Walt Disney reading Robin Hood |
Producer Perce Pearce, Richard Todd and the research team |
Walt Disney’s production crew, including producer Perce Pearce, scriptwriter Lawrence Edward Watkin, historical advisor Dr Charles Beard art director Carmen Dillon and Richard Todd visited Nottingham City Library, Nottingham Castle, Newstead Abbey, Edwinstowe, Sherwood Forest including Robin Hood’s Larder (now gone) and the Major Oak, Ollerton, Creswell Crags, Nottingham’s Caves, the Salutation Inn and the Trip to Jerusalem Inn.
Richard Todd climbs the Major Oak |
Left to right. Perce Pearce, Walt Disney, Lawrence Watkin |
Once in England, Walsh put his instinct as a publicist to good use and conceived the idea of a 12-minute promotional film about the making of this new Disney live-action movie. He called it 'The Riddle of Robin Hood' and it included details about the amount of research the studio had made into the ancient legend and backstage production scenes. The Riddle of Robin Hood was shown in schools, cinemas and TV stations across the country. Walsh described Disney as being delighted because:
“We were getting a lot of mileage out of this goofy little film and Walt was sort of enchanted by all that free space promoting the film.”
Today, Walsh's 'goofy little film' gives a fascinating insight into the Disney studio’s live-action production of Robin Hood. It takes you behind the scenes, right from the early research, the planning stages, set construction and on to the filming at Denham Film Studios in 1951.
To be continued soon…
3 comments:
THE RIDDLE OF ROBIN HOOD
Special thanks to Neil Vessey
This attention to detail seems to have been normal with Disney productions back then. I remember reading that Richard Todd and co-stars spent several months learning fencing and dancing before filming the Sword and the Rose
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