Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Betty Larom. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Betty Larom. Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Betty Larom

A bit of clearing the decks...

When I was trying to find information on Neville Main for an earlier post (see here) I scanned these two pages by Betty Larom who was also a contributor to TV Comic as well as producing material for Robin and Robin Annual. Betty Larom was Mrs. Neville Main, born on 5 December 1920 and died 4 December 1972.

I believe Betty May Larom was the daughter of F. G. Larom and his wife May Emma Larom. She had previously married Henry Peter Ryland (son of H. Montague Ryland and Sylvia Ryland [Lady Doughty]) on 17 September 1949 and had a son, born in 1951. Her family may have hailed from Eastbourne but I'm not absolutely certain of that. Nor am I sure when she married Neville Main.

She contributed 'Happy and Butterball' to TV Comic for an undetermined period from 1955, later drawing 'The Story of Dumpy' in Robin in 1958-60. Later still, in 1966, she was the artist for 'Camberwick Green' in Pippin. I'm sure a good dig around the nursery comics will turn up more of her work. Happy (and Butterball) also appeared in a number of other books by Betty Larom, including the one below (illustration nabbed from eBay).

Books (all illus. by the author)
Robin's Visit to Fairyland. London, The Children's Press, 1944.
The Story of Tufty. London, Juvenile Productions, 1950.
Wimsy and Pinky. London, Juvenile Productions, 1950.
The Story of Twinky. London, Juvenile Productions, 1951.
The Story of Baba. London, London, Juvenile Productions, 1952.
Neddy's Little Bedtime Book. London, Juvenile Production, 1953.
1 2 3 Board Book. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1956.
My ABC Board Book. London & Glasgow, Collins, c. 1956?
The Three Little Bears. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1956.
The 'Happy' Book. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1964.
Happy's Holiday. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1964.
My Playtime Book. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1967.

Illustrated Books
Nursery Rhymes and Fairy Tales, illus. with others. Southampton, The Capella Press, 1940?
The Crackerjack ABC and Play Book, illus. with others. London & Glasgow, The Children's Press, 195?.
Toytown Series (credited to Betty Hulme Beaman & S. G. Hulme Beaman):
__9: Larry the Plumber. London, Oldbourne, 1961.
__12: The Conversion of Mr. Growser. London, Oldbourne, 1961.

Friday, August 19, 2022

Comic Cuts — 19 August 2022


After last week's holiday (Clacton got a 5-star review!), I'm back at work, slogging through the last few chores on another book (doing the final bits of tidying up the artwork) before settling in to write an introduction (which is much more fun!). I'm hoping to have the whole thing finished Friday.

I'm then copy-editing a book that will be the next release from Bear Alley Books, a memoir by George Coates about his trip around the world by motorbike. It won't be out for a few months, but I'm getting started on it between other jobs. I have a fourth book due for the publishers in Spain, but I'm waiting on some scans. So George's book will keep me busy... no rest for the wicked... except, of course, the week off I've just had proves definitively that I'm not wicked whatever you hear to the contrary.

I mentioned Jon Peaty as being an artist who contributed to Swift Annual way back in 2007 and was subsequently contacted by David Peaty. I heard from David again when an exhibition of his father's work was planned for 2020... which was, of course, cancelled due to the pandemic.

The good news is that the exhibition, a retrospective of paintings, drawings and designs, is back on and will run between the 10th and 30th of September at The Skyway Gallery in Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex.

David also tells me that he will be launching a website dedicated to his father's work in the near future. Details to follow.

Betty Larom is another artist I wrote about briefly in 2007, and I was pleased to hear from Carol, her daughter, about an exhibition that is running now at Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's Books in Newcastle upon Tyne, which celebrates the work of both Betty Larom and Neville Main.

Carol says, “My brother and I are delighted that Seven Stories are exhibiting our mother and stepfather's books and artwork. The exhibition showcases a brilliant era for the development of children's books and comics, in which they both had a major involvement."

The exhibition includes original and facsimile items from both Betty Larom and Neville Main’s archive which is in the Seven Stories Collection, a commentary from Molly Goddard, as well as interactive elements for children.

"I have made sure that a good part of the exhibition is about the children's comic era. i.e. T.V. Comic, Pippin, Playland etc.," Carol tells me. "I have sent Seven Stories a lot of Mum and Neville's archive material i.e. storyboards, scripts, comic, annuals etc." The plan is to rotate the exhibition and Carol hopes that will allow her to also promote the Gordon Murray era.

Molly Goddard, incidentally, is a fashion designer, who has used images by Betty Larom to create a t-shirt, top and dress as part of her autumn/winter '22 collection. The t-shirt has become incredibly popular, thanks to Harry Styles, who appeared in one while singing 'Boyfriends' on the YouTube channel The First Take, which has had over 6 million views.

Seven Stories has its own range of merchandise based on Betty Larom's artwork.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

S G Hulme Beaman

I've recently covered some of the authors of children's TV shows, although in most cases they have been related to comics in some way. Well, this is no different...

S. G. Hulme Beaman was the creator of Toytown and its most famous inhabitant, the tremulous-voice Larry the Lamb. The little mystery I was trying to solve was that at least one story in TV Comic Annual was credited to Mrs. S. G. Hulme Beaman and I was trying to figure out whether this was the Betty Hulme Beaman who is also credited with some of the Toytown books that have appeared over the years.

Sydney George Hulme Beaman (pronounced "Hume Beeman") was born in Tottenham, London, in 1887, the son of George Hulme Robins Beaman (1855- ), a surveyor and risk assessor for an insurance company. George had married Eleanor Nicholls in 1881 and the couple had at least three children, Sydney George Hulme (1887), Dorothy Eleanor (1889) and Winifred Gladys (1892).

The family were related to Ardern George Hulme Beaman (1857-1929), who had served as a diplomat in Egypt, the subject of his book Twenty Years in the Near East (1898), and who wrote one of the first books about bridge, Pons Asinorum; or, Bridge for Beginners (1900); and novelists Emeric E. J. Hulme Beaman (c. 1865- ) and Ardern Arthur Hulme Beaman (1886- );

S. G. was raised in Tottenham and became a music hall performer whilst studying at Heatherley's School of Art. After the First World War, he set up a workshop in Golders Green making wooden animals and figures for model theatres which became very popular -- Mr. Noah and the inhabitants of Noah's Ark were especially well received. In 1923 the comic strip 'Philip and Phido' began appearing in the Golders Green Gazette and S. G. deliberately styled the strip after the wooden creatures he had been creating. Several stars of the later Toytown would emerge from this strip. The first Toytown (or Toy Town) books appeared in the mid-1920s when S. G. wrote and illustrated The Road to Toytown and Trouble in Toyland (both 1925).

A collection of his early stories, Tales of Toytown (1928) was discovered by May Jenkin ('Aunt Elizabeth' of the BBC's Children's Hour radio show) and S. G. went on to produce 28 radio plays featuring the inhabitants of Toytown from 1929 until 1932.

S. G. married Maud M. Poltock in Fulham in 1913 and had at least two children: Geoffrey S. Beaman (b. Edmonton, 1914) and Betty Beaman (b. Barnet, 1918). (This at least proves that there was both a Mrs. S. G. Hulme Beaman (i.e. his wife Maud M. Hulme Beaman) and a Betty Beaman (his daughter), although given the known writing abilities of his daughter, I wouldn't be surprised to find that any new stories written in TV Comic Annual were by her).

S. G. continued to experiment with the Toytown characters and created marionettes for a model stage show version of the story 'The Arkville Dragon'. This became the basis for an animated version of the story, shot with the assistance of Pathe Films. Unfortunately, the experiment was never realised as S. G. Hulme Beaman died of pneumonia in February 1932 at the age of 43. At the time he was living at 11 Sneath Avenue, Finchley N.W4.

His characters lived on for many years. The first Toytown adventures were broadcast in 1929 and continued to be remade (this was in the days of live broadcasting) until 1963, some featuring Derek (Uncle Mac) McCulloch as Larry. A friend of Beaman, writer and producer Hendrik Baker, turned four of the Toytown stories into a stage play entitled The Cruise of the Toytown Belle which was subsequently filmed as Larry the Lamb for broadcast in the For the Children TV slot by the BBC on 10 May 1947; the character were also the inspiration for a 1969 musical by Sheila Ruskin and David Wood.

Larry and Toytown have appeared in various guises over the years. The BBC produced a series of 20-minute marionette plays produced by Gordon Murray: Portrait of the Mayor, The Great Toytown Mystery, Dreadful Doings in Ark Street, How the Wireless Came to Toytown, The Great Toytown War and The Enchanted Ark (broadcast 21 Sep-30 Nov 1956), The Tale of the Magician (7 Mar 1957), The Frightfulness at the Theatre Royal (27 Jun 1957) and The Cruise of the Toytown Belle (11 Sep 1958).

The famous animators Halas & Batchelor made two cartoons, The Showing Up of Larry the Lamb (1962) and The Tale of the Magician (1964) and a new series of 26 animated shows were made in colour in 1972-74, produced by Larry the Lamb Ltd. for Thames Television which inspired a regular Larry the Lamb Annual, published in 1972-74 (dated on covers 1973-75). A further annual appeared from Grandreams in 1981.

Around the same time as the Halas & Batchelor cartoons (1963), Hendrik Baker recorded a number of episodes which were released on 45 rpm EP records by HMV, these including Tea For Two (HMV 7EG 86??), The Toytown Mystery (HMV 7EG 8607), The Tale of the Magician (HMV 7EG 8835), The Showing Up of Larry the Lamb (HMV 7EG 8836), The Mayor's Sea Voyage (HMV 7EG 8837) and The Arkville Dragon (HMV 7EG 8838). The latter four stories were released as a 33 rpm album entitled Stories from Toytown (MFP 1103).

Books (illustrated by the author unless otherwise noted)
Aladdin. London, John Lane, 1924.
Jerry & Joe. London, Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press, 1925.
Pig-pig and the Three Bears. London, Oxford University Press, 1925.
The Road to Toytown. London, Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press, 1925.
Trouble in Toyland. London, Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press, 1925.
The Wooden Knight. London, 1925.
The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor. London, John Lane, 1926.
"Out of the Ark" Books (Grunty the Pig, Ham and the Egg, Jenny the Giraffe, Jimmy the Baby Elephant, Teddy's New Job, Wally the Kangaroo) London, F. Warne & Co., 6 vols., 1927; in one volume as The Toy-Town Book, Warne, n.d..
Tales from Toytown. London, Humphrey Milford, 1928.
John Trusty. London & Glasgow, W. Collins, Sons & Co., 1929; adapted by Muriel White in 2 vols. as A Trusty Tale and Two Trusty Stowaways with the original illustrations by S. G. Hulme Beaman. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1938,
Wireless in Toytown (contains: How the Wireless Came to Toytown, The Encharted Ark, Larry the Plumber, The Mayor's Sea Voyage, The Arkville Dragon, The Toytown Treasure). London, Collins, Dec 1930.
The Toytown Mystery (contains: The Toytown Mystery, The Extraordinary Affair of Ernest the Policeman, A Portrait of the Mayor, The Disgraceful Business at Mrs. Goose's, The Showing Up of Larry the Lamb, Dirty World at the Dog and Whistle). London & Glasgow, Collins, 1932.
Stories from Toytown (contains: 10 stories). London, Oxford University Press, 1938.
The Adventures of Larry the Lamb (Toy Town series), illus. Ernest Noble. London, G. Lapworth & Co., 12 vols., 1942-47.
__2: The Brave Deed of Ernest the Policeman.
__3: Pistols for Two.
__4: Mr. Noah's Holiday.
__5: Mr. Growser Moves.
__6: Dreadful Doings in Ark Street.
__7: Golf.
__8: The Frightfulness at the Theatre Royal.
__?: The Toytown Mystery. c.1947
__?: The Extraordinary Affair of Ernest the Policeman. c.1947.
__?: Portrait of the Mayor. 1947?
__?: Dirty Work at the Dog and Whistle.
Larry the Lamb. London & Glasgow, Collins, 1946.
Toy Town Tales. London, News of the World, 1952.
The Cruise of the Toytown Belle, adapted by Hendrik Baker. London, Samuel French, 1953.
Toytown Series (credited to Betty Hulme Beaman & S. G. Hulme Beaman):
__1: Ernest the Brave, and The Toytown Mystery. London, Oldbourne Press, 1957.
__2: Tea for Two and A Portrait of the Mayor. London, Oldbourne Press, 1957.
__3: The Disgraceful Business at Mrs Goose's. London, Oldbourne Press, 1958.
__4: Dirty Work at the 'Dog and Whistle. London, Oldbourne Press, 1958.
__5: The Theatre Royal, and, Punch and Judy, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne Press, 1958.
__6: Toytown Goes West, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne Press, 1958.
__7: The Enchanted Ark, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne Press, 1958.
__8: The Mayor's Sea Voyage, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne Press, 1959.
__9: Larry the Plumber, illus. Betty Larom. London, Oldbourne, 1961.
__10: How the Radio Came to Toytown. London, Oldbourne, 1961.
__11: Mr. Noah's Holiday, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1961.
__12: The Conversion of Mr. Growser, illus. Betty Larom. London, Oldbourne, 1961.
__13: The Great Toytown War, illus. Betty Larom. London, Oldbourne, 1961.
__14: Mr. Growser Moves House, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1962.
__15: The Extraordinary Affair of Ernest the Policeman, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1962.
__16: Pistols for Two, illus. Kenneth Lovell. Oldbourne, 1962.
__17: A Toytown Christmas Party, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1962.
__19: Dreadful Doings in Ark Street, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1963.
__20: The Arkville Dragon, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1963.
__21: The Showing Up of Larry the Lamb, illus. Kenneth Lovell. London, Oldbourne, 1963.
__22: The Toytown Pantomime, illus. H. Faithful. London, Oldbourne, 1963.
The First [Second, Third] Larry the Lamb Story Book. London, Piccolo Books, 1972-73.
The Book of Toytown and Larry the Lamb, with a biographical note about the author by Hendrik Baker. London, Harrap, 1979.
Toytown and Larry the Lamb, illus. by S. G. Hulme Beaman and John Donnelly. London, Thames Methuen, 1985.
Toytown. The World of S. G. Hulme Beaman, ed. G. G. Grange. London, G. G. Grange, 2000.

Illustrated Books
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson. London, John Lane, 1930.
The Smith Family by Mrs. H. C. Craddock. London, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1931.

Radio Plays (dates are for the earliest broadcast I have been able to trace; any help with dates would be very welcome)
Proud Punch from Toy Town (18 Jul 1929)
The Tale of the Magician (1 Aug 1929)
The Tale of the Inventor (16 Aug 1929)
Captain Brass the Pirate (28 Aug 1929)
The Giles Barn Gang and the Baby Brother (11 Sep 1929)
The Tale of Ernest the Policeman (25 Sep 1929)
How Wireless Came to Toy-Town (29 Nov 1929)
The Enchanted Ark (2 Jan 1930)
The Arkville Dragon (30 Jan 1930)
Larry the Plumber (18 Feb 1930)
The Toy Town Treasure (12 Mar 1930)
(The Toy Town Times, arranged by Charles Bewer and Sara Sarony, 27 Mar 1930)
The Great Toy Town Mystery (3 Apr 1930)
The Portrait of the Mayor (6 Jun 1930)
Our Programme, by the Citizens of Toy Town (18 Jul 1930)
How John Trusty and his dog Walter stowed away on the good ship Firefly (9 Sep 1930)
The Disgraceful Affair at Mrs. Goose's (14 Nov 1930)
The Kidnapping of Father Christmas (23 Dec 1930)
The Cruise of the Toy Town Belle:
__Part 1: The Start of the Treasure Hunt (3 Feb 1931)
__Part 2: (in which Mr. Growser's worst fears are realised) (10 Feb 1931)
__Part 3: The Wreck of the Toytown Belle (3 Mar 1931)
__Part 4: The Wreck of the Toytown Belle (19 Mar 1931)
Mr Noah's Holiday (21 Apr 1931)
Pistols for Two (12 May 1931)
(Toytown from Within, in which the Author meets Mr. Growser, 16 Jun 1931)
Disgraceful Doings in Ark Street (1 Sep 1931)
Golf--(Toytown Rules) (27 Nov 1931)
Mr. Growser Moves (1 Dec 1931)
A Toytown Christmas Party (22 Dec 1931)
The Conversion of Mr. Growser (23 Feb 1932)
The Brave Deed of Ernest the Policeman (15 Apr 1932)
Dirty Work at the Dog and Whistle (16 Aug 1932)
Toy Town Goes West
Frightfulness at the Theatre Royal
Tea for Two
The Sea Voyage
The Great Toytown War
The Babes in the Wood (a pantomime)
The Showing Up of Larry the Lamb

Friday, March 09, 2007

Robin Annual Artists & Authors

Artists and authors credited in the first nine issues of Robin Annual. Anyone who thinks they can help with information, please drop me a line.

ARTISTS

Morley Adams Ltd.

Aldridge
Arthur W. Baldwin
Anthony Beaurepaire
Ursula Blau
Hilda Boswell
George Bowe
Pat Bowyer (see Patricia Turner)
Eileen Bradpiece
John Brinkley
Rosemary Brown
Roy F. Brown
Richard Browning
Gordon Burrell
Nancy Catford [Dora Catford]
Rene Cloke
Dorothy Craigie
Josephine Crichmay / Crickmay
Evelyn Cuthbertson
Kathleen Dance
Beryl Davies
Thomas Davis / Davies
Anna Farr
Jane Foot
Reg Forster
Marcia Lane Foster
Lilla Fox
Jill Francksen
Terry Freeman
George Fry
Len Fullerton
Nan Fullerton
Rosemary Garland
Gay (Wood? See below)
Michael Gibson
R. Gillings
J. & A. Grahame-Johnstone
Catherine Hammond
Dee Hammond
Harry Hants
Pat Harrison
Irene Hawkins
Dorothy Heather
Racey Helps
Elizabeth Hobson
Joyce Horn
Patricia Hubbard
Stuart Irwin
Faith Jacques
Maria Jocz
Edward Kearon
Richard Kennedy
May Kirkham
Glyn Lacey
Betty Larom
Gerald Lipman
Grace Lodge
Mary McGowan
Beryl Maile
Jean Main
Gwynneth Mamlock
Rosalind Mansell
Constance Marshall
Jeffery Matthews
D. L. Mays
Mary Millar-Watt
Margaret Milnes
Pamela Neads
Michael K. Noble
Walter Pannett
Ann Parker
Jenny Paul
Ann Pout
Jenny Reyn
Shirley Anne Richardson
Joan Roberts
Margot Russell
Norman Satchel
Sabine Schweitzer
Prudence Seward
Maria Skarbek-Wazynska
Elizabeth Skottowe
Roland Smith
A. E. (Tony) Speer
Paddie Spratley
Mary Taylor
Pat Taylor
Valerie Taylor
Jean / Joan Thompson
Patricia Turner (aka Pat Bowyer?)
Robert Tyndall
Jennetta Vise
Astrid Walford
David Walsh
Eccles Williams
Hubert Williams
Roy Williams
Irene Williamson
Andrew Wilson
Maurice Wilson
Eric Winter
Gay Wood
Neville Wortman
Matvyn Wright

AUTHORS

Pat Ablewhite
Sylvia Allen
John Baldwinson
Winifred Bear
Dilys Beeston
Leila Berg (Wikipedia)
Maria Bird
Rachel Booth
Peggy Bridges
Ruby Brooke
Roy F. Brown
Murray Browne
Constance Bruce
Gerald Bullett
John Byrne
Mary E. Carmichael
Nancy Catford
[Dora Catford]
Fred Chadwick
Christine Chaundler
Rene Cloke (ills)
Margaret Connor
Wendy Cooper
Dorothy Craigie (ills)
Jean Crouch
Barbara Davies
Dennis Duckworth
Edward Duffy
Jessica Dunning
D. G. Edmunds
Janet Erskine
Marjorie Etheridge
Lilian Fitzgerald
Jean Ford
Shelagh Fraser
Rosemary Garland (ills)
Eileen Gibb
Michael Gibson (ills)
Wyn Gordine
Wendy Jeanette Grant
Betty Gray
Arthur Groom
Jane Gross
James Hemming
Anita Hewett
Maureen Hillyer
Eileen Holder
Muriel Holland
Winifred Holmes
Dorothy Horton
Patricia Hubbard (ills)
Sabrina Hughes
Somerset Hughes
Ursula John (see Ursula Moray Williams)
Maurice Jones
Muriel Jones
Hilary Kent
Betty Larom
Edward Lear (Wikipedia)
Joan Leslie
Anna McMullen
Sheila Makins
O. Markham
Joyce Clark Mitton
Catherine Morris
Muriel G. Nix
Patricia Opeshaw
S. F. Palmer
Eileen E. Passmore
K. H. Pearce
Phyllis Pearce
Ann Pout (ills)
John R. Pulling
Stella Ranns
Moore Raymond
Margaret Rhodes
Josephine Richards
Ivy Russell
Norman Satchel (ills)
Kathleen Scott
W. Scott
Doreen M. Sharp
Rosemary Sisson
Elizabeth Skottowe (ills)
Betty Smith
Peggy Stack
Jean Stevens
Kathleen Stone
John Taylor
Billy Thatcher
Margaret Thomas
Margit Todman
Chad Varah (Wikipedia)
Joyce Vaughan
Lesley Vincent
Jennetta Vise (ills)
Eric Wagstaff (songs)
Ethel Walter
Oscar Wilde (Wikipedia)
Ursula Moray Williams
Irene Williamson (ills)
Monica Woodford
John Worsley

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