Barry Purves

Barry J.C. Purves (born 28 August 1960) is an English animator, director and screenwriter of puppet animation television and cinema. He is also a theatre designer and director, primarily for the Altrincham Garrick Playhouse in Manchester.

Models by Barry Purves including William Shakespeare (left), Achilles and Patroclus (front center), and Richard D'Oyly Carte and Arthur Sullivan (right back)

Purves has made six short films (see filmography below), each of which has been nominated for awards (including Academy Award and British Academy Film Awards nominations).[1] He has also directed and animated for several television programmes and over seventy advertisements, title sequences and animated insert sequences.[2] His film credits include being head animator for Tim Burton's Mars Attacks! (1996) (before the decision was made to use computer animation in place of stop motion), and serving as previsualisation animation director for Peter Jackson's King Kong (2005).[3]

Purves' book Stop Motion: Passion, Process and Performance was released through Focal Press in 2007. Around 1996 he made plans to shoot a full-length film of Noye's Fludde, Benjamin Britten's opera version of a mystery play about the Deluge;[4] he was also credited with co-presenting, in Mandarin, the live final of the Chinese talent search show Super Girl in 2006.[5]

A selection of his films, and those with animation by Ray Harryhausen, the bolexbrothers, Suzie Templeton and others, were included alongside those of Kihachirō Kawamoto himself in the Watershed Media Centre season Kawamoto: The Puppet Master in 2008.[2]

  1. ^ Short Film Winners: 1993 Oscars
  2. ^ a b Sharp, Jasper (April 2008). "Screening details". Kawamoto: The Puppet Master. Watershed Media Centre. Retrieved 15 December 2008.
  3. ^ Purves, Barry. "Filmography". Barry J.C. Purves. Archived from the original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 15 December 2008.
  4. ^ Purves, Barry (1996). "The Emperor's New Clothes". Animation World Network. Retrieved 16 December 2008.
  5. ^ Purves, Barry. "Animation extras". Barry J.C. Purves. Archived from the original on 19 August 2011. Retrieved 29 December 2008.

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