Blaze destroys Wallace and Gromit’s history
LONDON (Reuters) – All the props and sets from the Wallace and Gromit movies were feared destroyed in a fire on Monday, the day after the plasticine pals’ debut feature film went straight to the top of the North American box office.
Production house Aardman Animations said a blaze at a warehouse in Bristol, western England, was thought to have wiped out its entire history, including models, memorabilia and awards from the Oscar-winning Wallace and Gromit short films.
“We woke up to the most fantastic news this morning that ‘Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit’ had debuted in the United States at number one,” said company spokesman Arthur Sheriff.
“But this has really thrown us,” he added. “It’s our entire history.”
Sixty firefighters battled flames 100 feet high that engulfed the warehouse at around 5.30 a.m. on Monday, causing the roof to collapse, a fire service spokeswoman said.
“It looks like most of the contents of the building have been destroyed,” she said, adding the cause of the blaze was under investigation.
Wallace and Gromit are the creations of animator Nick Park, who was also the brains behind the 2000 animated feature film “Chicken Run.”
He was said to be philosophical about the fire, saying it was put into context by the massive earthquake in Pakistan.
“Nick has been on the phone and while this is devastating, in light of the other news he has been hearing on the radio, it is immaterial,” Sheriff said.
Park’s latest chart-topping film revolves around intrepid inventor Wallace and his faithful canine sidekick Gromit. The adventure sees the pair using a complex vacuum system to protect vegetables from a rabbit problem in their village.
The film took $16 million in its first three days of release in North America, more than movies featuring the likes of Cameron Diaz and Jodie Foster.
Aardman Productions, established in 1976, was also behind “Morph” — another plasticine figure whose adventures on BBC TV won an army of young fans — and helped make the celebrated video “Sledgehammer” for singer Peter Gabriel.
Sheriff said although all archive material could be lost, the fire should not affect the company’s future productions.
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