Lot Essay
The Captain Paul Travers puppet is a complete replica of the original puppet made by Terry Curtis for the 1966 feature film 'Thunderbirds are Go'. The original puppet is in the possession of Terry Curtis and there are no other copies available, other than those recreated by him. This is an exclusive edition, each puppet being microchipped and authenticated to discourage further copying.
To give some idea of the time involved in recreating one of these puppets - which are fully working - the head is probably the most time consuming part of the operation; this takes between 70 and 80 hours. It is made from fibreglass (as were the originals), it is then trimmed, the eyes and mouth and lip section cut out, the back of the eyes are ground, eye sockets made, the neck mechanism is fitted, the lip mechanism fitted with flexible leather insert and false teeth. (All these mechanisms are hand made by Terry Curtis to the original specification). The head is sanded to remove any imperfections from the casting and the chin and leather section is blended in. The head is then painted with several coats of undercoat - again re-sanded - painted with top coat and all skin textures. The puppet is then wigged (in the case of Paul Travers with real hair, which takes two days) eyebrows and false eyelashes fashioned, after which the eyes - again recreated by Terry Curtis - are fitted.
All body parts, the torso, arms, hips, legs and feet are from castings of the original. The hands have been recreated in a flexible material for the first time in 35 years - wired to enable positioning of fingers as they were originally. Just recreating the hands and finding a suitable material took 51 hours to get the first pair perfected. Overall, the body parts and mechanisms take approximately the same time as the head to produce. The only part not recreated by Terry Curtis himself is the Paul Travers' costume - this is made to an even higher standard than the original and take a seamstress approximately two days to produce. The jumper has been recreated in pure lambswool, and dyed to match the original. All badges have been especially made for the uniform. All buttons, buckles and braiding are finished by hand and are, again, as per original. All in all, it takes in excess of 170 hours to reproduce just one puppet.
To give some idea of the time involved in recreating one of these puppets - which are fully working - the head is probably the most time consuming part of the operation; this takes between 70 and 80 hours. It is made from fibreglass (as were the originals), it is then trimmed, the eyes and mouth and lip section cut out, the back of the eyes are ground, eye sockets made, the neck mechanism is fitted, the lip mechanism fitted with flexible leather insert and false teeth. (All these mechanisms are hand made by Terry Curtis to the original specification). The head is sanded to remove any imperfections from the casting and the chin and leather section is blended in. The head is then painted with several coats of undercoat - again re-sanded - painted with top coat and all skin textures. The puppet is then wigged (in the case of Paul Travers with real hair, which takes two days) eyebrows and false eyelashes fashioned, after which the eyes - again recreated by Terry Curtis - are fitted.
All body parts, the torso, arms, hips, legs and feet are from castings of the original. The hands have been recreated in a flexible material for the first time in 35 years - wired to enable positioning of fingers as they were originally. Just recreating the hands and finding a suitable material took 51 hours to get the first pair perfected. Overall, the body parts and mechanisms take approximately the same time as the head to produce. The only part not recreated by Terry Curtis himself is the Paul Travers' costume - this is made to an even higher standard than the original and take a seamstress approximately two days to produce. The jumper has been recreated in pure lambswool, and dyed to match the original. All badges have been especially made for the uniform. All buttons, buckles and braiding are finished by hand and are, again, as per original. All in all, it takes in excess of 170 hours to reproduce just one puppet.