Gerry Anderson, 'Thunderbirds' Creator, Dead At 83
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/26/gerry-anderson-dead-thunderbirds-creator_n_2365609.html?view=print&comm_ref=false>

By CASSANDRA VINOGRAD

LONDON — Gerry Anderson, puppetry pioneer and British creator of the sci-fi 
hit "Thunderbirds" TV show, has died. He was 83.

Anderson's son Jamie said his father died peacefully in his sleep on 
Wednesday at a nursing home near Oxfordshire, England, after being 
diagnosed with mixed dementia two years ago.

His condition had worsened dramatically over the past six months, his son 
said.

Anderson's television career launched in the 1950s. Once "Thunderbirds" 
aired in the 1960s, "Thunderbirds are go!" became a catchphrase for 
generations. It also introduced the use of "supermarionation" – a puppetry 
technique using thin wires to control marionettes – and made sci-fi 
mainstream, according to Jamie Anderson.

"He forever changed the direction of sci-fi entertainment," Jamie told the 
Associated Press. "Lots of animation and films that have been made in the 
past 20 or 30 years have been inspired by the work that he did."

He said the TV show was perhaps his father's proudest achievement – along 
with the cross-generational appeal of his body of work, which also included 
TV shows "Stingray" and "Space: 1999," among others.

"Most people know some aspect of one of his shows which is not something 
that many TV producers can say," Jamie said. He noted that his father first 
broke ground with puppets in "Thunderbirds," but was trying new techniques, 
like advanced computer-generated imagery, into his later years with 
projects such as 2005's "New Captain Scarlet," the re-imagining of his 1967 
TV animation.

Anderson also worked as a consultant on a Hollywood remake of his 1969 
series "UFO."

"He was very much a perfectionist and was never happy with any of the end 
products although he may have been happy with the responses," Jamie said, 
describing how his father would involve himself in every aspect of 
production. "He wasn't just someone who sat in a chair barking orders, he 
managed to bring together great teams of great people and between them with 
a like mindset produced some real gems."

In recent years, Anderson and his son had become active supporters of 
Britain's Alzheimer's Society.

Jeremy Hughes, chief executive of society, said Anderson tirelessly 
attended events to raise awareness and raise money for a cure.

"He was determined, despite his own recent diagnosis, to spend the last 
year of his life speaking out for others living with dementia to ensure 
their voices were heard and their lives improved," Hughes said.

Anderson is survived by his wife, Mary, and four children.


t says: I believe he also was responsible for "Supercar", and Fireball 
"XL-5", both syndicated in America.

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