cheese enthusiast known only
as Wallace (of West Wallaby
Street in Wigan) and his anthropomorphic pet dog
Gromit first appeared in the
BBC animated short A Grand
Day Out in 1989. The
plasticine duo were created
by Nick Park (born 1958) way
back in 1973, and brought to
life by Aardman Animations
(based in Bristol since 1972).
Three more 'claymation' TV
adventures followed, and in
2005, Wallace and Gromit made their full-length film debut in The
Curse of the Were-Rabbit (released by Dreamworks).
The Wrong Trousers (1993), A Close Shave (1995), and this film
all won Academy Awards, whilst A Matter of Loaf and Death (2008)
received Park's fifth BAFTA prize.
Wallace has been always been voiced by Peter Sallis (1921-2017),
and it was intended that Gromit should talk too - Peter Hawkins
(one of the original Dalek and Cybermen voice artists on classic
Doctor Who from 1963) was to provide his voice, but this proved
too difficult to realise.
The Curse of the Were-Rabbit was co-written by Bob Baker, writing
partner of Dave Martin (1935-2007), and they were nicknamed the
Bristol Boys by the Doctor Who production teams. Together they
scripted nine TV serials (from The Claws of Axos to Nightmare of
Eden), and created K9.
Shown on BBC1 today, the film featured the voices of Ralph Fiennes,
Helena Bonham Carter, John Thomson, Geraldine McEwan, Liz Smith,
Mark Gatiss, and another ten Doctor Who cast/crew connections:
- Sallis played Elric Penley in The Ice Warriors, and was due to appear in Enlightenment as Striker
- Peter Kay (PC Mackintosh) was Victor Kennedy [the Abzorbaloff] in Love & Monsters
- Nicholas [John] Smith (Hedges) was Wells in The Dalek Invasion of Earth
- Edward [Harry] Kelsey (Growbag) was Slave Buyer in (episode 2 of) The Romans, Resno in The Power of the Daleks, and Edu in The Creature from the Pit
- [Terence] Dicken Ashworth (Mr. Mulch) was Sezon in Timelash
- Vincent Ebrahim (Caliche) voiced Shardul Khan for Big Finish's The Emerald Tiger (2012)
- Christopher Fairbank (additional voice) voiced Pierre Arronax for The Wreck of the Titan (2010), Doc Baroque for The Scapegoat (2009), and Marc Brunel for Iron Bright (2018), then appeared as Fenton in Flatline
- ADR recordist Robert Edwards was a mixer on Hide, Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS, The Crimson Horror, Nightmare in Silver, The Name of the Doctor and Space and Time
- Peter Gleaves was also ADR mixer on The Magician's Apprentice and The Witch's Familiar
- assistant cameraman Adam Lincoln was clapper loader on Blink
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