Vancouver Sun

Paddington bear creator dies at 91

Duffel-coated teddy bear huge hit with children

- JILL LAWLESS AND DANICA KIRKA The Associated Press, with files from The Daily Telegraph

LONDON • It was a lastminute Christmas gift for his wife that inspired Michael Bond to create Paddington bear, the marmalade-loving teddy in a duffel coat and floppy hat.

Bond would go on to see his creation enchant children for more than half a century and become an icon immortaliz­ed in print, on screens and as countless stuffed toys before his death at age 91.

His publisher, HarperColl­ins, said Wednesday that the author died at his home a day earlier after a short illness.

Ann-Janine Murtagh, executive publisher of HarperColl­ins Children’s Books, said Bond “will be forever remembered for his creation of the iconic Paddington, with his duffel coat and wellington boots, which touched my own heart as a child and will live on in the hearts of future generation­s.”

The furry adventurer first appeared in A Bear Called Paddington in 1958 — a stowaway from “darkest Peru” who arrived at London’s Paddington train station wearing a sign saying “Please look after this bear. Thank you.”

Adopted by the kindly Brown family, the misadventu­re-prone bear went on to star in more than 20 books, several television series and a 2014 feature film. A sequel is currently in production.

The books have sold some 35 million copies worldwide and have been translated into 40 languages, including Latin (Ursus Nomine Paddington).

Born an only child in Newbury, southern England, on Jan. 13, 1926, Bond served in both the Royal Air Force and the British Army during the Second World War. Training in Canada gave him a liking for travel and, having transferre­d to the Army, he served briefly in Egypt after the war ended. From there he sold his first short story to the magazine London Opinion.

He was working as a BBC cameraman when he created his most famous character. Paddington was inspired by a teddy bear that Bond bought for his wife one Christmas Eve as a stocking filler and named after the station he used for daily commutes.

Today, stuffed Paddington­s are for sale in toy stores and souvenir stands around Britain. A statue of the beloved bear stands at his namesake station.

In creating the initially homeless Paddington, Bond drew on memories of the refugees and evacuees who streamed through British train stations before and after the Second World War, seeking security in safer places. Many of the children had name tags hung around their necks.

Bond said a sense of vulnerabil­ity “was an important part of Paddington’s persona” and a reason why children were drawn to him.

Explaining the character’s enduring appeal in 2008, Bond said “there’s something about bears which sets them apart from the other toys.”

“I think dolls are always wondering what they’re going to wear next,” he told The Associated Press. “Bears have this quality that children in particular feel they can tell their secrets to and they won’t pass them on.”

Actor Hugh Bonneville, who plays Mr. Brown in the movie adaptation­s, said news of Bond’s death came on the final day of shooting for the upcoming film.

BEARS HAVE THIS QUALITY THAT CHILDREN FEEL THEY CAN TELL THEIR SECRETS TO.

 ?? SANG TAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Author Michael Bond, creator of globe-trotting duffelcoat­ed teddy Paddington bear, is pictured in 2008. The Paddington books have sold some 35 million copies worldwide and have been translated into 40 languages.
SANG TAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Author Michael Bond, creator of globe-trotting duffelcoat­ed teddy Paddington bear, is pictured in 2008. The Paddington books have sold some 35 million copies worldwide and have been translated into 40 languages.

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