The Guardian (USA)

Wallace and Gromit creators pull out of 'UK's Disneyland'

- Mark Sweney

The creators of Wallace and Gromit and Shaun the Sheep have pulled out of a deal to be part of a £3.2bn theme park touted as a British rival to Disneyland.

In 2015, Aardman Animations struck a deal with the company behind the developmen­t in Kent, known as the London Resort to potentiall­y turn its characters into themed rides and attraction­s.

The theme park project, which has been beset by delays and was originally expected to open this year, started with a tie-up with Paramount Pictures, the Hollywood studio behind blockbuste­rs such as Mission: Impossible, Star Trek, Transforme­rs and The Godfather. However, Paramount, which lent its name to the resort, pulled out in 2017.

London Resort’s memorandum of understand­ing with Aardman Animations said the deal would “bring a number of the nation’s favourite characters to the resort and introduce them to a whole new internatio­nal audience”. However, a spokeswoma­n for Aardman told the Guardian the company is “no longer involved with this project”. A spokesman for London Resort Company Holdings said: “The partnershi­ps are under continuous review and when the agreement with Aardman expired both parties decided not to renew the partnershi­p.”

On Monday, ITV struck a deal to turn children’s shows, led by animated series Thunderbir­ds Are Go, into attraction­s at the theme park. Thunderbir­ds returned to TV in 2015 five decades after Gerry Anderson’s “supermario­nation” puppets first appeared on ITV.

The BBC signed a similar deal in 2014, which could lead to attraction­s based on shows from Doctor Who to Top Gear. Fifty rides and attraction­s based on popular film and TV shows have been planned for the park.

Billions have been invested in the London Resort, which is expected to open in 2024, with constructi­on due to start in 2021. It will be the size of 136 Wembley stadiums and aims to attract 50,000 visitors a day and offer 3,500 hotel rooms. The south-east of England location was chosen to position the park as a rival to Disneyland Paris.

 ??  ?? Aardman struck a deal with the London Resort in 2015 to potentiall­y use its characters for themed attraction­s. Photograph: Allstar/ Aardman
Aardman struck a deal with the London Resort in 2015 to potentiall­y use its characters for themed attraction­s. Photograph: Allstar/ Aardman

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