + Drama.

When Gabriel Hershman approached Tony for help with the biography, Tony was �more happy to provide him with many anecdotes and stories�of the times they shared in the early 50's in London.

Once they went to see Richard Burton play Hamlet �in the West End - and Churchill appeared to watch it too!

Later, when Tony had moved into writing and television production, he approached Ian to see if he wanted to play the part of Erik Shepherd in�The Lotus Eaters - a part for which he thought he would be perfect. Written by Michael J. Bird, it was a story about the lives of various British expats living on the island of Crete and their reasons for being there. Wanda Ventham played the part of Ian's wife, Anne Shepherd. Tony fondly recalled the events that surrounded his approach to Ian to play this part and how ultimately, his instincts had been proven to be correct.

Anthony-tony-read-TV Screenwiter Producer

Anthony Read

Author, television screenwriter and producer who worked on Doctor Who, Z Cars, The Professionals and The Omega Factor

Anthony Read, who has died aged 80, was a writer and television producer who in 1977 chose to be, in effect, demoted, in order to spend a year working as script editor during Tom Baker�s years in Doctor Who. When he joined the BBC in November 1963 Read had noticed the show�s very first instalments being recorded in one of the studios. By the 1970s, he was a seasoned writer and producer of drama, and was reluctant to accept a post offered to him as script editor � until told which series he was being asked to join. Read�s vast experience, calm demeanour and forensic aptitude for structuring scripts provided essential ballast for the Doctor Who producer Graham Williams. When one script fell through at the last minute, together they hurriedly wrote the season climax, conceiving The Invasion of Time (1978) set on the Doctor�s home planet, Gallifrey.

Read also helped to develop the first television script from Douglas Adams, whose four-episode Doctor Who story Pirate Planet (1978) was at first deemed too complex by the BBC�s head of serials Graeme MacDonald. Read and the director Pennant Roberts felt that Adams was a talent worth backing and so fought for it to remain in production. They won, and helped to structure Adams�s wild ideas into a coherent narrative.

The adventure became part of the first season of the show to utilise an umbrella theme: in an unusual move, Read and Williams decided to link the individual stories with a framing narrative concerning the Doctor�s search for the Key to Time, a futuristic plot device aimed at restoring balance to the universe. After Read left the show (having installed Adams as his successor as script editor), he contributed an adventure entitled The Horns of Nimon (1979), which was based on the Minotaur myth.

Read was born in Cheslyn Hay, a small mining village in Staffordshire. His father, Frederick, a miner, died in the pit when Anthony was seven, leaving his mother, Lottie, to bring him up alone. He was educated at Queen Mary�s grammar school in Walsall, which had a strong theatrical tradition, and then enrolled at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London. National service interrupted his studies and after demobilisation he set up a theatre company with the actor Ian Hendry and toured eastern Europe as a fledgling actor-manager, taking lead roles or manning the tills, as necessary, often both on the same night.

Realising that he was not cut out for acting, he headed to Fleet Street, aiming for work in advertising copywriting while submitting scripts to television companies. He was eventually asked to join the BBC, where he became a protege of the innovative head of drama Sydney Newman, adapting stories, writing original scripts and serving as story editor for series such as Detective (1964, starring Rupert Davies), The Indian Tales of Rudyard Kipling (1964) and Sherlock Holmes (1965, starring Douglas Wilmer).

From 1965 he script-edited Mogul (later entitled The Troubleshooters), a drama about the oil industry starring Geoffrey Keen, also producing it from 1966, and in 1972 The Lotus Eaters (featuring his friend Hendry). In 1980 he script-edited the 13 one-off thrillers in the Hammer House of Horror series.

Among more than 200 television writing credits were Z Cars (1976-77), The Professionals (1977-80), The Omega Factor (1979), Sapphire and Steel (1981), the zoo vet series One By One (1984-85) and the New Zealand-based teen drama The Tribe (1999).

His proudest small-screen achievements were Chocky (1984), a six-part adaptation of a John Wyndham novel about a boy befriending an extraterrestrial, for which he conceived two original sequels; and the award-winning The Baker Street Boys (1983), about a group of urchins who assist Sherlock Holmes. Between 2005 and 2009 Read wrote six well received and widely translated novels based around the Baker Street characters.

He had other major successes in print, largely as a writer of historical non-fiction. Kristallnacht: Unleashing the Holocaust won the Wingate literary prize in 1989. Other works (some co-written with a former Doctor Who colleague, David Fisher) included Operation Lucy: The Most Secret Spy Ring of the Second World War (1980), Colonel Z: the Secret Lives of a Master of Spies (1984), The Deadly Embrace: Hitler, Stalin and the Nazi-Soviet Pact 1939-1941 (1988) and The Proudest Day: India�s Long Road to Independence (1997).

Read was an active member of the Writers� Guild, serving as chair between 1981 and 1982, and drawing up an industry-wide code of practice on behalf of the young writers he was committed to nurturing, never taking pay or expenses for his work on the guild�s behalf. He was also a director of the Authors� Licensing and Collecting Society. He co-wrote a proposal from the Writers� Guild and the Directors and Producers Association that was submitted to the Annan committee on the future of broadcasting and was subsequently used as part of the charter agreement for establishing Channel 4.

He is survived by his wife, Rosemary (nee Kirby), whom he married in 1958, and their two daughters.

� Anthony Read, writer, editor and producer, born 21 April 1935; died 21 November 2015

Source: Anthony Read - The Guardian

Our condolences and thoughts go to his family and friends.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Loni Von Friedl - Promotional Still For Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun/ Doppleganger (1969)

Picture: Ian Hendry with Loni Von Friedl - Original Promotional Still

This photograph was located in Buenos Aires - we find memorabilia in all kinds of places!

Original promotional still for the film Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (released as Dopleganger in the UK).

Video: Original Trailer

See also:

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969) - Show Guide + Stills

Journey To The Far Side Of The Sun (1969) - Definitive BluRay/ DVD Release

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry - Portrait From The Late 50s/ Early 60s

Picture: Ian Hendry Portrait from the late 50's/ early 60's - Granada TV archive.

A recent find of an early Ian Hendry portrait from the Granada TV archive. On the rear of the photograph is a press cutting from a TV listings page:

Ian Hendry stars in ITV's Big Picture film "The Girl in the Headlines" (tomorrow, 7.25pm)

Ian Hendry Granada TV Portrait Back Early 60's

Picture: Ian Hendry portrait - back of photograph

 

The Girl in the Headlines was a film made in 1963, with a cast including�Ronnie Fraser, James Villiers and Jeremy Brett. The rear of the photo includes the date stamp 21st March 1970, but this is more likely to be the day the film was broadcast on TV and not when the picture was taken. On the rear of the picture there is also the hand written note 'Ian Hendry Y/col w/d 10.30 for P2' suggesting that it was used for an earlier weekday programme listing.

If we had to estimate when it was�taken, we'd say 'late 50's/ early 60's'.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Tales From The Crypt (1972) - Ian Hendry, Peter Cushing And The Make-Up Of Roy Ashton

Picture above: Ian Hendry wearing a special effects mask created by Roy Ashton for the film - Tales From The Crypt (1972)

Roy Ashton was one of cinema's greatest make-up designers and created most of Hammer's most famous and memorable monsters. We take a look at his work on Ian Hendry and Peter Cushing in Tales From The Crypt (1972) - through the lens of some great behind the scenes pictures and reference photographs.

Tales From The Crypt 1972 Ian Hendry as Carl Maitland
Picture: A rare reference photograph of Ian Hendry wearing a special effects mask created by Roy Ashton for the film.�Photograph from the Ashton & Leakey Collection
tales-from-the-crypt-roy-ashton-peter-cushing
Picture: Make-up artist Roy Ashton works on Peter Cushing�s corpse look�for the segment Poetic Justice.
Picture: Peter Cushing and Roy Ashton - World of Horror magazine issue 1 (1974)
Tales-from-the-Crypt_05 Peter Cushing
Picture: Peter Cushing ready for action! Tales From The Crypt (1972)
Roy Ashton in Studio Vault of Horror 1973

Picture: A reference photograph of Roy Ashton (1909-1995) in his studio fitting a death mask onto an actor for 'Vault of Horror' (1973), taken by an unknown photographer in 1973. Other prosthetic creations by Ashton are evident. Photograph from the Ashton & Leakey Collection.

Picture: Peter Cushing [main picture] and Ian Hendry [inset] - World of Horror magazine issue 1 (1974)

Roy Ashton

Howard Roy Ashton (17 April 1909 � 10 January 1995) was an Australian tenor, associated for a while with Benjamin Britten's English Opera Group, and make-up artist who became particularly associated with his work on the Hammer Horror films.

See: Roy Ashton in Wikipedia

In 1955, Ashton was finally forced to make a choice. Invited to work with Orson Welles in Madrid for the film Mr. Arkadin, Ashton was on location when he received a message that English Opera Group wanted him to take part in a revival of Albert Herring. Having already promised to work on the film, though no contract had been signed, Ashton turned the EOG job down, so finishing his association with the group. His work as a make-up artist was a more lucrative and stable source of income, so he devoted himself to that career. However he would always fondly remember his singing career: "Nothing can compare with the thrill of appearing before a great gathering, of hearing the thunder of the applause delivered to a sincere artist," he wrote.

On the production of Invitation to the Dance (1955), Ashton found himself working as assistant to Phil Leakey. They were soon firm friends, and worked together on several films. Leakey introduced Ashton to Hammer Films, so starting a relationship for which Ashton is best known.

Although he had a long and varied career in British films, Ashton is chiefly remembered for his work on the Hammer's horror films. After assisting Leakey on The Curse of Frankenstein (1957), Ashton found himself in charge of make-up for The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959) when Leakey, having had his retainer cut by the company's associate producer, Anthony Nelson Keys, left the company in disgust. Ashton's main effort on that film, to transform a Great Dane into the title character, was barely a success, the result only appearing briefly in the final cut. His next film, The Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959), involved transforming Anton Diffring into "a living corpse": "To produce all the ravages of time and debauchery, I felt that the final effect should be a cocktail of fatal diseases spreading rapidly across his body. Glandular fever, smallpox, cholera, typhus and typhoid, represented some of the ailments that Bonner had come into contact with (through his unseen travels) as a crusading physician." The result was widely admired: over a decade later the American make-up artist, Dick Smith, consulted Ashton about the effect to create make-up to age Dustin Hoffman as an 103-year-old man in Little Big Man, and was to repeat the effect in several subsequent films.

Ashton subsequently created some of the studio's most celebrated images in films, such as The Mummy (1959), The Curse of the Werewolf (1960) and The Reptile (1966). Ashton was particularly proud of the make-up he created for The Curse of the Werewolf, which he claimed he created quite unaware of the make up by Jack Pierce in Werewolf of London or that used in Jean Cocteau's La Belle et la B�te. Hearing in advance that Hammer were planning to make Curse of the Werewolf, he obtained a copy of the script and spent weeks in preparation before he was approached by Keys to undertake the job. Ashton also recommended that Oliver Reed should be cast in the title role: "His powerful bone structure was just right for the appearance and his gifts as an actor were perfect for the part. In addition, he resembles a wolf anyway when he is very angry." Through Oliver Reed, Ashton met the Australian dental surgeon Phil Rasmussen, who gave useful advice about creating fangs for the werewolf make-up; so started a professional relationship which was to continue in several subsequent films.

Ashton also worked on a number of Amicus horror films, including The House That Dripped Blood (1971), Asylum (1972), and Tales from the Crypt (1972), and worked on Tigon's The Creeping Flesh. As well as horror films, he worked on Blake Edwards' Pink Panther series.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


New Book: The Avengers Series 1 - Two Against The Underworld: The Collected Unauthorised Guide to The Avengers Series 1

A new book has been published on the Avengers Series 1.

If you are familiar with the previous publications by Hidden Tiger Books (The Strange Case of the Missing Episodes and With Umbrella, Scotch and Cigarettes) this new book is an updated and expanded omnibus version of both titles.

TWO AGAINST THE UNDERWORLD:�The Collected Unauthorised Guide to The Avengers Series 1

Two Against The Underworld The Avengers Series 1 Ian Hendry Patrick Macnee

Congratulations to authors Richard McGinlay, Alan Hayes and Alys Hayes on their latest addition to the collection.

Details below provided by Alan Hayes:

Forewords by Roger Marshall and Neil Hendry

If you think you�ve read the definitive account of THE AVENGERS� lost year... think again!

Two Against the Underworld brings together six years of research and combines and updates two previously published Hidden Tiger books (The Strange Case of the Missing Episodes and With Umbrella, Scotch and Cigarettes) to tell the story of The Avengers from both sides of the camera.

Authors Richard McGinlay, Alan Hayes and Alys Hayes lift the lid on all 26 Series 1 episodes. Comprehensive chapters detail the narratives in extended synopsis form, often with script extracts, as well as the production, transmission and reception of each episode, and the talented personnel who were involved in making them.

The creation of The Avengers, the departure of Ian Hendry, the series' destiny, and the mystery of the missing episodes, are explored in a series of essays, each of which is new or has been revisited to incorporate fresh information.

avengers-hendry

Picture: Ian Hendry illustration by Shaqui Le Vesconte

Avengers scriptwriter Roger Marshall and Neil Hendry, who runs his uncle Ian Hendry's official website, both contribute forewords to this volume. The book also boasts lavish black-and-white illustrations by artist Shaqui Le Vesconte and 70 pages of appendices that deal in depth with the unproduced episodes of Series 1, Keel and Steed's further adventures in the comic strip The Drug Pedlar and the novel Too Many Targets, and much more.
Order Links:

Deluxe Hardcover - �24.99

Two Against The Underworld - Deluxe Hardcover

Standard Paperback - �19.79

Two Against The Underworld - Paperback

Save 15% with the promotional code FWD15 (enter at checkout)

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Wedding of Ian Hendry + Janet Munro: Today Magazine Article - February 23rd 1963

Picture: Today Magazine Article - February 23rd 1963. Wedding of Ian Hendry + Janet Munro.

Wedding of Ian Hendry + Janet Munro - 16th February 1963

Video: News clip of wedding between Ian Hendry + Janet Munro - 16th February 1963

A big thanks to Alan Hayes of The Avengers Declassified�website for sharing this recently discovered article with us.

It tells the story of how the two met, the romance and events that followed and the wedding held at the Presbyterian Church at Bayswater, London on 16th February 1963.

Today 1963-02-23 p16-17 Ian Hendry and Janet Munro copy 2

Today 1963-02-23 p16-17 Ian Hendry and Janet Munro copy 22

Today 1963-02-23 p18 Ian Hendry and Janet Munro copy 2i

Today 1963-02-23 p18 Ian Hendry and Janet Munro copy 2ii

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry Portrait 'Clown Of Quality' - TV Times 18th March 1972

Picture above: Portait of Ian Hendry taken from the TV Times article, 'Ian Hendry - Clown Of Quality' - 18th March 1972

Ian Hendry's love on the circus - and clowns in particular - stemmed from his student days at the Central School of Speech and Drama, when by chance he met Coco The Clown who was working for Bertram Mills' Circus. Ian went to work for him in his spare time as his stooge and so began a lifelong friendship with Coco and his wife Valentina.

This article in the TV Times, reflected upon Ian's love affair with the circus - and the audience's reaction - and saw him dressed up as a clown once again.

Coco The Clown 1951 Olympia

Picture: Coco the Clown polishing his oversized shoes before a performance at Olympia Kensington in 1951

Coco The Clown And Bertram Mills' Circus

Coco, whose real name was Nicolai Poliakoff, was born in Latvia in 1900.�His parents worked in the theatre when Nicolai was born, but both lost their jobs a few years later and, in order to survive, Nicolai started busking from the age of five. In 1929 Nicolai, or Coco as he was then called, came to England with his young wife Valentina and began working for�Bertram Mills' Circus.

For the full story of Ian Hendry and Coco The Clown:

See: Ian Hendry and The Circus That Came To Town - Part One

 

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


This Is My Street (1964) - Ian Hendry Promotional Still

Picture above: Ian Hendry Promotional Still - This Is My Street (1964)

This Is My Street is a 1964 British drama film directed by Sidney Hayers and starring Ian Hendry, June Ritchie, Avice Landone, John Hurt and Meredith Edwards. A bored housewife living in a run down inner city house begins an affair with the lodger, a salesman. The second film featuring Ian and June Ritchie - the first of course being Live Now Play Later (1962)

This Is My Street Ian Hendry

Picture: Original Film Poster - This Is My Street (1964)

Re-released by Network on DVD in April 2014 - This Is My Street is presented in a brand-new transfer from the original film elements in its as-exhibited theatrical aspect ratio.

See also: This Is My Street on Network

"Ian Hendry, June Ritchie, John Hurt and future Randall and Hopkirk stars Annette Andr� and Mike Pratt feature among an outstanding cast in this mid-sixties realist drama from noted director Sidney Hayers.

Jubilee Close, a drab street of decaying houses in London's Battersea, is home to a cross-section of working-class families. Yearning to escape from this depressing environment is the pretty, ambitious Margery Graham; the victim of an enforced marriage, she is tied to a lazy, boorish husband and young daughter. Margery lives next door to her widowed mother who, in order to make ends meet, has taken in a lodger, Harry � a slick, unscrupulous salesman with a roving eye and a more-than-neighbourly interest in Margery..."

Video above: This Is My Street (1964) - Promotional Video

See reviews: This Is My Street (1964) on Amazon

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Ian Hendry + Tommy Cooper: Cooper To Play John Steed Of The Avengers? Royston Mayoh, Victor Spinetti And An Overheard Conversation At 'The Agglers'...

Video above: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Cooper (1975)

Every so now and then I have the good fortune to chat with someone who worked with Ian back in his heyday.

On this occasion I was carrying out so research on Ians' This Is Your Life (1978) and was put in contact with Royston Mayoh, who was one of the Executive Producers for the show. He was kind enough to send me an account of the time he worked with Ian Hendry and Tommy Cooper on the Cooper Show in 1975 - which we've reproduced it in full below.

Ian-Hendry-This-Is-Your-Life-1978-Tommy-Cooper-3

Picture: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Cooper (1975)

Despite being cast frequently in 'serious' roles or as the villain in his TV and Film - Ian's loved comedy and comedians. Whilst studying at the Central School of Speech + Drama in London he met and became close friends with Coco The Clown - and became his stooge learning many of the tricks of the trade. He was a clown at heart. That experience and memory of the circus and working with Coco would stay with him for the rest of his life. Ian and Tommy remained friends and Tommy would appear as a special guest on Ian's This Is Your Life in 1978

As well as discussing Ian's work, we also enjoy 'shining the spotlight' on those who worked with him or knew him and revealing more about the film and television history of the era. So before we get to Royston's account, we'll begin this article with at some of the highlights of his 50+ years in television.

Royston Mayoh - A Short Biography

Although Royston has spent a large part of his life as a Director/ Producer, acting has given him a new career in later life. Royston is one of the key members in the ITV show 'Off Their Rockers'

royston mayoh off their rockers
Royston has written a fascinating account of his 50+ years in television. It's fascinating reading:

Royston Mayoh - 50+ Years in Television

The following is an extract from the article:

"What follows is a long and fairly detailed biography of my 50+ years in the Television Industry, Unless you have time to read it, here is a potted version. Starting a career as a Film/TV cameraman, moving swiftly through scriptwriting and on to the positon of Producer/Director of major ITV and BBC programmes through the 60's right up to 2005 both in the UK and India. illness stopped that career but gave birth to two NEW ones, that of a Lecturer and that of an Actor. My Lecturing skills were rated outstanding by Ofcom and my Acting skills are being required more and more the older I get.

Thats the short Version, Here is the LONG version, to be read with a cop of tea in hand!

In the world of 60�s 70�s 80�s 90�s &20�s TV production, Royston Mayoh was better known as a Director/Producer specialising in entertainment marking up many successes over a 50 year career as a writer and innovator of original formats for BBC, ITV, Ch4, BskyB and FIVE.

As a Freelance Director / Producer he earned a reputation for being associated with top rated shows both in the UK and Internationally.

Throughout his career, Royston has specialised in innovative and ground breaking high-rated successes in Comedy / Dance / Game shows / Lifestyle and Music. This has resulted in BAFTA nominations and many International Awards.

His work in Multi Camera TV Direction and production of music shows earned him the prestigious New York International Gold award for his directorial skills resulting in the pop music hit ITV series RAZZMATAZZ. Included among the many music LIVE Outside Broadcast specials are BB KING, PEGGY LEE, ROD STEWART, SADE, THE THREE TENORS & DONNA SUMMER.

In India Royston achieved strong programme and film making affiliations with Fahad Samar of Bombay Talkie productions, Anil Malhotra of Eagle Films (Bombay and Delhi Studios) and Siddhartha Basu, Anita Kaul Basu & Karun Prabakaran of Synergy Communications (Mumbai �Millionaire�). With Royston�s guidance these companies made top-rated and highly acclaimed programmes exclusively for the Indian market.

Royston also has a notable track record in TV Comedy, producing and directing now �classic� comedy TV series including the legendary and quite disparate shows starring, amongst many others, KENNY EVERETT, LES DAWSON, LITTLE & LARGE and TOMMY COOPER.

In terms of �Award� shows Royston has directed the British Academy of Film & Television Arts (BAFTA Film Awards), the Evening Standard British Film Awards, 3 years of the Channel [V] Music Awards in Delhi, the International Indian Film Awards in London and South Africa and produced, wrote and Directed The Good Food Awards for the BBC.

Royston was Executive Producer and �creative� for a TV Spectacular from the Ostend Casino, which launched the, now leading, Belgian Flemish language Commercial TV Station VTM. Royston Produced and Directed the FIRST colour programme from Australia, the FIRST satellite broadcast from Tokyo and directed THIS IS YOUR LIFE from the USA (Jule Styne). This was in addition to the 106 UK THIS IS YOUR LIFE episodes the MOHAMMED ALI one hour special and the LIVE Moulin Rouge special featuring the original MISS BLUEBELL (Margaret Kelly) .

As an actor Royston has also appeared in many commercials, corporate productions and, more recently, in 4 episodes of EMMERDALE as the Restaurant Owner Raymond Robinson, a rustic gardener in a new Farmfoods commercial. And yet to be transmitted (scheduled for Christmas 2013) as STOUGHTON the Butler in a 3 part series of the Drama DEATH COMES TO PEMBERELY, and three quite differing portayals of an Grandad/Old Man. In the short Art House Film CACHE the character is a wise old worryingly mad clairvoyant, In THE HARD DAYS WORK the character is a warm and empathetic Granddad and in THE ARTEX FAMILY a stumbling, clumsy, but lovable old Grandad that simply 'gets in the way'

However, following the success of the first �pilot� series of OFF THEIR ROCKERS Royston is thrilled to be invited back for its third series and is presently completing the filming along with 10 other disgracefully irresponsible �old farts�.

Royston Mayoh is a Member of B.A.F.T.A � D.G.G.B. & B.E.C.T.U.

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Royston Mayoh: Working With Ian Hendry + Tommy Copper (+ an anecdote from Victor Spinetti)

 

Firstly, a big thank you to Royston Mayoh for allowing us to reproduce his account in full for the website:

"I only ever worked with your uncle once, and that was on the TOMMY COOPER SHOW.

As I recall it your Uncle's agent contacted Tommy's agent to let him know that Ian had been waxing lyrical about what bliss it would be to work with Tom.

As these things tend to do, it all got mixed up somewhere within the casting department and my Head of Department called me up with ' ...what's all this about Ian Hendry? You haven't got that sort of money,especially as the show sells so well overseas....' I explained that I didn't know what he was talking about which was true, so Philip Jones got the head of casting on the phone there and then to check the veracity of the rumour/story/wish/fact or whatever it was..........

[At this point you should know that IAN HENDRY was an enormous star, who (in much kinder times) had taken a 'break' away! So he had been out of the public eye for while]

..............[Edit: Name removed by request] was incandescent with rage and complained bitterly that MIFF FERRY ( Toms agent) was attempting to 'cast' the show outside of the normal lines of communication and that she had found out by accident and was NOT happy about it because this had totally denied her the right to negotiate a fee, so now we would be duty bound to pay top dollar! At which point I jumped in and asked from whom she had heard about it ? It turned out to be the Barman at THE ANGLERS Teddington who had announced that IAN HENDRY was back doing DANGER MAN alongside TOMMY COOPER who was playing STEED from THE�AVENGERS. The barman had heard this from the horses mouth Tommy himself, who often frequented this pub that he affectionately called ' THE AGGLERS'

Ian-Hendry-This-Is-Your-Life-1978-Tommy-Cooper

Picture: Tommy Cooper and Ian Hendry - Cooper (1975)

There were other rumours too that the contract THAMES had with Ian specified that IF it was discovered that IAN HENDRY had 'come off the wagon' and was 'drunk' then all bets were OFF.

NOW I can tell you that, as the producer of the Show, these notes and observations are complete RUBBISH.

NO such contract was ever drawn up or , to my knowledge, even discussed by anyone connected to the TOMMY COOPER HOUR. I would have known, because unlike today's regime, the 'producer' had to know every aspect as there was NIT ONE aspect of the production that the ' Producer' wasn't RESPONSIBLE for.

The contractual details including RIDERS and FEE and also any background notes which may have 'lead' to the booking, including my own casting preferences, we're all included in a P.asT. ( production as transmitted) form , which was signed by both the Producer AND the Director before any payments could be actioned .

As I was both Producer and Director , I would have signed your Uncles contract twice.
He learnt the part, he brought a new characterisation, and comedy , to the role that even surprised the writer DICK HILLS, he and Tom got on like a house on fire, and the whole experience was one of sheer joy.

I do also remember, my friend, VICTOR SPINETTI banging on about what a superb actor IAN HENDRY was , and made much about his 'eye contact' which Victor had described as rather like someone leaning in and inviting your soul to come out to play !

That, as they say, is that !

Thank you for providing the opportunity of reminding myself about the time I worked with your uncle IAN HENDRY.

Yours most sincerely

ROYSTON MAYOH

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Victor Spinetti

The comment by Victor Spinetti intrigued me and I wanted to find out more about this actor's life.

File photo dated 18/6/1968 of Victor Spinetti with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The veteran actor, whose notable roles included appearances in three Beatles films, has died at the age of 82. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Tuesday June 19, 2012. See PA story DEATH Spinetti. Photo credit should read: PA Wire

Picture: Victor Spinetti with John Lennon and Yoko Ono

Victor-Spinetti

Picture: Victor Spinetti

The following is an extract from Victor Spinetti's obituary published by The Guardian:

"Victor Spinetti was an outrageously talented Welsh actor and raconteur who made his name with Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop and found fame and fortune as a friend and colleague of the Beatles, appearing in three of their five films, and with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in Franco Zeffirelli's The Taming of the Shrew (1967).

It was while he was giving his brilliantly articulated and hilarious "turn" as the gobbledegook-shouting drill sergeant in Oh, What a Lovely War! in the West End in 1963 � he won a Tony for the performance when the show went to Broadway � that the Beatles visited him backstage and invited him to appear in A Hard Day's Night (1964).

"George Harrison later said that his mother would refuse to go and see the group's films unless Spinetti was in them..."

 

These, and other tales of the stars, would be recounted by Spinetti himself in his one-man shows, and in the wonderful autobiography he wrote, Up Front (2006), with the help of another Littlewood associate, Peter Rankin."

A wonderfully colourful character, Spinetti was in his element when the 60's arrived:

"He was more than ready for the swinging 60s, living a champagne lifestyle and dressing colourfully, even when he could not pay all the bills. And if that happened, he told me, he "spanked old gentlemen for money" so he could buy Christmas presents. "My dear old mother told me that, if she'd known at the time, she would have come along and given me a hand!"

After his New York success and the first two Beatles films � Richard Lester's Help! followed A Hard Day's Night in 1965 � he played opposite Jack Klugman in Neil Simon's The Odd Couple at the Queen's in 1966 and then accepted an invitation from the critic Kenneth Tynan to co-write and direct John Lennon's zany, poetic In His Own Write at the National (then based at the Old Vic) in 1968.

His career after this phenomenal start was erratic. He clocked up more than 30 films, including the third Beatles collaboration, Magical Mystery Tour (1967) for television, and Andrew Sinclair's Under Milk Wood (1972) with the Burtons again, as well as Peter O'Toole, Si�n Phillips and Vivien Merchant.

Spinetti was always in work but there was not much focus to it. He started directing musicals in the 1970s, taking charge of Hair in Amsterdam and Rome, and Jesus Christ Superstar in Paris. In 1980 he directed The Biograph Girl, a mediocre musical about the silent movie era at the Phoenix theatre, London, and shortly afterwards launched his one-man show of tart and funny reminiscences, A Very Private Diary, at the Edinburgh festival, but only on the fringe.

Later film work included a nice cameo in Peter Medak's The Krays (1990). On television he played in an early sitcom opposite Sid James, Two in Clover, but became even better known as a Mexican snack thief in adverts for McVitie's Jaffa Cakes. In the 1980s he was the voice of Texas Pete in the children's series SuperTed, and 10 years ago played the "man of a thousand faces" in the popular children's show Harry and the Wrinklies.

His last on-screen appearance was in a recent DVD of an independent film, Seth Swirsky's Beatles Stories, issued to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' first recording session at Abbey Road. And on stage he last garnered acclaim as Einstein in Albert's Boy at the Finborough theatre in Earl's Court in 2005. There he was, taking an audience by surprise right to the end.

Thanks again to Royston Mayoh for his personal account. Keep rocking!

Until next time

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


The McKenzie Break (1970) - Universal Artists Promotional Still

Picture: Newly found Universal Artsists Promotional Still - The McKenzie Break (1970)

One of my favourite clips from the film as the two contrasting characters clash. The maverick Captain Jack Connor (Brian Keith) discusses an unconventional idea which challenges Colonel Perry's authority (Ian Hendry).

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��'Send in the Clowns - The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry' by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry


Culford School Sports Day (1947) - Extremely Rare Footage Of A Young Ian Hendry ( Just 16 Years Old ) + His Brother Donald Hendry At The Culford School Sports Day

Video above: Rare film of the Culford School Sports Day (1947).

___________________________________________________________________________

Sometimes things work out perfectly – and this is one of those occasions.

This film is the result of an extraordinary discovery and the culmination of several months of work. It not only features rare footage of my family but also captures memorable moments of many of the students who were really only just at the beginning of their lives; it’s also a short historical record of a school and it’s teachers and the families who obviously valued it so dearly. Two years after the second world war had ended, this footage seems to encapsulate the sense of freedom, hope and rekindled belief of a generation.

A Message Is Received

In May 2015, I received a message from Simon Moreby, alerting me to a reel of 16mm film which had been listed for auction on eBay. What made this potentially so special was that it contained footage taken during the Culford School Sports Day in 1947.

Ian Hendry and his brother Donald (my father) were students at Culford School at that time and both were keen on sports. In 1947, Culford School was an independent boarding school for boys in the village of Culford, four miles north of Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, England.

Both Ian and Donald played rugby and cricket and they were also very good at athletics. Ian was captain of the 1st XV rugby team and also featured in the 1st cricket XI. It was whilst he was studying at Culford School that he really began to develop his love of acting and featured in several school plays. We will return to this subject in a future article.

In his biography on Ian Hendry, Gabriel Hershman explores this early period in his life with anecdotes and contributions from one of his best friends there – Ian Ferguson. Some great details are included on Ian’s sporting prowess, his involvement with the drama group and some humourous anecdotes from his schooldays. A time that many may know little about – a world away from TV, films and the ‘celebrity lifestyle’ that in some ways came to define him later in life.

Ian Hendry Culford School Admission Card

Picture: Ian Hendry’s Admission Card – Culford School

Ian-Hendry-Culford-School-1st-Cricket-XI-19471-820x558

Ian Hendry 1st XL Culford School Cricket

In 1947, Ian was just 16 years old and my father was still a couple of months away from his 14th birthday. So could this old 7″ steel reel contain some long lost footage of them taken during their school years? The mere thought of the possibility sent all of our minds racing. What if? The decision to bid for the film had already been made.

The Auction

The eBay listing contained a few frame captures from the film, but none of people featured in them resembled either Ian or my father. We calculated that the reel contained about 400ft of film, which equates to just c.15 minutes. The final evening of the auction came and after some fierce last-minute bidding from someone who was obviously equally keen on winning it – we came away with the prize. The film was won and a few days later it arrived.

Culford School Sports Day 16mm Film

Picture: Some clips from the film included in the eBay auction listing – but no sign of Ian or Donald Hendry at this point

The Film Transfer

But that was only the first step. We still didn’t know whether the reel contained footage of either Ian or my father. The film was sent to a film company that specialises in the transfer of 16mm film to digital. Several weeks passed and I was getting a bit impatient so I sent them an email. An auto-reply message came back informing me that the company had just closed for a two week holiday! In hindsight, the waiting just added to the suspense.

Eventually the package arrived by recorded delivery – the original reel of film and a USB memory stick with the digital files on them. This was the moment of truth. What exactly did this film contain and would it have been worth all the effort and expense? I could barely bring myself to watch. Not knowing what was on the film gave me a sense of hope and anticipation. Now I could actually watch it and I feared for the worse. I clicked play…..and the silent film began.

First Viewing

The film flickered on my screen and with it the memories of that day came back to life again; almost as though the participants in the sports day had been waiting patiently for this moment of discovery when they could reenact their roles again. Some 68 years had passed since that day but the film brought it all vividly back to life. I felt extremely privileged. It soon became apparent that the film had been shot by a family member of one of the students – but this was not just some home movie – it contained creative footage of the day as a whole. A truly remarkable find.

The results were far far better than any of us could have hoped for. I saw my father dashing across the finish line in first place. Not once but twice! The film continued and I scoured the frames and the faces, trying to see if Ian was there as well. And then, the final proof that finding this film was meant to be. As a line of gymnasts waited for their turn to leap over the wooden vaulting horse – Ian walks calmly into the scene. Perhaps the earliest record of him on film.

I recognised him immediately. I had seen the 1st Cricket XI team photograph taken that very same year – in which he appeared in the back row/ far right. The same slight build, jet black hair and determined look.

Given that so many families were present, I then turned my attention to see whether I could see their parents (my grandparents) Enid and Jim. And yes, after a few minutes of searching I saw them too.

They were all there. How incredible. How complete.

Ian Hendry, Donald Hendry + Their Parents – Jim + Enid (Culford School Sports Day – 1947)

Ian hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 #1

Picture: Ian Hendry deep in thought as he prepares for his leap!

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 11

Picture: Ian Hendry – airborne!

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 5

Picture: My father, Donald Hendry wins race number two

Jim + Enid Culford School

Picture: The parents of Ian and Donald – Enid and Jim Hendry

Culford School Day Sports Day 1947 – Stills

But this film is not just about my family. It is a moment in time that captures the lives of many people – the teachers, the pupils and the families who came to visit for the day. The pictures below capture some of the great moments from the film.

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 1

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 3

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 6

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 7

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 8

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 9

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 12

Ian Hendry Culford School Sports Day 1947 13

In closing

Many thanks to Simon for first alerting me to this film. Without his discovery this footage may never have seen the light of day.

This film is very dear to me. To say that I have found it moving – watching and working with it – would be a great understatement. Seeing my uncle and father – and their parents – captured at this point in their lives brings out many different and mixed emotions. To have been able to also ‘share’ that day with the many students, staff and families present makes me feel very privileged and fortunate; almost as if I had been given my own special invitation to attend as well and join in the fun. I may never witness time travel, but perhaps this is as near to it as one can get.

This film also belongs to all the people who appear in it and their families and it’s an important documentary record. For these reasons it will be returned to Culford School for safe-keeping and so they can also share it as well. The circle will finally be completed.

This film is dedicated to the hopes and dreams of all the pupils and staff of Culford School. Past, present and future.

Carpe diem.

Until next time,

Neil Hendry
Editor, Official Website of Ian Hendry

Further Reading

A detailed account of the life and work of Ian Hendry in the new biography:

Read:��‘Send in the Clowns – The Yo Yo Life Of Ian Hendry’ by Gabriel Hershman

Send In The Clowns - The Yo Yo Life of Ian Hendry