Sylvia Anderson

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S Y LV I A A N D E R S O N

Gerry and Sylvia Anderson in 1967, surrounded by some of their creations

hulton-deutsch collection/corbis

His vacant eyes and menacingly arched brows wouldn’t get near a TV screen these days, but this was the Fifties and unbeknown to Sylvia and Gerry back then, creepy old Torchy was actually paving the way for Jeff Tracy and sons. “Once we had the idea to use puppets, we could make our first independent production, a puppet western called Four Feather Falls for Granada,” Sylvia explains. It wasn’t until sci-fi TV-show producer, Frank Sherwin Green stepped up, and later commercial TV titan Lew Grade, that the team was able to fully utilise the creative skills that they were now acquiring by the day. A succession of half-hour shows went out on ATV including Supercar, Fireball XL5 and Stingray, for which Sylvia contributed plot development and voice work. “But characters were always my thing. I persuaded Lew Grade to give us an hour – because half an hour didn’t really allow you to get to know any of the characters at all – and the result was Thunderbirds. “Gerry and I wrote the bible, if you like. We’d write the first episode that was the key to the rest. I’d work on the characters and he would work on the adventures. “I created Lady Penelope as something that would appeal to the Americans, and to Lew Grade, who’d given us so much. They thought everyone over here was either a Cockney or a lady living in her manor house. Well, Lady Penelope was both and neither. One of my favourite characters growing up was the Scarlet Pimpernel, someone who was very different by day – a bit of a fop – and a spy by night. So that was her back-story and Parker, the safe-cracker, was a part of that. “We also wanted comedy, because we hadn’t had a chance to use it before, and I could do so much more with the villains in an hour.” The show forced its audience to suspend disbelief. Here were real characters with motivations and internal lives. Graduates of the Stanislavski system, rather than contemporaries of Mary, Mungo or Midge. The word ‘children’ doesn’t crop up once in Sylvia’s explanation of how Thunderbirds came about, and she is keen to remind me that creating a kids’ show was never their intention. For the same reason I was more consumed by the goings on of Albert Square than of Farthing Wood as a child, the popularity of Thunderbirds lay in its sense of drama. Sure, most kids didn’t understand the workings of a plutonium bomb, but the fact that the show was capable of sustaining their attention, as well as that of their older siblings’ and parents’, meant they had some idea by the end of said episode, “30 Minutes After Noon”. It was a chance for Sylvia, Gerry and the rest of their team to fulfil their dramatic potential and to explore wider interests. “It was the Sixties and London had become

a very glamorous place, so I wanted to reflect that in the show.”

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ike the creation of Lady Penelope and the company’s use of puppets in the first place, however, the fact that Thunderbirds lacked condescension was, in part, another happy coincidence; the result of an otherwise stifled team finally being granted more freedom than ever before. Hence why Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, Joe 90, The Secret Service, UFO, The Protectors and Space: 1999 were not as well received. Each occupies its own space in the canon of children’s TV – with the exception, perhaps, of the final two – but as Sylvia explains: “Those shows did lack something. I felt we had achieved something quite remarkable with Thunderbirds. We’d put so much into the characters that I really didn’t want to go through it all again”. With cracks also beginning to show in hers and Gerry’s personal relationship, the company was only fated to last until the end of the 1970s. “Being a woman – probably one of the few successful female producers at the time – I did get a lot of attention. My husband found that hard because he was doing great work and creating wonderful effects. Whenever we were being interviewed, I always had to step back a bit. But that would only frustrate Gerry and he would say, ‘Go on, you’ve got to speak to your reporters’. Later on, we started working with actors and there were probably some things that happened there which hurt the marriage. “We got divorced in the Seventies. Things had changed. When we were both poor and working very hard, I was a help, and I was delighted when we finally got that success. It was heartbreaking at the time but Gerry and I had to break up. He quickly got someone else THE INDEPENDENT MAGAZINE/17

who was a secretary or something, because that’s what he wanted. He didn’t really want a woman who was going to compete in any way. Although I didn’t realise I was competing at the time. “I remember going to meet another producer about a film I was working on. He stared at my legs through the whole meeting before tapping me on the head and saying, ‘Don’t worry your pretty little head about that’. Well I wanted to slap him! Back then if you wanted to work as a woman, people assumed you were either tough or very flirtatious.” Sylvia went on to write an epistolary novel, Love and Hisses – a prototype Bridget Jones – which she cites as “saving her” following the break-up of the marriage. She then embarked on a long career sourcing UK content for American network HBO. Gerry died last Boxing Day and Sylvia admits to feeling melancholy in the aftermath. “I got quite angry with myself thinking, why did it all go wrong?” Only a few years before, in 2010, he was publicly outraged when Working Title failed to credit him in their remake. Sylvia recalls how he “sulked”. “I didn’t expect to be involved, you see. You have to hand these things over, you can’t hang on to them forever.” Anyone working to resurrect Thunderbirds and reinstate its legacy is a friend in her eyes. “Unless you accept that people are going to do it differently, you’re always going to be disappointed.” She grants Rosamund Pike her blessing and looks forward to seeing the show. “I am proud of what we have achieved and to see it being adapted by another group of people who are so talented.” She might not be colluding with intelligence agencies, but in her own quiet way, Sylvia exhibits all the poise of her best loved, and soon E to be revived, heroine.


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