Waikato Times

Visionary designer assembled cast of blockheads to enliven Lego’s playscapes

- Do you know someone who deserves a Life Story? Email obituaries@dompost.co.nz Contact us

Their numbers have reached 7.8 billion if not more, roughly the population of the Earth. Their ranks include police officers and firefighte­rs, pirates and knights, astronauts and elephant keepers. Their physical dexterity is limited, their facial features rather plain. But for more than

40 years, standing only four Lego blocks tall, they have been giants of the toy world and the object of untold hours of enjoyment for generation­s of children and collectors.

They are Lego minifigure­s, and their creator, the Danish Lego designer Jens Nygaard Knudsen, has died at 78. The Lego Group announced his death, describing him in a statement as

‘‘a true visionary whose ideas brought joy and inspiratio­n to millions of builders around the world’’.

The Lego company was founded in 1932 by Ole Kirk Kristianse­n, a master carpenter, in the Danish town of Billund, where he made stepladder­s, ironing boards, stools and wooden toys. It was christened Lego two years later – a name that combined the Danish words ‘‘leg godt’’, meaning ‘‘play well’’.

Over the decades, the company honed modern techniques of manufactur­ing plastic toys, patenting its signature stud-and-tube locking system for its toy building bricks in

1958. But until Knudsen’s innovation­s in the

1970s, Lego lacked a human or even humanoid element to enliven its playscapes.

‘‘There was something missing from the houses, cars, planes and fantasy world these children spent hours playing with,’’ Sarah Herman wrote in her book A Million Little Bricks: The Unofficial Illustrate­d History of the LEGO Phenomenon. Knudsen’s minifigure­s, she wrote, went ‘‘on to define and drive’’ the Lego system ‘‘more than any other part since the launch of the new Lego brick in 1958’’.

In 1974, the company introduced human figures best remembered for their appearance in the ‘‘Family’’ set, which included a mother and a father, a grandmothe­r and two children, all with round yellow heads. They proved popular but were too big to be comfortabl­y employed in the small-scale Lego world.

Knudsen, who had joined Lego in 1968 and ultimately became the company’s chief designer, was tasked with overseeing the developmen­t of a new line of miniature figures. The project took him and the company through dozens of iterations, including the faceless ‘‘Extra’’, which had stiff arms and no means of ambulation.

It was a start, but Knudsen wanted a character with greater capacity for play. Introduced in 1978, the blocky minifigure had movable arms and legs, C-shaped hands to grip other Lego elements, and basic if sometimes inscrutabl­e facial features.

With its head made from yellow plastic, the minifigure had ‘‘no obvious ethnicity’’, according to the company’s descriptio­n. (Future characters had natural skin tones.)

‘‘As a child, when you’re creating and building an imaginativ­e world from Lego, being able to play with real people in that world is part of the pleasure and fascinatio­n and gives character and life to whatever you’ve created,’’ Herman said. ‘‘They have so much spirit.’’

Early minifigure­s included a police officer, a firefighte­r, a doctor, a gas station attendant, a knight and an astronaut. The line proved so popular that it grew over the years to include 8000 characters, among them figures from the Star Wars and Harry Potter franchises. Legoloving children who grow into Lego-loving adults have been known to place bride-andgroom minifigure­s atop wedding cakes.

Knudsen also was credited with designing Lego sets including the ‘‘Castle’’ theme, which Herman described as ‘‘one of the first to take Lego building to another time period’’.

‘‘The addition of these knights and guards,’’ she observed, ‘‘with their helmets, horses, and weaponry, transporte­d the castle model from historical relic to a living, breathing battlement.’’

Other sets that Knudsen helped design included the ‘‘Space’’ theme, introduced in 1978 – an undertakin­g Knudsen said sapped him of 14 months of work hours in a single year. Another popular set was the ‘‘Pirates’’, which required a new look for the minifigure­s previously known for their anodyne expression­s.

‘‘It was necessary to alter the minifigure’s expression in order to develop credible pirates,’’ Knudsen said, according to the company. ‘‘A real pirate captain must have a patch on his eye, a peg leg and a hook.’’

Survivors, according to an AFP report, include his wife, Marianne Nygaard Knudsen.

Some children who grew up playing with Lego retained such an affection for their toys that they became collectors. Many more became parents of children who delighted in the stubby bricks and minifigure­s.

‘‘I am convinced,’’ Knudsen told Herman, ‘‘that the minifigure will live as long as children play with Lego.’’

 ??  ?? Jens Nygaard Knudsen whose ideas ‘‘brought joy and inspiratio­n to millions of builders around the world’’.
Jens Nygaard Knudsen whose ideas ‘‘brought joy and inspiratio­n to millions of builders around the world’’.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand