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Not currently on display at the V&A

Poster

ca.1880 (made), 1945 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This poster was used to advertise De-Randel's Marionettes, owned by Joe Randel Hodson. He performed in variety and pantomime, but in 1945, with work was scarce after the war, became the resident puppeteer at Heysham Head, the 'Wonderland of the North', a family attraction set in 20 acres of gardens and parkland just south of Morecambe on the North West Coast of England. An admission charge of one shilling entitled families to a full day's outing including a zoo, circus, children's talent competition, rose garden and other entertainments including marionettes. He performed with the marionettes used by his father Joe Hodson in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Joe Randel Hodson worked from 1945 for eight years at Heysham Head as De-Randel's Marionettes. He obviously acquired a quantity of posters originally printed for Thomas Holden, and had them overprinted in gold to obliterate all the instances of the name - on the balloons, on the pyramid, on the balance pole on the clown's feet, on the newspaper the man is reading in the sedan chair, the bird's wings, the ballerina's tutu and the wine bottles.

Thomas Holden owned one of Britain's best-known marionette companies in the late 19th century. Having grown up performing with his father John Holden's troupe, Thomas left for the USA in 1873 with Bullock's Marionettes when his brother John inherited the family business. He returned to England in 1875 with his own company the Imperial Marionettes and spent the 1880s travelling all over Europe and even South America, performing with them.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Printed ink on paper
Brief description
Poster advertising Thomas Holden's Marionettes, ca.1880, overprinted to advertise De-Randel's Marionettes ca.1945
Physical description
Pictorial and typographic.
Dimensions
  • Poster height: 50.9cm
  • Poster width: 64.4cm
Gallery label
This poster illustrates the wealth of puppets common in all Victorian travelling marionette troupes, from skeletons to stilt walkers, cats to clowns. Originally advertising Thomas Holden’s troupe that toured the UK and abroad in the 1880s, it was overprinted to advertise Joe Randel Hodson’s De-Randel Marionettes that performed at Morecambe’s Heysham Head from 1945 until 1953(30/01/2019)
Object history
The poster has been numbered 1301 in gold, presumably by Joe Randel Hodson, the proprietor of De-Randel's Marionettes. This poster originally advertised Thomas Holden's puppets but was overwritten by De-Randel's to cover up references to Holden with gold leaf paint and over-print their own information. Associated Production: De-Randel's Marionettes. Company: De-Randel's Marionettes. Performance category: puppetry.
Production
Netherfield, Nottingham
Summary
This poster was used to advertise De-Randel's Marionettes, owned by Joe Randel Hodson. He performed in variety and pantomime, but in 1945, with work was scarce after the war, became the resident puppeteer at Heysham Head, the 'Wonderland of the North', a family attraction set in 20 acres of gardens and parkland just south of Morecambe on the North West Coast of England. An admission charge of one shilling entitled families to a full day's outing including a zoo, circus, children's talent competition, rose garden and other entertainments including marionettes. He performed with the marionettes used by his father Joe Hodson in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Joe Randel Hodson worked from 1945 for eight years at Heysham Head as De-Randel's Marionettes. He obviously acquired a quantity of posters originally printed for Thomas Holden, and had them overprinted in gold to obliterate all the instances of the name - on the balloons, on the pyramid, on the balance pole on the clown's feet, on the newspaper the man is reading in the sedan chair, the bird's wings, the ballerina's tutu and the wine bottles.

Thomas Holden owned one of Britain's best-known marionette companies in the late 19th century. Having grown up performing with his father John Holden's troupe, Thomas left for the USA in 1873 with Bullock's Marionettes when his brother John inherited the family business. He returned to England in 1875 with his own company the Imperial Marionettes and spent the 1880s travelling all over Europe and even South America, performing with them.
Collection
Accession number
S.4077-1995

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Record createdJuly 30, 2010
Record URL
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