Nostalgia for Adam West’s Batman
Batman is among the most iconic TV generation characters. I grew up with the 1960s Batman with its wonderfully camp ‘Kerpow’ aesthetic. Batman formed part of the DC Comics stable, with Batman receiving his own publication in 1940. The character developed a strong moral compass and sense of justice. Batman employs his intellect, fighting skills and wealth to defeat the criminals of Gotham City.
In the 1960s version the Caped Crusader, Bruce Wayne, alias Batman is played by Adam West who is accompanied by Burt Ward as the Boy Wonder, Robin, as well as his faithful butler Alfred and Commissioner Gordon.
Batman and Robin battle their arch enemies Joker, Riddler, Penguin and Cat Girl. Each episode featured a showdown. In the fantastically choreographed fight scenes each punch was wittily punctuated with a Kerpow, Biff or a Bam in jagged speech bubbles, just like a comic, as the duo defeated a procession of baddies. The 1960s aesthetic appeals to today’s collectors as it did to us as boys. The first Corgi Batmobile
was produced at its Swansea factory in 1966. The example illustrated here has just fetched £900 at Toovey’s.
The gloss black No 267 Batmobile with Batman and Robin figures features bat logo on the doors and hubs, silver front blade and red exhaust flame which moves in and out as the car moves along –so exciting! Mint and boxed with diorama, yellow rockets, envelope, operation instructions, detail sheet, printed spare missile envelope and card insert for diorama it also came with a letter and newspaper cuttings announcing to the seller that he had won the prize of the Sun newspaper’s Batman Competition.
In the same sale were a collection of A & BC Bubblegum Batman cards, with a shop box. Although they had tears and corner scuffs they realised £600. The new Batman movie returns to the darker aesthetic of the original Batman comics. Batman, played by Robert Pattinson, battles Paul Dano as The Riddler, a sadistic serial killer, who begins murdering key political figures in Gotham City. Batman is forced to investigate the city’s hidden corruption and question his family’s involvement.
I am looking forward to seeing this latest incarnation of the Batman franchise but I have to own a real nostalgia for the 1960s joyful aesthetic of Adam West’s Batman.
Rupert Toovey is a senior director of Toovey’s, the leading fine art auction house in West Sussex, based on the A24 at Washington - www.tooveys.com - and a priest in the Church of England Diocese of Chichester.