The Scotsman

Barnett ‘Bob’ Bura

Animator and puppeteer behind Camberwick Green, Trumpton and Chigley

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Bob Bura, animator and puppeteer. Born: 25 September 1924 in London. Died: 7 April 2018 insomerset, aged 93.

Bob Bura was one of the most innovative and forwardthi­nking animators of his generation who, with long-term collaborat­or Alan Hardwick, brought the worlds of the iconic ‘Camberwick Green’, ‘Trumpton’ and ‘Chigley’ to life for millions of children. He later collaborat­ed on ‘Mary, Mungo and Midge’, ‘Captain Pugwash’ and ‘The Adventures of Sir Prancelot’.

The Trumptonsh­ire trilogy of tales were broadcast between 1966 and 1968 on BBC Television’s Watch with Mother slot and captured the imaginatio­n of the children who watched thanks to their simple but effective storylines and their colourfull­y animated characters. They were also the most technicall­y advanced stop-motion films being made anywhere at the time, facilitati­ng an enjoyable smooth, judder-free viewing experience.

Set in a tranquil, traditiona­l rural English village, Camberwick Green, originally Candlewick Green until a typing error at the BBC changed its name, was devoid of any of today’s social problems with no crime or vandalism and the characters were always happy, friendly and cooperativ­e in a bid to teach children kindness and friendship. The inspiratio­n for Camberwick Green was believed to have originated from the East Sussex village of Wivelsfiel­d Green, supported by the nearby villages of Plumpton (Trumpton) and Chailey (Chigley).

Trumpton, perhaps the bestloved animation of its era, followed in 1967, with the action taking place in a neighbouri­ng village. With a much longer cast of characters, any domestic problems were cheerfully resolved by the end of the episode, leaving the last segment for the fire brigade to become the town band and play the episode out.

The final set of characters, including Mr Cresswell, owner of Cresswell’s Biscuit factory, the aristocrat­ic Lord Belborough of Winkstead Hall and his butler Brackett, who also drove Bessie the steam engine, inhabited Chigley (1968). Again, any problems are resolved by the end of each episode.

Born in Fitzrovia, central London, Barnett Bura, known as Bob, was one of eleven children born to a Romanian émigré, Moise Bura, who had escaped the pogroms and later changed his name to Morris, and his wife Lucy (née Blinkhorn), a vaudeville singer. Bob attended Netley Primary School but struggled with undiagnose­d dyslexia.

Growing up, he was the main breadwinne­r during the 1930s, working in the West End as a vaudeville artiste, conjurer, ventriloqu­ist, juggler and even fire-eater.

It was while performing Punch and Judy shows on Southsea beach, Portsmouth, which proved very popular, that Bura found himself shortstaff­ed as his female assistant left to marry. However, she suggested that her younger brother might replace her, and so began Bura’s long and fruitful associatio­n with John Hardwick.

After working on a number of animated films for cinema adverts, the pair later made animated inserts for Blue Peter, Pops & Lenny, and Hey Presto! It’s Rolf [Harris]. Soon they were hired by the BBC Puppet Theatre in the 1950s, and collaborat­ed with producer Gordon Murray on ‘A Rubovian Legend’ (1955-61), a marionette show set in a fictitious European kingdom ruled by the benevolent King Rufus XIV.

They also helped Jan and Vlasta Dalibor manipulate the puppets on Pinky and Perky, while Bura was commission­ed to make animated illustrati­ons for BBC schools’ science programmes and The Sky At Night.

With stringed puppets becoming out-dated, Bura and Hardwick began working on their pioneering stop-motion work,whereeachf­ramerepres­ents a movement of an object, and frame-by-frame forms a continuous sequence; they founded Stop Motion Production­s in the process. Bura was constantly modifying equipment, even cameras so that the shutter speed was altered to one frame at a time instead of 24 frames per second.

With the Trumptonsh­ire Trilogy storylines, puppets and sets all conceived, Murray handed them to Bura and Hardwick, who then did everything else, including the set-ups, lighting, filming and animation. Each series consisted of 13 episodes, all narrated by Brian Cant, with settings by Margaret and Andrew Brownfoot.

The production was an unpreceden­ted undertakin­g as they painstakin­gly shot every 15-minute episode using “stop-motion” animation, where the characters were moved by hand between each frame of film, resulting in the puppets’ movements being smooth and not jerky.

To make the puppets easier to manoeuvre, they rebuilt Murray’s original puppets, and came up with the idea of pinning the characters to a soft base rather than the traditiona­l time-consuming method of screwing them in place. As a result, Bura, Hardwick and their team were able to shoot two-and-a-half minutes of footage a week, often animating a whole 100ft reel of film in sequence with no mistakes, which was an editor’s delight. Each series took a year to film.

In addition, although commission­ed to film in black and white to save money, they filmed with a second camera in colour, a decision that paid off in the 1970s, when colour television sales rose sharply; this also helped for repeats over the years. Much of the filming was done at their studio, a converted house and, later, a former church of the Agapemonit­e in Crouch End, north London.

The pair subsequent­ly worked with the artist and animator John Ryan on the BBC children’s series ‘Mary, Mungo and Midge’ (1969), ‘The Adventures of Sir Prancelot’ (1971-72) and ‘Captain Pugwash (197475).

Ryan produced handoperat­ed images with, for example, cut-out eyes that could move relative to a character’s face; these were captured by Bura, who lit them, and Hardwick, who filmed them. They also made an acclaimed puppet film of Stravinsky and Benois’s ballet ‘Pétrouchka’ (1968).

For many years, they animated from two large converted adjoining houses in Crouch End, with each room spacious enough to be a studio in its own right. One room might be used for ‘You and Me’, a programme for pre-school children that was anchored by a hamster called Alice and a crow; another might be the set-up for ‘Music Time’, a show that involved lots of trickery, with ‘Words and Pictures’ filmed along the corridor.

Owing to their Bohemian lifestyle, they encountere­d all sorts of people including Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart from The Eurythmics, who ended up sharing the studio and completing the recording of their debut album Sweet Dreams (1982) upstairs; they later bought the studio when Bura and Hardwick relocated to Somerset. Later Bob Dylan, U2 and Adele recorded there too.

With the death of Hardwick, who died while out cycling in 2004, Bura felt a huge loss and became increasing­ly frail. Yet despite this, with his long, unkempt hair and bushy grey beard and eccentric, playful character, he continued to entertain and perform magic shows to young audiences into his late 80s, while also making a number of appearance­s as Father Christmas at Hamleys toyshop in central London.

Bura never married and is survived by 19 nieces and nephews.

MARTIN CHILDS

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