Richard Todd as Robin and Joan Rice as Marian |
Filmed in Britain
Merrie Christmas
Merrie Christmas and Happy New Year!
Thank you for visiting the Facebook page and this blog down the years and keeping the memory of this wonderful film alive.
If you would like to see Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men (and I thoroughly recommend you do) it is now available on Disney+ streaming service.
Joan's Premiere Skirt
70 years ago Walt Disney's live action movie The Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men had its premiere in London at the Leicester Square Theatre. Here is our lovely Joan Rice (1930-1997) wearing a specially designed skirt for the occasion.
I wonder what happened to that skirt?
It was possibly designed by Walt Disney's promotional team. The newspapers described Joan arriving in a limousine with Robin Hood motifs along the trim of her tulle skirt. Her velvet bodice was in Lincoln Green, of course!
The Disney Magic
Prince John watches his brother King Richard leave on Crusade |
Prince John (Hubert Gregg) watches his brother King Richard and his Crusading army leave for the Holy Land. One of my favourite scenes from Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men (1952). This film contained so many visual feasts! It left me sitting spellbound in my local cinema.
It is difficult to describe to the younger generation what it was like growing up in the 1950s and 1960s. Our television was in grainy black a white, with a very small screen. Hi-definition and recording a programme off of it was something yet to be invented.
So visiting a cinema was not only a treat but an immersive experience, especially if the film was in colour!
Nottingham Castle |
One of the first TV programmes I can remember watching was the Richard Greene series The Adventures of Robin Hood (1955-1959). I was also a huge fan of everything Walt Disney produced. So, when I had the chance to see Disney's live-action movie The Story of Robin Hood at my local Granada Cinema, I was buzzing with excitement.
I saw it three times that week!
A disguised Marian finds Alan a Dale |
Disney's Story of Robin Hood inspired an interest in the outlaw's legend that has never left me. It also led to my love of history and genealogy.
So, I started this blog as a way of making others aware of this now almost forgotten Technicolor masterpiece.
But what made this version of the legend so special for me?
Nottingham Archery Tournament |
Where do I begin? To start with it oozes quality, in the host of actors, chosen by casting director Maud Spector. Stars like Peter Finch, Richard Todd, James Hayter, Martitia Hunt and Joan Rice- to name a few. The crews behind the camera are; legendary art director Carman Dillon and directors Ken Annakin and Alex Bryce. Also Director of Photography Guy Green, later to become co-founder of the British Society of Cinematographers.
I could go on and on.
It was Disney legend Perce Pearce who was chosen by Walt Disney to supervise and produce the film in England. It would be the last major movie to be made in Denham Studios in Buckinghamshire using some of its huge sound stages.
Friar Tuck |
Perce Pearce, Richard Todd, Carmen Dillon, scriptwriter Lawrence Edward Watkin and other members of the production unit made several research visits to Nottinghamshire and its archives during the Spring of 1951. It is this close attention to detail and respect for the legend that I admire and shows in the final cut.
The five images in this article demonstrate the visual beauty of this film, they were created by the legendary matte artist Peter Ellenshaw- another Disney legend, working many decades before the invention of computer generated imagery.
Ellenshaw's artistic skill, together with Carmen Dillon's art department created that storybook quality to the film. It is not surprising it was voted one of the best Technicolor movies ever made in Britain. Disney Magic!
Joan Rice Sponsors Innoxa Fashion Cream
Joan Rice promoting Innoxa in1954 |
Above is an advert dated by the Innoxa company to 1954, featuring the beautiful English actress Joan Rice (1930-1997).
Joan as Peggy French in The Crowded Day |
Walt Disney Visits the Robin Hood Set
Richard Todd, Walt Disney and Joan Rice |
Walt Disney greets Joan Rice (Maid Marian) |
Before leaving America, Walt had screened films at the studio, looking at prospective actors and directors and making what he himself called ‘merely suggestions’, while he left the final decisions to Perce Pearce, who was producing. For his part, Pearce had laid out every shot in the movie in thumbnail sketches, or storyboards, just as the studio had done with the animators, and sent them on along with photostats and the final script to Walt for his approval, which Walt freely gave, though not without a veiled threat that Pearce had better make the film as quickly as possible. “This is important not only to the organisation but to you as the producer,” he wrote.
Another publicity shot of Walt with Joan and Richard |
The Story of Robin Hood Poster
Above is an undated poster I have recently discovered for Walt Disney's live-action movie The Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men. We now have an impressive collection of these from all over the world and they can be found by clicking on the 'poster' label on this blog.
This recent discovery is very similar to the one below:
Both seem to be from same period, but when was that?
IMDb state that apart from its first showing in 1952, the film was re-released in the UK on the 28th of July 1957 and the 19th of September 1971.
If anyone can put a date on these two posters, please get in touch.
Joan Rice, Ivanhoe & Robin Hood's Chair
Joan Rice as Marcia |
Over the past 16 years I have attempted to piece together the life of Joan Rice (1930-1997). This blog is dedicated to her memory.
In an episode called The Night Raiders, Joan played the part of Marcia, a farmer's daughter who is abducted by a group of night riders terrorising a village. A young Roger Moore plays Sir Wilfred of Ivanhoe, son of Sir Cedric of Rotherwood. The TV series was based on the novel by Sir Walter Scott and set during the reign of King Richard the Lionheart. The Crusades have ended in disaster for the English king, who is believed dead - and the running plot of this series mostly concerns Prince John's various efforts to claim the English throne and Ivanhoe's attempts to secure justice for the populace despite John's illicit rule.
Joan would have been familiar with this particular time in history after her appearance as the girlfriend of Robin Hood, six years earlier and assisting the outlaw in his duels with the cold-blooded Sheriff of Nottingham and evil Prince John.
Roger Moore as Ivanhoe |
This swashbuckling TV series was typical of the period. Shows like The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Adventures of the Scarlet Pimpernel, The Adventures of Lancelot and later the Adventures of Richard the Lionheart were all aimed at the younger audiences of the late 1950's and early 1960's.
While watching this particular episode of Ivanhoe, I was surprised to catch a glimpse of one of 'Robin Hood's Chairs'!
My regular blog readers will know about the 'Robin Hood's Chairs'. They were created by Carmen Dillon's art department for Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men in 1951 and Joan Rice would have remembered them from her days filming on the sound stages at Denham Studio.
The chair in The Story of Robin Hood |
And here it is again below, in the Ivanhoe episode in which Joan Rice appeared.
The chair in the episode of Ivanhoe |
Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men was the last major production made at Denham Studios and this huge complex later merged with the Rank Organisation's Pinewood Studios. Laurence points out that The Black Knight was made at Pinewood, which probably explains the availability of the chairs as props.
Because of our discoveries, I have compiled a list of some of the film and television productions that have used those Robin Hood Chairs:
The Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men (Film:1952)
The Men of Sherwood Forest (Film:1954)
The Black Knight (Film:1954)
The Adventures of Robin Hood (TV:1955-58)
The Dark Avenger (Film:1955)
Ivanhoe (TV:1958) Ep.The Night Raiders.
Sword of Sherwood Forest (Film:1960)
Robin of Sherwood (TV:1984-86)
Horrible Histories (TV: 2013-15)
To read more about Joan Rice (1930-1997) and much more click on the labels.
Rare Robin Hood Scoper and Film Strips
Over the years, we have discovered many items connected in some way to Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood (1952). Under the Memorabilia link on this blog, there is a collection of letterheads, tins, records, bows and arrows, cards, posters, books, jigsaw puzzles and much more!
There are plenty more. The Disney Organisation had - and still has an incredible marketing system.
Matt Crandall has recently sent me images of this very rare toy from the 1950s. When I was young, I would have loved something like this. Before the days of videos and DVDs, this was one of the only ways to remember your favourite film.
If you know of any other memorabilia connected to this Walt Disney live action film, please get in touch.