Marionette
Edward Hellawell
Category
Toys
Date
circa 1937 - circa 1952
Materials
Wood, Plastic-Wood, cotton, artificial silk, hair and metal
Measurements
780 mm (height)
Place of origin
Walsall
Order this imageCollection
Sudbury Hall Museum of Childhood, Derbyshire
NT 661589
Summary
One of the puppets made by Edward G. Hellawell for his puppet theatre known as ‘The Lilliput Theatre Company' or 'The Lilliput Marionette Theatre' This marionette is 'Marley's Ghost' from a play entitled 'A Christmas Carol' based on the novella by Charles Dickens. This play was possibly the first to be created and performed by the theatre in the late 1940s. The ghost has a human appearance with a face made from 'Plastic-Wood' with painted and moulded facial features, including grey eye shadow, a pointed nose and small pink lips. He has a receding hairline, bald on top with real grey-white hair at the back and at the sides. His face has a pale complexion. His body is wood and jointed with metal at the neck, shoulders, elbows, wrists, waist, knees and ankles. His hands are made from 'Plastic-Wood' moulded onto a wire frame, but are badlychipped in places. The ghost is wearing a white fabric shirt with a stiff high collar and a grey artificial silk cravat around his neck and a waistcoat with horizontal green stripes. Over this he is wearing a cream cotton jacket, with long green artificial silk lined tails at the back. The front of the jacket has green artificial silk lapels. He has cream cotton trousers and grey material shoes. His hands and ankles are linked together with long metal chains and hanging from his right hand is a silver coloured metal ball on a chain. Various strings are attached to his body. History of the company The company was created by Edward G. Hellawell (born 1914-1983) and Bernard C. Lewis (died 1982). As a student at the Royal College of Art in the mid 1930s Edward made sketches for a puppet theatre and between circa 1937 and circa 1952 he created five plays, each with its own cast of hand-crafted marionettes (over 100 puppets). The Museum hold over 90 of these marionettes. The heads were either made from moulding 'Plastic-Wood' (a commercial product now discontinued) on a frame or carved from solid wood - finished with paint and varnish. Limbs were made from solid wood with hands made using 'Plastic-Wood' molded onto a wire frame. The 'controls' were made from wood and had fixed leg bars which allowed a puppeteer to operate two puppets at once. Edward's wife Margery was the costumier and dressed the marionettes using scraps of fabric she had gathered together; fabric being scarce during the war. The cast for each play were created in the basement of Edward and Margery's Walsall home. Four of the plays were for younger children (A Christmas Carol, The Lost Princess, The Little Mermaid and Hansel & Gretel) and one was for college students (Faust). The plays were performed to school children across the county - mainly around the Midlands but there is photographic evidence that the theatre performed at Granard Primary School, Putney Park, London in 1963. The theatre also toured seaside resorts such as Blackpool and Herne Bay and did a three week tour in Northern Ireland in the late 1950s and also went as far a field as Norway in 1963. Almost from the start he worked with his friend Bernard C. Lewis (died in 1982). It is thought that they met in prison, serving time as conscientious objectors during the War. When Edward was appointed Head of the Art School in Nuneaton in 1952 he stepped down from performing, handing over Artistic Directorship to Bernard, who continued to tour the theatre around the country until his death in 1982.The theatre (set and staging etc...) then went to auction, but the puppets were donated to the Museum.
Provenance
Donated by Mr Edward G. Hellawell in 1982. Maker and Artistic Director (1937 - 1952) - Edward G. Hellawell (born 1914 - 1983) Costumier - Margery Hellawell (Edward's wife) Artistic Director (circa 1952 - circa 1982) Bernard C. Lewis
Makers and roles
Edward Hellawell, maker Margery Hellawell, costumier