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Gerry Anderson



 
 
Gerry Anderson MBE, born , is a British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 producer, director and writer, famous for his futuristic television programmes, particularly those involving specially modified marionette
Marionette

A marionette is a puppet controlled from above using strings; a marionette's puppeteer is called a manipulator. Marionettes are operated with the puppeteer hidden or revealed to an audience by using a vertical or horizontal control bar in different forms of theatres or entertainment venues....
s, a process called "Supermarionation
Supermarionation

Supermarionation is a Puppeteer technique devised in the 1960s by British production company AP Films. It was used extensively in the company's numerous Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson-produced action-adventure series, the most famous of which was Thunderbirds ....
".

His first television production was the 1957 Roberta Leigh
Roberta Leigh

Janey Scott , well-known as Roberta Leigh is a Great Britain artist. She wrote romantic novel and children's stories as Roberta Leigh, Rachel Lindsay, Janey Scott, and Rozella Lake, now she paints abstract art....
 children's series The Adventures of Twizzle
The Adventures of Twizzle

The Adventures of Twizzle was the very first television show produced by AP Films and specifically Gerry Anderson, after being approached by author Roberta Leigh and her colleague Suzanne Warner....
. His most famous and successful production in this genre came later: Thunderbirds
Thunderbirds (TV series)

Thunderbirds is a British mid-1960s television show devised by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and made by AP Films using a form of marionette puppetry dubbed "Supermarionation"....
, which was made in 1965. His production company, originally known as AP Films
AP Films

AP Films or APF, later becoming Century 21 Productions, was a United Kingdom independent film production company of the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s....
 and later renamed Century 21 Productions, was in collaboration with partners Reg Hill
Reg Hill

Reg Hill was a United Kingdom television producer commonly associated with the works of Gerry Anderson.Hill served as art director for Anderson's television series The Adventures of Twizzle and Torchy the Battery Boy and continued the post for the film Crossroads to Crime....
, John Read
John Read (producer)

John Read Read initially worked at the BBC as a producer for the Talks Department and a screenwriter for the Film Department. He directed the 1962 BBC documentary An Act of Faith, narrated by Leo Genn, on the destruction and rebuilding of Coventry Cathedral....
 and his then-wife Sylvia Anderson
Sylvia Anderson

Sylvia Anderson , born , is a Great Britain voice artist and film producer, most notable for collaborations with her ex-husband Gerry Anderson....
.

He has also written and produced several feature films, although these did not perform as well as expected at the box office.






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Encyclopedia


Gerry Anderson MBE, born , is a British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 producer, director and writer, famous for his futuristic television programmes, particularly those involving specially modified marionette
Marionette

A marionette is a puppet controlled from above using strings; a marionette's puppeteer is called a manipulator. Marionettes are operated with the puppeteer hidden or revealed to an audience by using a vertical or horizontal control bar in different forms of theatres or entertainment venues....
s, a process called "Supermarionation
Supermarionation

Supermarionation is a Puppeteer technique devised in the 1960s by British production company AP Films. It was used extensively in the company's numerous Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson-produced action-adventure series, the most famous of which was Thunderbirds ....
".

His first television production was the 1957 Roberta Leigh
Roberta Leigh

Janey Scott , well-known as Roberta Leigh is a Great Britain artist. She wrote romantic novel and children's stories as Roberta Leigh, Rachel Lindsay, Janey Scott, and Rozella Lake, now she paints abstract art....
 children's series The Adventures of Twizzle
The Adventures of Twizzle

The Adventures of Twizzle was the very first television show produced by AP Films and specifically Gerry Anderson, after being approached by author Roberta Leigh and her colleague Suzanne Warner....
. His most famous and successful production in this genre came later: Thunderbirds
Thunderbirds (TV series)

Thunderbirds is a British mid-1960s television show devised by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and made by AP Films using a form of marionette puppetry dubbed "Supermarionation"....
, which was made in 1965. His production company, originally known as AP Films
AP Films

AP Films or APF, later becoming Century 21 Productions, was a United Kingdom independent film production company of the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s....
 and later renamed Century 21 Productions, was in collaboration with partners Reg Hill
Reg Hill

Reg Hill was a United Kingdom television producer commonly associated with the works of Gerry Anderson.Hill served as art director for Anderson's television series The Adventures of Twizzle and Torchy the Battery Boy and continued the post for the film Crossroads to Crime....
, John Read
John Read (producer)

John Read Read initially worked at the BBC as a producer for the Talks Department and a screenwriter for the Film Department. He directed the 1962 BBC documentary An Act of Faith, narrated by Leo Genn, on the destruction and rebuilding of Coventry Cathedral....
 and his then-wife Sylvia Anderson
Sylvia Anderson

Sylvia Anderson , born , is a Great Britain voice artist and film producer, most notable for collaborations with her ex-husband Gerry Anderson....
.

He has also written and produced several feature films, although these did not perform as well as expected at the box office. Following a successful move towards live action productions in the 1970s, his long and highly successful association with Lew Grade
Lew Grade

Lew Grade, Baron Grade , born Lev Winogradsky, was an influential showbusiness impresario and television company executive in the United Kingdom....
's ITC
ITC Entertainment

The Incorporated Television Company is a United Kingdom television company largely involved in production and distribution. It was founded by television mogul Lew Grade in 1954....
 (Incorporated Television Company) ended with the second series of Space 1999. After a career lull when a number of new series concepts failed to get off the ground, his career began a new phase in the early 1980s when audience nostalgia for his earlier Supermarionation series (prompted by Saturday morning re-runs in the UK) led to new Anderson productions being commissioned. A number of new projects have resulted including a recent CGI
Computer-generated imagery

Computer-generated imagery is the application of the field of computer graphics or, more specifically, 3D computer graphics to special effects in films, television programs, Television commercials, simulators and simulation generally, and printed media....
 remake of Captain Scarlet
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons

Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, often referred to as simply Captain Scarlet, is a science fiction television series produced by the Century 21 Productions Television company of Gerry Anderson, John Read , Reg Hill and Sylvia Anderson....
 entitled Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet
Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet

Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet is a United Kingdom-produced computer-generated imagery action-adventure TV series which debuted in February 2005 as part of the Ministry of Mayhem on ITV....
.

Biography


Early life

Gerald Alexander Abrahams was born in Kilburn, North London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
. Anderson's ancestral name (from the Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
-Poland
Poland

Poland , officially the Republic of Poland , is a country in Central Europe. Poland is bordered by Germany to the west; the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the south; Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania to the east; and the Baltic Sea and Kaliningrad Oblast, a Russian Enclave and exclave, to the north....
 border) was Bieloglovski. This was changed to "Abrahams" by a British immigration official in 1895. Anderson's mother, Deborah, changed it to "Anderson" because she liked the sound of it.

The family's name was changed by deed poll
Deed poll

A deed poll is a Law document binding only to a single person or several persons acting jointly to express an active intention. It is, strictly speaking, not a contract because it binds only one party and expresses an intention instead of a promise....
 in 1939. When World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 broke out, Anderson's older brother Lionel volunteered for the RAF
Royal Air Force

The Royal Air Force is the United Kingdom's air force, the oldest independent air force in the world. Formed on 1 April 1918, the RAF has taken a significant role in British military history ever since, playing a large part in World War II and in more recent conflicts....
 and was posted to the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 for training. He often wrote to his family and one of these letters described a USAF airbase called Thunderbird Field, a name that stuck in his brother's memory.

Gerry Anderson began his career in photography and after the war he secured a traineeship with the British Colonial Film Unit. He developed an interest in film editing and moved on to Gainsborough Pictures
Gainsborough Pictures

Gainsborough Pictures was a United Kingdom film studio based on the south bank of the Regent's Canal, in Poole Street, Hoxton in the London Borough of Hackney....
, where he gained further experience.

In 1947, he was conscripted for national service
National service

National service is a common name for mandatory or voluntary government service programs . National service was common in the 20th century, and many young people spent one or more years in such programs....
 with the RAF. After completing his military service, he returned to Gainsborough and remained there until the studio folded in 1950. He then worked freelance on a succession of feature films. During this time he married Betty Wrightman and they had two children.

Start of television career


In the mid-1950s Anderson joined independent television production company Polytechnic Studios, as a director, where he met cameraman Arthur Provis. After Polytechnic collapsed, Anderson, Provis, Reg Hill
Reg Hill

Reg Hill was a United Kingdom television producer commonly associated with the works of Gerry Anderson.Hill served as art director for Anderson's television series The Adventures of Twizzle and Torchy the Battery Boy and continued the post for the film Crossroads to Crime....
 and John Read
John Read (producer)

John Read Read initially worked at the BBC as a producer for the Talks Department and a screenwriter for the Film Department. He directed the 1962 BBC documentary An Act of Faith, narrated by Leo Genn, on the destruction and rebuilding of Coventry Cathedral....
 formed Pentagon Films in 1957; secretary Sylvia Thamm
Sylvia Anderson

Sylvia Anderson , born , is a Great Britain voice artist and film producer, most notable for collaborations with her ex-husband Gerry Anderson....
 later became Anderson's second wife. Pentagon was wound up soon after and Anderson and Provis formed a new company, AP Films
AP Films

AP Films or APF, later becoming Century 21 Productions, was a United Kingdom independent film production company of the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s....
, with Hill and Read as partners. Anderson continued his freelance directing work to keep money coming in.

AP Films' first television venture was produced for Granada Television
Granada Television

Granada Television is the United Kingdom ITV contractor for North West England. It previously held the "North of England" weekday franchise, which also covered most of Yorkshire, from 1954 until 1968 when its broadcast area was divided into two franchises....
. Created by Roberta Leigh
Roberta Leigh

Janey Scott , well-known as Roberta Leigh is a Great Britain artist. She wrote romantic novel and children's stories as Roberta Leigh, Rachel Lindsay, Janey Scott, and Rozella Lake, now she paints abstract art....
, The Adventures of Twizzle
The Adventures of Twizzle

The Adventures of Twizzle was the very first television show produced by AP Films and specifically Gerry Anderson, after being approached by author Roberta Leigh and her colleague Suzanne Warner....
 (1957-1958) was a series for young children about a doll with the ability to 'twizzle' his arms and legs to greater lengths. It was Anderson's first work with puppets, and the start of his long and successful collaborations with puppeteer Christine Glanville
Christine Glanville

Christine Glanville was a British professional puppeteer and spent most of her working life involved to some degree with Gerry Anderson.She was born with the name Nancy Christine Fletcher in Halifax, West Yorkshire, but moved to London in early childhood....
, special effects technician Derek Meddings
Derek Meddings

Derek Meddings was a United Kingdom television and film special effects expert, initially noted for his work on the "Supermarionation" television puppet series produced by Gerry Anderson....
 and composer/arranger Barry Gray
Barry Gray

Barry Gray was a United Kingdom musician and composer who is best known for his work for Gerry Anderson....
.

During production of Twizzle, Anderson began an affair with Sylvia Thamm and eventually left his wife and children. Following his divorce, Anderson and Thamm married in November 1960. The Adventures of Twizzle was followed by another low budget puppet series with Leigh, Torchy the Battery Boy
Torchy the Battery Boy

Torchy the Battery Boy was the second television series produced by AP Films and Gerry Anderson. It was another collaboration with author Roberta Leigh and was directed by Anderson, with music scored by Barry Gray, art direction from Reg Hill and special effects by Derek Meddings....
 (1958-1959). Although the APF puppet productions made the Andersons world famous, Gerry Anderson was always unhappy about working with puppets, and made them primarily as a means of getting a foot in the door with TV networks, hoped to use them as a stepping stone to his desired goal making live action film and TV drama.

AP Films' third series was the children's western fantasy-adventure series Four Feather Falls
Four Feather Falls

Four Feather Falls was the third puppet TV show produced by Gerry Anderson for Granada Television, from an idea by Barry Gray. Gray, most noted as a composer who created the theme songs for many of Anderson's creations, also wrote the first episode....
 (1959-1960). During production Provis left the partnership, working once again with Roberta Leigh
Roberta Leigh

Janey Scott , well-known as Roberta Leigh is a Great Britain artist. She wrote romantic novel and children's stories as Roberta Leigh, Rachel Lindsay, Janey Scott, and Rozella Lake, now she paints abstract art....
 on Space Patrol
Space Patrol (1962 TV series)

Space Patrol is a science fiction television series featuring marionettes that was produced in the United Kingdom in 1962. It was written and produced by Roberta Leigh in association with the Associated British Corporation...
, but the company retained the name 'AP Films' for several more years. Four Feather Falls was the first Anderson series to use an early version of the Supermarionation
Supermarionation

Supermarionation is a Puppeteer technique devised in the 1960s by British production company AP Films. It was used extensively in the company's numerous Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson-produced action-adventure series, the most famous of which was Thunderbirds ....
 process, though the name hadn't yet been coined.

Despite APF's success with Four Feather Falls, Granada did not commission another series from them, so Anderson took up the offer to direct a film for Anglo-Amalgamated
Anglo-Amalgamated

Anglo-Amalgamated Productions was a British film production company run by Nat Cohen and Stuart Levy that operated from the 1940s to the 1970s. Much of the output was low budget and often second features, many produced at Merton Park Studios....
 Studios. Crossroads to Crime
Crossroads to Crime

Crossroads to Crime is a United Kingdom crime film released in 1960 in film. It was Gerry Anderson's first Live action production and his feature film directorial debut....
 was a low-budget B-grade crime thriller and although Anderson hoped that its success might enable him to move into mainstream film-making, it failed at the box office.

By this time, APF was in financial trouble and the company was struggling to find a buyer for their new puppet series. They were rescued by a fortuitous meeting with ATV
Associated TeleVision

Associated Television, often referred to as ATV, was a United Kingdom television company, holder of various licenses to broadcast on the ITV network from 1955 until 31 December 1981....
 boss Lew Grade
Lew Grade

Lew Grade, Baron Grade , born Lev Winogradsky, was an influential showbusiness impresario and television company executive in the United Kingdom....
 who offered to buy the show. This began a long friendship and a very successful professional association between the two men, during which Anderson and his collaborators created some of their best work.

Sylvia's increased role

The new series, Supercar
Supercar (TV series)

Supercar was a children's TV show produced by Gerry Anderson and Arthur Provis's AP Films for Associated TeleVision and ITC Entertainment. 39 episodes were produced between 1961 and 1962, and it was Anderson's first half-hour series....
, (1960-1961) was created by Anderson and Reg Hill and marked several important advances for APF. Sylvia Anderson
Sylvia Anderson

Sylvia Anderson , born , is a Great Britain voice artist and film producer, most notable for collaborations with her ex-husband Gerry Anderson....
 took on a larger role and became a partner in the company. The series was also the official debut of Supermarionation, the electronic system that made the marionettes more lifelike and convincing on screen. The system used the audio signal from the pre-recorded tapes of the actors' voices to trigger solenoids installed in the puppets' heads, enabling the puppets' lips to move in exact synchronisation with the voices of the actors.

One of Anderson's most successful ventures was inaugurated during the production of Supercar
Supercar (TV series)

Supercar was a children's TV show produced by Gerry Anderson and Arthur Provis's AP Films for Associated TeleVision and ITC Entertainment. 39 episodes were produced between 1961 and 1962, and it was Anderson's first half-hour series....
 —the establishment of AP Films (Merchandising) Ltd, a separate company set up to handle the licensing of merchandising rights for APF properties; it was headed by Keith Shackleton (not the wildlife artist and TV presenter of the same name) an old friend of Anderson's from their National Service
National service

National service is a common name for mandatory or voluntary government service programs . National service was common in the 20th century, and many young people spent one or more years in such programs....
 days.

APF's innovative merchandising made them a world leader in the field and they licensed a huge range of toys, books, magazines and related items. The worldwide popularity of their TV shows was coupled with astute marketing, and the combination made APF one of the most successful merchandising ventures of the decade. The die-cast metal toys from series such as Thunderbirds were hugely popular at the time and they now number among the most collectible toys of their kind. Models from almost all their series have been produced ever since by companies throughout the world, notably in Japan, where the Anderson series have a dedicated following.

APF's next series was the futuristic space adventure Fireball XL5
Fireball XL5

Fireball XL5 is a science fiction-themed children's television show produced in what was described as a modest building in a trading estate in Slough, Berkshire, United Kingdom....
 (1962) and it was the company's biggest success yet, becoming the first Anderson series sold to a US TV network (NBC) — a rarity for British TV programmes at that time. After the completion of the series, Lew Grade offered to buy AP Films. Although Anderson was initially reluctant, the deal eventually went ahead, with Grade becoming managing director, and the Andersons, Hill and Read becoming directors of the company.

Shortly after the buy-out, APF began production on a new puppet series, Stingray
Stingray (TV series)

Stingray is a children's marionette television show, created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by AP Films for Associated TeleVision and ITC Entertainment from 1964-65....
 (1964), the first British children's TV series to be filmed in colour. For the new production APF moved to new studios in Slough
Slough

Slough is a Borough status in the United Kingdom and unitary authority area within the Ceremonial counties of England of Berkshire, England, situated west of London....
. The new and bigger facilities allowed them to make major improvements in special effects, notably in the underwater sequences, as well as advances in puppetry, with the use of a variety of interchangeable heads for each character to convey different expressions.

Thunderbirds

APF's next project for ATV was based on a mining disaster
Wunder von Lengede

On November 7, 1963, 11 West German miners were rescued from a collapsed ore mine after surviving for 14 days, an event that became subsequently known as the Wunder von Lengede and attracted worldwide media attention....
 that occurred in West Germany in October 1963. This real-life drama inspired Anderson to create a new programme format about a rescue organisation, which eventually became his most famous and popular series, Thunderbirds
Thunderbirds (TV series)

Thunderbirds is a British mid-1960s television show devised by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and made by AP Films using a form of marionette puppetry dubbed "Supermarionation"....
 (1964-1966). The dramatic title was inspired by the letter Anderson's older brother Lionel had written to his family during World War II.

Grade was very enthusiastic about the concept and agreed to back a series of 25-minute episodes (the same length as Stingray), so the Andersons scripted a pilot episode, "Trapped in the Sky", and began production. Gerry initially wanted actress Fenella Fielding
Fenella Fielding

Fenella Fielding is an English actress popular in the 1950s and 1960s and known chiefly for her seductive image and distinctively husky voice....
 to perform the voice of Lady Penelope, but Sylvia convinced her husband to let her play the role. Thunderbirds also marked the start of a long professional association with actor Shane Rimmer
Shane Rimmer

Shane Rimmer is a Canada actor and voice actor, probably best known as the voice of Scott Tracy in Thunderbirds .He has mostly performed in supporting roles, frequently in films and television series filmed in the United Kingdom, having relocated to England in the late 1950s....
, who voiced Scott Tracy
Scott Tracy

Scott Tracy is a fictional character from Gerry Anderson's Supermarionation television show Thunderbirds and the subsequent films Thunderbirds Are GO and Thunderbird 6....
.

Production on Thunderbirds had been underway for several months when Grade saw the completed 25-minute version of "Trapped in the Sky". He was so excited by the result that he insisted that the episodes be extended to fifty minutes. With a substantial increase in budget, the production was restructured to expand episodes already filmed or in pre-production, and create new 50-minute scripts for the remainder. Grade and others were so convinced that Thunderbirds would be a success that a feature-film version of the series was proposed even before the pilot episode went to air.

APF—now renamed Century 21 Productions—enjoyed its greatest success with Thunderbirds and the series made the Andersons world-famous. The 32-episode series was not initially successful in the United States because it was only given a limited release, although it later became hugely successful in syndication
Television syndication

In broadcasting, syndication is the sale of the right to broadcast radio shows and television shows to multiple individual stations, without going through a broadcast network....
). But it was a major hit with young audiences in the UK, Australia and other countries and retains a huge and dedicated international following that spans several generations.

During the production of Thunderbirds the Andersons' marriage began to come under increasing strain, and the company also had a setback when the Thunderbirds Are GO
Thunderbirds Are GO

Thunderbirds Are Go is a United Kingdom science fiction-adventure motion picture released in 1966. It was the first film based on Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson's popular Supermarionation television series Thunderbirds , and followed the first unmanned mission to Mars....
 feature film flopped. According to interviews published since, Anderson has said that he considered divorce, but this was halted when Sylvia announced that she was pregnant. Their son, Gerry Anderson Jr was born in July 1967.

By that time, production had started on a new series, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons

Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, often referred to as simply Captain Scarlet, is a science fiction television series produced by the Century 21 Productions Television company of Gerry Anderson, John Read , Reg Hill and Sylvia Anderson....
 (1967), which saw the advent of more realistic puppet characters which, thanks to improvements in electronics which allowed miniaturisation of the lip-sync mechanisms, could now be built closer to normal human proportions.

Century 21's second feature film, Thunderbird 6
Thunderbird 6

Thunderbird 6 is a United Kingdom science fiction-adventure motion picture released in 1968. It was the second film based on Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson's popular Supermarionation television series Thunderbirds ....
, was an even bigger failure than the first, and the problems were compounded by their next (and penultimate) Supermarionation series, Joe 90
Joe 90

Joe 90 is a 1968 television series concerning the adventures of a nine-year-old boy, Joe McClaine, set in the years 2012-2013. Devised by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson, a single season of thirty 25-minute episodes was completed, and it was the last show to be made exclusively using a form of puppetry called "Supermarionation"....
 (1968). This series returned to more 'kid-friendly' territory, depicting the adventures of a young boy who is also a secret agent and whose scientist father uses a supercomputer called 'BIG RAT' which can 'program' Joe with special knowledge and abilities for his missions. Its relatively poor reception made it the last of the classic Anderson marionette shows.

On August 29 2008, it was announced by UK Newspaper The Sun, that there are plans to make a new computer generated series of Thunderbirds. Gerry Anderson is in talks with ITV for the rights to the original series.

Venturing into live action


Anderson's next project took the special effects expertise built up over previous TV projects and combined it with live action. Century 21's third feature film, Doppelgänger
Doppelgänger (1969 film)

Doppelg?nger is a 1969 in film British science fiction film directed by Robert Parrish. The film was released in the US as Journey to the Far Side of the Sun, a title by which it is now better known....
 (1969) (aka Journey to the Far Side of the Sun) was a dark, Twilight Zone
The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series)

The Twilight Zone is a science fiction anthology series United States television series created by Rod Serling. The original series ran for five seasons on CBS from 1959 to 1964 and remains television syndication to this day....
 style sci-fi project about an astronaut who travels to a newly discovered planet on the opposite side of the sun, which proves to be an exact mirror-image of Earth. It starred American actor Roy Thinnes
Roy Thinnes

Roy Thinnes is an United States television actor....
, famed at the time for his role as the protagonist in the American television series The Invaders
The Invaders

The Invaders, a Quinn Martin, is an American Broadcasting Company science fiction television program created by Larry Cohen that ran in the United States for two seasons, from January 10, 1967 to March 26, 1968....
. Although it was not a major commercial success, Doppelganger was nominated for an Academy Award
Academy Awards

The Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, are presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize excellence of professionals in the film industry, including directors, actors, and writers....
 for its superb special effects.

Century 21's return to television was the abortive series The Secret Service
The Secret Service

* This article is about the television series. For the form of government policing, see secret service.The Secret Service is the title of a United Kingdom children's Spy-fi series produced by Gerry Anderson and Lord Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions company for ITC Entertainment in 1969 and broadcast on some ITV stations in the Uni...
, which this time mixed live action with Supermarionation. The series was inspired by Anderson's love of British comedian Stanley Unwin
Stanley Unwin (comedian)

Stanley Unwin , sometimes billed as Professor Stanley Unwin, was a United Kingdom comedian and comic writer, and the inventor of his own language, "Unwinese," referred to in the film Carry On films as Gobbledygook....
, who was known for his nonsense language, 'Unwinese', which he created and used on radio, in film and most famously on the 1968 Small Faces LP Ogden's Nut Gone Flake. Despite Anderson's track record and Unwin's popularity, the series was cancelled before its first screening; Lew Grade considered that it would be incomprehensible to American audiences, and thus unsellable. Only 13 episodes were produced, and the series was only shown in a handful of broadcast areas in the UK. Most Anderson fans only got to see it when it was finally released on VHS in the mid-90s.

In 1969 the Andersons began production of a new TV series, UFO
UFO (TV series)

UFO is a British television science fiction series created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by the Anderson's and Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions for Grade's ITC Entertainment company....
, Century 21's first full live-action television series. This sci-fi action-adventure series starred American-born actor Ed Bishop
Ed Bishop

Ed Bishop , was an United States film, television, stage and radio actor based in United Kingdom....
 (also the voice of Captain Blue in 'Captain Scarlet & The Mysterons') as Commander Straker, head of a secret defence organisation set up to counter an alien invasion. UFO was decidedly more adult in tone than any of the previous puppet series, and it mixed the classic Century 21 futuristic action-adventure and special effects with some very serious dramatic elements. UFO was moderately successful on first release, but built up a strong cult following over the years, although it too fell short of the global success of Thunderbirds and was the last series made under the Century 21 Productions banner.

The Bond that never was

During production of UFO Gerry Anderson was approached directly by Harry Saltzman
Harry Saltzman

Harry Saltzman was a Canada theatre and film producer best known for his mega-gamble which resulted in his co-producing the James Bond James Bond with Albert R....
 (at the time co-producer of the James Bond
James Bond

James Bond 007 is a fictional character created in 1953 by writer Ian Fleming, who featured him in twelve novels and two short story collections....
 film series with Albert "Cubby" Broccoli
Albert R. Broccoli

Albert Romolo Broccoli, Order of the British Empire , nicknamed "Cubby", was an Academy Award-winning United States film producer, who made more than 40 motion pictures throughout his career, most of them in the United Kingdom, and often filmed at Pinewood Studios....
), and invited to write and produce the next film in the series which was to be Moonraker
Moonraker (film)

Moonraker is the eleventh spy film in the James Bond James Bond , and the fourth to star Roger Moore as the fictional character Secret Intelligence Service agent James Bond ....
. Collaborating with Tony Barwick to provide the characterisation, whilst he himself focused on the action sequences, Anderson wrote and delivered a treatment to Saltzman. Saltzman was enthusiastic, but then broke the news that he and Broccoli were parting ways. Offered £20,000 for the treatment, Anderson refused, fearing that if he accepted he would not be at the helm when it was made; as it turned out, the next Bond film to be made - some years later - was entitled The Spy Who Loved Me
The Spy Who Loved Me (film)

The Spy Who Loved Me is the tenth spy film in the James Bond James Bond , and the third to star Roger Moore as the fictional character Secret Intelligence Service agent James Bond ....
. Anderson started legal proceedings against Broccoli for plagiarism of story elements but withdrew the action shortly after, nervous of the legal might lined up against him. He relinquished the treatment, and received £3,000 in compensation.

Breaking ties

By this time the relationship between the Andersons had deteriorated. Although produced under the aegis of a new company, Group Three Productions (the three being both of the Andersons and Reg Hill), Gerry decided not to work with his wife on his next project, the ITC
ITC Entertainment

The Incorporated Television Company is a United Kingdom television company largely involved in production and distribution. It was founded by television mogul Lew Grade in 1954....
 action series The Protectors
The Protectors

The Protectors was a United Kingdom television series, an action Thriller created by Gerry Anderson - his second TV series using live actors as opposed to animated puppets....
. It was one of Anderson's few non-original projects. Lew Grade himself was heavily involved in the programme, and cast both the lead actors, Robert Vaughn
Robert Vaughn

Robert Francis Vaughn is an American Academy Award-nominated actor noted for theater, film and television work. He is perhaps best known as suave spy Napoleon Solo in the popular 1960's TV series The Man from U.N.C.L.E.....
 and Nyree Dawn Porter
Nyree Dawn Porter

Nyree Dawn Porter, Order of the British Empire, was an actor....
. The production was difficult for Anderson, who clashed with the famously difficult Vaughn. There were also many logistical problems arising from the Europe-wide filming of the show, but it was very successful in both the UK and America.

Space:1999

Following The Protectors, Anderson worked on several new projects, none of which he was able to realise. A proposed second series of UFO was shelved, and a return to puppetry, in a television pilot
Television pilot

A television pilot is a test episode of an intended television series. It is an early step in the development of a television series, much like pilot lights or pilot serve as precursors to the start of larger activity, or pilot holes prepare the way for larger holes....
 for a series called The Investigator, failed to find a buyer. Elements of the abandoned second series of UFO were eventually turned into what became the most expensive television series ever made at the time, Space:1999.

Another futuristic sci-fi adventure, it was based on the implausible premise that a huge thermonuclear explosion on the Moon's surface (caused by dumping of nuclear waste) projected it out of orbit and into interstellar space. It starred American husband-and-wife actors Martin Landau
Martin Landau

Martin Landau is an Academy Awards-winning United States film and television actor. He is perhaps best known for his roles in the television series Mission: Impossible and Space: 1999 ....
 and Barbara Bain
Barbara Bain

Barbara Bain is a United States actor.Bain was born Millicent Fogel into a Jewish family in Chicago, Illinois. She graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a Bachelor's Degree in Sociology and moved to New York City where she was a dancer and high fashion model....
, who had gained international TV fame in Mission: Impossible
Mission: Impossible

Mission: Impossible began as an American television series that chronicles the missions of a team of secret United States government agents known as the Impossible Missions Force ....
. They were cast at the insistence of Grade, and against Sylvia Anderson's strenuous objections.

Separation, and moving on

The Andersons' marriage broke down irrevocably during the first series of Space: 1999 in 1975; Gerry announced his intention to separate on the evening of the wrap party. Sylvia severed her ties with Group Three, and to alleviate his financial plight, Gerry Anderson sold his share of the profits from the APF/Century 21 shows and their holiday home in Portugal
Portugal

Portugal , officially the Portuguese Republic , is a country on the Iberian Peninsula. Located in southwestern Europe, Portugal is the westernmost country of mainland Europe and is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the west and south and by Spain to the north and east....
 to Lew Grade in return for a one-off payment. It was a decision he later bitterly regretted because he could not have then foreseen the huge value the shows would have when eventually released on home video.

Between making the two series of Space: 1999, Anderson produced a one-off television special, The Day After Tomorrow
The Day After Tomorrow (TV special)

The Day After Tomorrow was a 1975 science fiction television special produced by Gerry Anderson between the two seasons of Space: 1999....
 (also known as Into Infinity), about two spacefaring families en route to Alpha Centauri
Alpha Centauri

Alpha Centauri ; is the brightest star in the southern constellation of Centaurus and an established binary star system, Alpha Centauri AB ....
, for an NBC series of programmes illustrating current scientific theory for popular consumption. While making this project Anderson met Mary Robins, a secretary working at the studios; they began a relationship and were married in April 1981.

A second series of Space: 1999 went into production in 1976 with American producer Fred Freiberger
Fred Freiberger

Fred Freiberger was an United States television producer and script writer. He is best known for his work as producer of the third and final season of science fiction series Star Trek: The Original Series from 1968–1969....
 brought in to replace Sylvia Anderson. According to The Space:1999 Documentary, produced by Kindred Productions for Fanderson
Fanderson

Fanderson is a UK based Official Gerry Anderson Appreciation Society. It is a non-profit organisation, and the only such society worldwide that is endorsed by Anderson Entertainment Ltd., Gerry Anderson Productions plc and ITC Entertainment Group Ltd....
, the second series was successful enough that a third almost happened; however, the documentary features Martin Landau stating that the idea was killed because Lew Grade needed money to help finance and promote his pet feature film project Raise The Titanic. Consequently, the budget that would have paid for the third series was redirected into that movie project (which subsequently flopped at the box office). However, given that Raise The Titanic did not enter production until 1979 (and was not promoted and released until the following year), it is more likely that the money that would otherwise have financed a third season of Space: 1999 instead financed the production of ITC's Return of the Saint series. Space: 1999 marked the end of Anderson's association with ATV.

By the late 1970s, Anderson's life and career was at a low point - he was in financial difficulty, found it hard to get work, and perhaps most devastatingly, became estranged from his young son after receiving a note written by him stating that he didn't want to see Gerry any more. Anderson suspected that Sylvia was behind this, but there was little he could do, and he would have no contact with his son for over twenty years.

1980s resurgence

In 1981, episodes of many of Anderson's Supermarionation series were combined and edited together as films. These aired under the title Supermarionation Sci-Fi Theatre.

In the early 1980s, Anderson and businessman Christopher Burr formed a new partnership, Anderson Burr Pictures Ltd. The new company's first production was based on an unrealised concept devised by Anderson in the late seventies for a Japanese cartoon series. Terrahawks
Terrahawks

Terrahawks was a puppet-based science fiction television series created by Gerry Anderson and Christopher Burr. It ran for three seasons between 1983 and 1986 comprising a total of 39 25-minute episodes....
 marked Anderson's return to working with puppets, but rather than marionettes, this series used a new system dubbed 'Supermacromation', which used highly sophisticated glove puppets -- an approach undoubtedly inspired by the great advances in this form of puppetry made by Jim Henson
Jim Henson

'James Maury "Jim" Henson' , was one of the most widely known puppeteers in American television history. He was the creator of The Muppets, Fraggle Rock, and the leading force behind their long run in the television series Sesame Street and The Muppet Show and films such as The Muppet Movie and The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth...
 and his colleagues.

It featured another reuse of the Captain Scarlet/UFO formula of a secret organization defending against aliens. Terrahawks was successful, running from 1983 to 1986 in the UK and only fell short of a four year US syndication deal by one season when the show was cancelled, scrapping attempts at making it more well known. Terrahawks retains a cult following to this day, regarded by some as being at times a "black comedy" version of many of Anderson's older series in addition to being a straight science fiction series. In equal contrast however, it is regarded by some fans as an unwise rehash of many of the visual concepts of Thunderbirds on a fraction of the budget, Anderson has claimed on record he'd rather forget the show.

Anderson hoped to continue his renewed success with a series called Space Police
Space Precinct

Space Precinct is a United Kingdom television series that aired from 1994 to 1995 on Sky One and later on BBC Two in Britain, and in television syndication in North America....
 a new show mixing live-action and puppets. A pilot film was made with Shane Rimmer
Shane Rimmer

Shane Rimmer is a Canada actor and voice actor, probably best known as the voice of Scott Tracy in Thunderbirds .He has mostly performed in supporting roles, frequently in films and television series filmed in the United Kingdom, having relocated to England in the late 1950s....
, but it took almost ten years to get the concept to the screen. In the meantime, Anderson and Burr produced the cult stop-motion animated series Dick Spanner, which enjoyed many showings on Britain's Channel 4
Channel 4

Channel 4 is a UK Public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television broadcaster which began transmissions on 2 November 1982. Although commercially self-funded, it is ultimately publicly owned; originally a subsidiary of the Independent Broadcasting Authority , the station is now owned and operated by the #Channel Four Television...
 in the late eighties and early nineties. It was the final project completed by Anderson Burr. Anderson then joined the Moving Picture Company as a commercials director, and provided special effects direction for the hit musical comedy Return to the Forbidden Planet
Return to the Forbidden Planet

Return to the Forbidden Planet is a Jukebox musical by director Bob Carlton based on William Shakespeare's The Tempest and the 1950s science fiction film Forbidden Planet ....
.

1990s - a new audience


The cult appeal of Thunderbirds and the other Supermarionation series grew steadily over the years and was celebrated by comedy and stage productions such as the hit two-man stage revue Thunderbirds FAB. In the early nineties, ITC began releasing home video versions of the Supermarionation shows, and the profile of the shows was further enhanced by productions such as the Dire Straits
Dire Straits

Dire Straits were a United Kingdom Rock music, formed in 1977 by Mark Knopfler , his younger brother David Knopfler , John Illsley , and Pick Withers , and managed by Ed Bicknell....
 music video for their single Calling Elvis, which was made as an affectionate Thunderbirds pastiche (with Anderson co-producing), and by Lady Penelope and Parker appearing in a successful series of UK advertisements for an insurance company.

In 1991 Gerry asked journalist and author Simon Archer to write his biography, following an interview by the latter for a series of articles for Century 21 magazine. In September that same year in the UK BBC2
BBC Two

BBC Two is the second major terrestrial television channel of the BBC, aimed at a wide range of subject matter and interests, and specialising in intelligent yet popular programme genres....
 began a repeat showing of Thunderbirds, which rivalled the success of its original run a generation before. This was also surprisingly the series' network television premiere, having never been shown nationally by ITV
ITV

ITV is a public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television network of British television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority to provide competition to the BBC....
. It became so popular in Britain that toy manufacturers Matchbox
Matchbox (toy company)

Matchbox is a die cast toy brand currently owned by Mattel, Inc. Matchbox toys were so named because the original models were packed in boxes similar in size and style to boxes of matches....
 were unable to keep up with the demand for the Tracy Island
Tracy Island

Tracy Island was the home of the Tracy family in the Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson 1960s television series Thunderbirds . Located in the South Pacific Ocean, the island's true function as the secret base of the International Rescue organisation was heavily camouflaged....
 playset, leading children's show Blue Peter
Blue Peter

Blue Peter is a long-running BBC television programme for children. It is shown on CBBC, both in its BBC One programming block and on the CBBC Channel....
 to broadcast a segment showing children how to construct their own. The fan base for the Anderson shows was now worldwide and growing steadily, and Anderson found himself in demand for personal and media appearances.

In response to this greater demand Anderson performed a successful one-man show in 1992, which Simon Archer had written and constructed. Entitled An Evening with Gerry Anderson, it took the form of an illustrated lecture in which he talked about his career, and his most popular shows. He also made numerous media and personal appearances to tie in with revivals and DVD releases of Stingray, Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet and Joe 90.

By 1993 the interviews with Archer had generated so much more material than was required for the biography that a book was published of Gerry Anderson trivia "Gerry Anderson's FAB Facts". Archer was killed in a car crash on London's M25
M25 motorway

To see information about the M25 motorway under construction in Ireland, see N25 road.The M25 motorway, also known as the M25 corridor, is a 117 mile beltway which encircles Greater London, United Kingdom....
 on his way to the publishers to collect one of the first print run to present to Anderson, and the book later had to be withdrawn from sale and thousands of copies destroyed as a result of a copyright dispute with ITC America.

The renewed interest enabled Anderson to return to television production, but several projects including GFI (an animated update of Thunderbirds) did not make it into production. Finally, in 1994, Anderson was able to get the long-shelved Space Police project into production as Space Precinct
Space Precinct

Space Precinct is a United Kingdom television series that aired from 1994 to 1995 on Sky One and later on BBC Two in Britain, and in television syndication in North America....
. It was followed by Lavender Castle
Lavender Castle

Lavender Castle is a United Kingdom stop motion/Computer-generated imagery television series created by Rodney Matthews and produced by Gerry Anderson....
, a children's sci-fi fantasy series combining stop-motion animation and computer-generated imagery
Computer-generated imagery

Computer-generated imagery is the application of the field of computer graphics or, more specifically, 3D computer graphics to special effects in films, television programs, Television commercials, simulators and simulation generally, and printed media....
.

In the meantime, the biography, which had been set aside since Simon Archer's death had been picked up again and was completed by Stan Nicholls
Stan Nicholls

Stan Nicholls has been a full-time writer since 1981. He is the author of many novels and short stories but is best known for the internationally acclamied Orcs: First Blood series....
 from Archer's original notes and manuscript, finally being published in 1996 shortly before Lavender Castle went into production.

Around this time Gerry was reunited with his elder son, Gerry Jr., at which time it was suggested that Sylvia had been responsible for the enforced estrangement. This reinforced Anderson's already powerful feelings of animosity towards his ex-wife.

2000 onward


By December 1999, Anderson was working on plans for a computer animated
Computer-generated imagery

Computer-generated imagery is the application of the field of computer graphics or, more specifically, 3D computer graphics to special effects in films, television programs, Television commercials, simulators and simulation generally, and printed media....
 sequel to Captain Scarlet, and test reels were displayed by Gerry at a few fan conventions. Some of the test sequences from these reels were later available for a period as elements in publicity reels available on the website of the production company engaged to make them (the Moving Picture Company or MPC in Soho, London, where Gerry had previously worked). These early test reels had the visual design and characters looking very much as they had in the original show, although the vehicle designs had been somewhat modernised. Several years after the initial tests the project evolved into the remake Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet
Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet

Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet is a United Kingdom-produced computer-generated imagery action-adventure TV series which debuted in February 2005 as part of the Ministry of Mayhem on ITV....
, by which time the entire appearance had been very much updated. Gerry Anderson was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire in 2001.

Along with his then business partner John Needham, Anderson created another new series entitled Firestorm
Firestorm (anime)

is a Japanese anime series co-created by two British people: Gerry Anderson and his business partner John Needham. The series combines CGI animation for mecha and traditional cell animation for characters....
 which was financed by Japanese investors and featured anime
Anime

is animation in Japan and considered to be "Japanese animation" in the rest of the world. Anime dates from about 1917.Anime, in addition to manga , is extremely popular in Japan and well known throughout the world....
 style animation. The project was not a happy one for any of the parties involved, and other planned shows with the Japanese backers, including Eternity failed to come to fruition. Firestorm has yet to be shown on UK television. Anderson and Needham parted company in 2003.

Anderson was originally approached to be involved in a live-action feature film adaptation of Thunderbirds as far back as 1996, but was actually turned away by the producers of the 2004 film Thunderbirds
Thunderbirds (film)

Thunderbirds is a 2004 in film science fiction-adventure film based upon the Thunderbirds of the 1960s, directed by Jonathan Frakes. The movie, written by William Osborne and Michael McCullers, was released on July 24, 2004 in the UK, with later dates for others....
, directed by Jonathan Frakes
Jonathan Frakes

Jonathan Scott Frakes is an United States actor and film director best known for his portrayal of Commander William T. Riker in the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation....
, after first being invited to meet with them. He distanced himself overtly from the project, later turning down an offer of $750,000 simply to write an endorsement of the film shortly before its release; Sylvia Anderson
Sylvia Anderson

Sylvia Anderson , born , is a Great Britain voice artist and film producer, most notable for collaborations with her ex-husband Gerry Anderson....
, however, did become involved and received a "special thanks" credit in the film. The film itself received poor critical reviews and was a box-office failure in America.

Anderson later praised the execution of the puppet-based political satire
Political satire

Political satire is a significant part of satire that specializes in gaining entertainment from politics; it has also been used with subversive intent where political speech and dissent are forbidden by a regime, as a method of advancing political arguments where such arguments are expressly forbidden....
 Team America: World Police
Team America: World Police

Team America: World Police is a 2004 comedy film, written by Trey Parker, Matt Stone, and Pam Brady and film director by Parker, all of whom are also known for the popular list of animated television series South Park....
, produced by Matt Stone
Matt Stone

Matthew Richard "Matt" Stone is an Emmy Award winning United States animator, screenwriter, Television director, Television producer, Voice acting, musician, and actor....
 and Trey Parker
Trey Parker

Trey Parker is an Emmy Award winning American animator, screenwriter, Television director, Television producer, Voice acting, musician, and actor, best known for being the co-creator of South Park along with Matt Stone....
, which used many familiar supermarionation style effects familiar to many long time fans of Anderson's work.

After Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet
Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet

Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet is a United Kingdom-produced computer-generated imagery action-adventure TV series which debuted in February 2005 as part of the Ministry of Mayhem on ITV....
 finally premiered in the UK in February 2005. The show cost £23,000,000 to produce (the most expensive children's programme ever to be made in the UK) and was warmly received by the fan community. However it was missed by many due to poor scheduling and pre-publicity by ITV
ITV

ITV is a public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television network of British television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority to provide competition to the BBC....
. Although many companies invested in producing toys and merchandise, the lack of exposure given to the series by ITV inevitably failed to produce the excitement that accompanied the original series and disappointing sales followed. The accompanying comic lasted only six editions before being scrapped by its publishers. Followers of the show await with interest on how the show will re-coup its hefty investment while Gerry's displeasure at ITV's handling of the show was widely reported.

2005 also saw the 40th Anniversary of Thunderbirds. A wide range of merchandise was produced to celebrate the landmark, though poor scheduling of the series on the BBC failed to re-ignite the usual following of the show.

In 2006, ITV announced it would re-run the entire series on its fledgling CITV Channel
CITV Channel

CITV is a United Kingdom children's Television channel from ITV Digital Channels Ltd, a division of ITV plc. The channel is aimed at children under 12 years old, showing content from the current CITV library, as well as commissions and acquisitions....
, a digital service available on cable, satellite and the Freeview service. With fewer than 50,000 viewers, it seems that, once again, New Captain Scarlet is destined to be seen by very few people.

The series is however filmed in the High Definition format and it is hoped that the show will find a place on the new services.

ITV4
ITV4

ITV4 is a United Kingdom television station which launched on 1 November 2005. It is owned by ITV Digital Channels Ltd, a division of ITV plc. The channel has a male-oriented line-up, including sport, cop shows and US comedies and dramas, as well as classic ITV action series of the 1960s and '70s....
, another digital service, also ran repeats of UFO
UFO (TV series)

UFO is a British television science fiction series created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by the Anderson's and Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions for Grade's ITC Entertainment company....
 and Space: 1999
Space: 1999

Space: 1999 is a United Kingdom Science fiction on television series. In the series, nuclear waste from Earth is stored on the moon. The waste explodes in a catastrophic accident on 13 September 1999, which knocks the moon out of its orbit and sends it and the 311 inhabitants of Moonbase Alpha hurtling uncontrollably into outer space....
 attracting a very small, but loyal following. Anderson is currently (end of 2007) believed to be working on a new project entitled Lightspeed, about which very little is publicly known and on a possible new edition of the UFO
UFO (TV series)

UFO is a British television science fiction series created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by the Anderson's and Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions for Grade's ITC Entertainment company....
 series.

Gerry Anderson productions


TV series (and broadcast dates)

  • The Adventures of Twizzle
    The Adventures of Twizzle

    The Adventures of Twizzle was the very first television show produced by AP Films and specifically Gerry Anderson, after being approached by author Roberta Leigh and her colleague Suzanne Warner....
     (1957-1959)
  • Torchy the Battery Boy
    Torchy the Battery Boy

    Torchy the Battery Boy was the second television series produced by AP Films and Gerry Anderson. It was another collaboration with author Roberta Leigh and was directed by Anderson, with music scored by Barry Gray, art direction from Reg Hill and special effects by Derek Meddings....
     (first season only) (1960)
  • Four Feather Falls
    Four Feather Falls

    Four Feather Falls was the third puppet TV show produced by Gerry Anderson for Granada Television, from an idea by Barry Gray. Gray, most noted as a composer who created the theme songs for many of Anderson's creations, also wrote the first episode....
     (1960)
  • Supercar
    Supercar (TV series)

    Supercar was a children's TV show produced by Gerry Anderson and Arthur Provis's AP Films for Associated TeleVision and ITC Entertainment. 39 episodes were produced between 1961 and 1962, and it was Anderson's first half-hour series....
     (1961-1962) - first Supermarionation production.
  • Fireball XL5
    Fireball XL5

    Fireball XL5 is a science fiction-themed children's television show produced in what was described as a modest building in a trading estate in Slough, Berkshire, United Kingdom....
     (1962-1963)
  • Stingray
    Stingray (TV series)

    Stingray is a children's marionette television show, created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by AP Films for Associated TeleVision and ITC Entertainment from 1964-65....
     (1964-1965)
  • Thunderbirds
    Thunderbirds (TV series)

    Thunderbirds is a British mid-1960s television show devised by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and made by AP Films using a form of marionette puppetry dubbed "Supermarionation"....
     (1965-1966)
  • Captain Scarlet and The Mysterons
    Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons

    Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, often referred to as simply Captain Scarlet, is a science fiction television series produced by the Century 21 Productions Television company of Gerry Anderson, John Read , Reg Hill and Sylvia Anderson....
     (1967-1968)
  • Joe 90
    Joe 90

    Joe 90 is a 1968 television series concerning the adventures of a nine-year-old boy, Joe McClaine, set in the years 2012-2013. Devised by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson, a single season of thirty 25-minute episodes was completed, and it was the last show to be made exclusively using a form of puppetry called "Supermarionation"....
     (1968-1969)
  • The Secret Service
    The Secret Service

    * This article is about the television series. For the form of government policing, see secret service.The Secret Service is the title of a United Kingdom children's Spy-fi series produced by Gerry Anderson and Lord Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions company for ITC Entertainment in 1969 and broadcast on some ITV stations in the Uni...
     (1969)
  • UFO
    UFO (TV series)

    UFO is a British television science fiction series created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by the Anderson's and Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions for Grade's ITC Entertainment company....
     (1970-1971)
  • The Protectors
    The Protectors

    The Protectors was a United Kingdom television series, an action Thriller created by Gerry Anderson - his second TV series using live actors as opposed to animated puppets....
     (1972-1974)
  • Space: 1999
    Space: 1999

    Space: 1999 is a United Kingdom Science fiction on television series. In the series, nuclear waste from Earth is stored on the moon. The waste explodes in a catastrophic accident on 13 September 1999, which knocks the moon out of its orbit and sends it and the 311 inhabitants of Moonbase Alpha hurtling uncontrollably into outer space....
     (1975-1977)
  • Terrahawks
    Terrahawks

    Terrahawks was a puppet-based science fiction television series created by Gerry Anderson and Christopher Burr. It ran for three seasons between 1983 and 1986 comprising a total of 39 25-minute episodes....
     (1983-1984, 1986)
  • Dick Spanner, P.I.
    Dick Spanner, P.I.

    Dick Spanner, P.I. was a 1986 British stop-motion animation comedy series which parodied Chandleresque detective shows. The titular character and main protagonist was Dick Spanner, voiced by Shane Rimmer, a robotic private detective who works cases in a futuristic urban setting....
     (1987)
  • Space Precinct
    Space Precinct

    Space Precinct is a United Kingdom television series that aired from 1994 to 1995 on Sky One and later on BBC Two in Britain, and in television syndication in North America....
     (1994-1995)
  • Lavender Castle
    Lavender Castle

    Lavender Castle is a United Kingdom stop motion/Computer-generated imagery television series created by Rodney Matthews and produced by Gerry Anderson....
     (1999-2000)
  • Firestorm
    Firestorm (anime)

    is a Japanese anime series co-created by two British people: Gerry Anderson and his business partner John Needham. The series combines CGI animation for mecha and traditional cell animation for characters....
     (2003)
  • Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet
    Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet

    Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet is a United Kingdom-produced computer-generated imagery action-adventure TV series which debuted in February 2005 as part of the Ministry of Mayhem on ITV....
     (2005)


Feature films

  • Crossroads to Crime
    Crossroads to Crime

    Crossroads to Crime is a United Kingdom crime film released in 1960 in film. It was Gerry Anderson's first Live action production and his feature film directorial debut....
     (1960)
  • Thunderbirds Are GO
    Thunderbirds Are GO

    Thunderbirds Are Go is a United Kingdom science fiction-adventure motion picture released in 1966. It was the first film based on Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson's popular Supermarionation television series Thunderbirds , and followed the first unmanned mission to Mars....
     (1966)
  • Thunderbird 6
    Thunderbird 6

    Thunderbird 6 is a United Kingdom science fiction-adventure motion picture released in 1968. It was the second film based on Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson's popular Supermarionation television series Thunderbirds ....
     (1968)
  • Doppelgänger
    Doppelgänger (1969 film)

    Doppelg?nger is a 1969 in film British science fiction film directed by Robert Parrish. The film was released in the US as Journey to the Far Side of the Sun, a title by which it is now better known....
     (1969) aka Journey to the Far Side of the Sun (US title)


Miscellanies

  • The Investigator (pilot episode - never broadcast)
  • The Day After Tomorrow (a.k.a. Into Infinity) (1976)
  • Space Police (pilot episode - never broadcast)
  • GFI (pilot episode - never broadcast)


Gerry Anderson had no involvement in the 2004 live action film version of Thunderbirds
Thunderbirds (film)

Thunderbirds is a 2004 in film science fiction-adventure film based upon the Thunderbirds of the 1960s, directed by Jonathan Frakes. The movie, written by William Osborne and Michael McCullers, was released on July 24, 2004 in the UK, with later dates for others....
, although Sylvia Anderson served as a consultant on that project.

In addition, a number of UK
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 comics
Comic book

A comic book is a magazine or book of narrative artwork and dialog and descriptive prose. The style was introduced in 1934. Despite the term, comic books do not necessarily feature humorous subject-matter; in fact, it is often serious and action-oriented....
 featured strips that were closely based around Anderson's creations. These started with TV Comic
TV Comic

TV Comic was a United Kingdom comic book published weekly between November 9 1951 and June 22 1984 for 1696 issues. With its bright eye-catching covers it featured stories based on television shows running at the time of publication....
 during the early 1960s followed by TV Century 21
TV Century 21

TV Century 21 was a weekly United Kingdom children's comic of the 1960s and early 1970s. It promoted the many television science-fiction puppet series created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson's AP Films....
 and its various sister publications Lady Penelope, TV Tornado, Solo and Joe 90. Later there was Countdown
Countdown (comic)

Countdown was a British comic book that ran for 132 issues from 20 February 1971 in comics to 25 August 1973.The pages in each issue were numbered in reverse order with page 1 at the end....
 (later TV Action) during the 1970s. There were also a number of tie-in annuals that were produced each year featuring Anderson's TV shows.

External links

  • at
  • A large site dedicated to the productions of Gerry Anderson, mainly Supermarionation.
  • Index and links for all productions