The Three Railway Engines (lost live BBC broadcast adaptation of "The Railway Series" books; 1953): Difference between revisions

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|title=<center>The Sad Story of Henry (1953 live broadcast)</center>
|title=<center>The Sad Story of Henry (1953 live broadcast)</center>
|image=The sad story of henry title card.png
|image=The sad story of henry title card.png
|imagecaption=Original Title card from the 1989 remake of the episode.
|imagecaption= Title card from the 1989 remake of the episode.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
}}

Revision as of 02:09, 17 January 2022

The sad story of henry title card.png

Title card from the 1989 remake of the episode.

Status: Lost

Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends is a children’s show adapted from the Reverend Wilbert Awdry and his son Christopher Awdry’s The Railway Series stories. While this is certainly the most famous adaption of the Awdrys' stories, it was not the first, having been preceded by a live broadcast in 1953 by the BBC. Unfortunately the technical difficulties associated with it would prevent a full series being commissioned for some time to come.

Background

In 1953, the BBC approached The Railway Series editor Eric Marriott and inquired about the possibility of adapting at least two stories from The Railway Series to television. Marriott and Rev. Awdry approved the proposal, on condition only that the the adaptation be as faithful to the railroad milieu as possible. Thus the broadcast was to be done using 00 Gauge Hornby models of the trains pictured in the original illustrations, with sets likewise designed to ensure authenticity. The script however was "freely adapted", in order to fit the ten-minute broadcast limit. It was broadcast live from Lime Grove Studios on Sunday, June 14th, 1953.

Live Broadcast

For this initial attempt, the BBC had chosen to adapt "The Sad Story of Henry", a suitably dramatic tale of the titular engine being bricked up in a tunnel after he refuses to leave it for fear of a rainstorm spoiling his new paint. The live adaptation had to be put together within a month; not ideal for what was already a notably complex production for the time, which besides the elaborately faithful model train setup included superimposed rain and other effects overlaid by music and narration by Julia Lang. The models were reported to jerk around as they moved, but other than that, the broadcast went well - until the lead engine derailed, the train set operator having missed switching the points before the engine arrived at them. To the surprise of viewers, a human hand abruptly picked up the engine and put it back on the rails instead.

Aftermath/Preservation

The broadcast went on without further incident and was generally well-received, but the derailment and its unexpected resolution managed to attract notice from several newspapers. An angry Rev. Awdry is recorded therein as demanding guarantees that a similar blunder would not happen in the second broadcast (scheduled for June 28th); however seriously the BBC took this, the second broadcast was in fact put on hold, and later cancelled. Although numerous attempts were made to revive the series, all were unsuccessful until the iconic current series began airing in 1989.

As the show was broadcast live and knowing the BBC's track record for preserving old content - let alone one with this kind of technical issue - it's no surprise that it is entirely lost. It is highly unlikely that anyone recorded the single broadcast; however, a Sodor Island Forums user named OJ said that he might have seen a clip of it while watching an episode of "It'll Be Alright on the Night" somewhere in the 1990s. Sadly, the clip was later found to be something completely unrelated.

Gallery

Images

Videos

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See Also (BBC Wiped Programs Media)

See Also (Thomas Series)

Thomas & Friends

Thomas the Tank Engine

Other

External Links