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Community Film Music Palmers Green

Guillermo and Bob at Talkies this October

Talkies Community Cinema’s autumn programme continues this month with a surreal tale from fascist era Spain at the Dugdale Centre on 10 October, and a night dedicated to Bob Dylan at the Fox on 30 October.

Heart of SummerWritten and directed by Guillermo del Toro, and interweaving real and mythical worlds, Pan’s Labrynth tells the story of Ofelia, a girl fascinated with fairy-tales, who is sent along with her pregnant mother to live with her new stepfather, a ruthless captain of the Spanish army. During the night, she meets a fairy who takes her to an old faun in the center of the labyrinth. He tells her she’s a princess, but must prove her royalty by surviving three gruesome tasks…

imnottheresquareThe next in Talkies’ music related nights at the Fox, I’m not there, features six actors exploring different facets of Bob Dylan’s life and public persona, through intercutting story lines, though Dylan’s name is only mentioned once!  The stars include Heath Ledger giving one of his last ever film performances, and Cate Blanchett who won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Jude Quinn, a version of Dylan from the Newport Folk Festival era. Other left field casting includes Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon. Film review site Rotten Tomatoes describes it as ‘a deliciously unconventional experience’.

Both nights are fantastic value at just £5.00. To book your ticket, visit http://www.talkies.org.uk/future-events

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Art and Culture Enfield History

William Leefe Robinson and the Cuffley airship

This morning you may perchance have been propelled to work by the Captain William Leefe Robinson VC, a familiar sight on the Great Northern Route. The Class 313 train was named in 2010 in honour of a young pilot, the first to bring down an enemy airship during London’s first – and now often forgotten – blitz.

H G Wells had predicted the use of airships in warfare as early as 1907 in his novel War in the Air. However, the potential threat from above was not initially regarded as serious. With the outbreak of the First World War, all that was about to change.

On 19 January 1915 at 6.40pm a young man at Ingham in Norfolk spotted what at first appeared to be two stars out to sea moving towards land. The craft went their separate ways about an hour later over the lighthouse at Happisburgh, dropping bombs on Great Yarmouth, Kings Lynn and Sheringham; nine people were killed and several more injured.

Britain already had its airships, but the sight of the slow-moving giants with their low, grumbling propellers, must have been truly terrifying. The invading airships were unwieldy to fly and highly flammable but they were also initially very difficult to shoot down. Their sheer bulk meant that a bullet puncture was insignificant – ordinary machine gun pellets were ineffective. They could fly at high altitude, way above the capabilities of aeroplanes.

But Zeppelins were also prone to being blown off course, and frequent errors in navigation meant that pilots often claimed hits for targets they had in fact been nowhere near. Over the coming year, towns in eastern England were frequently hit, either in error, or by airships jettisoning their bombs for the journey home.

Souvenir postcard 1The Kaiser’s initial policy had been to avoid civilian casualties, but first by accident and later by design, civilian casualties from air raids mounted. On the night of the 3th September 1916, the Germans launched their biggest raid on London, consisting of what is variously reported as 13 or 16 ships, mostly (but not all) Zeppelins. One non Zeppelin craft, a wooden- framed Shutte Lanze SL11, approached London snaking round from the North. Having dropped bombs on Finsbury and Victoria Park, the SL11 was picked out by searchlights over Alexandra Palace, and moving north to escape the beam was spotted by 21-year-old Robinson, who had already been in air combat for more than two hours that night. His BE2C by-plane was fast running out of fuel.

The spectacle that ensued was visible for miles around and must have been clearly visible in Palmers Green. After several unsuccessful sallies, Robinson dived at the thin end of the aircraft and strafed the ship with machine gun fire. SL11 burst into flames with a flash which was said to be visible as far away as Cambridge, and fell to the ground in a hill-top beet field behind the Plough in Cuffley. Though it was 2.30 in the morning, ‘The sky was red’, said the famous travel writer Norman Lewis in an unpublished autobiography, ‘as bright as day’. For weeks, thousands of people poured to Cuffley to visit the site. Lewis’s family were horrified to see the very young men of the German crew laid out in death in the little church at Cuffley prior to being taken to Potters Bar for burial.

Souvenir postcard 2Robinson became a national hero and was widely reported to have shot down a Zeppelin even though the authorities knew from the beginning that this was not the case, possibly because news of the downing of a Zeppelin was thought to be more effective in raising public morale. The remains of SL11 were put on display at the Honourable Artillery Company in Moorgate (coincidentally now the frequent destination for the train in Robinson’s memory), though by the time SL11 reached London a good deal had already been pilfered for souvenirs.

Robinson went on to serve in France before being captured, brought down by a wingman of the Red Baron. He made several escape attempts and survived the war, only to become a victim of the Spanish flu epidemic just a few days after the war ended in 1918.

Images by kind permission of Enfield Local Studies. This article originally appeared in the September issue of Palmers Green Life

Categories
Art and Culture Community Enfield Palmers Green Southgate Winchmore Hill

A creative beginning

Creative Exchange logoA new network for local creatives receives its formal launch on 1 October in Southgate.

Creative Exchange is a collective of designers, craftspeople and artists based in Southgate, Palmers Green and Winchmore Hill in North London though members are also welcome from further afield. You may perhaps have already heard the name at this summer’s fantastic Southgate and Palmers  Green Open Studios and Art Trail event – now in its second year and growing fast, and an indication of just how much collaborative work can achieve.

Dan Maier of Southgate’s Extraordinary Design describes the exchange as being on a mission: to build a dynamic creative hub which benefits creatives in the area, residents and local businesses – by championing the arts.

“The aim of Creative Exchange is to create a mutually supportive group to combat the isolation which can be an unfortunate side effect of being a sole practitioner. The intention is to create a forum for meeting and sharing experiences, opportunities and support; we are  also working together to create new outlets for selling work, meeting the public, and contributing to the community.  The Network has just installed it’s latest exhibition of Members’ work in the former Blockbusters store at Southgate tube which has notably improved the area and the next event is a new Designer Craft and Art Fair on November 17th.” (More details of that soon).

“If you are interested in meeting like minded people, being part of a burgeoning creative community or participating in future events, why not come and meet us and find out more about what we do,” says Dan. “and if you are a local business interesting in getting involved in our events or supporting us we’d love to see you.”

Space is limited, so if you would like to be on the Guest List, please send your details to Ruth Berenbaum: events@creativeexchange.uk.com

Categories
Art and Culture Community Palmers Green

Meet the man who brought us five minutes’ peace

Phil DavisPhil Davies is a Palmers Green local.

He is also a big cheese in the animated film world, winner of 6 BAFTA’s, and many other awards across the world. He supports the National Film and TV school and students at the Royal College of Art… and as a little hobby on the side he produces Peppa Pig, the sacred child calming aide to parents and babysitters nationwide!

Phil has agreed to host a Talkies evening of animated films, starting from their simple beginnings in the early part of the 20th Century through to today. Phil will show and talk about some of his favourite short films to illustrate methods and approaches to animation.

This is an evening not to be missed and there are a very small number of tickets left – if you want to go, grab yours quick.

Baskervilles serves wine, light meals, tea, coffee and plenty of cake! Come early have a drink and meet some friends before the screening. Two screenings 7.30 and 9.15, with a programme of about 80 minutes.

Categories
Art and Culture Community History Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Shops Uncategorized

How Palmers Green changed before your eyes

One of the highlights of the recent 50 years of Palmers Green event at the Ruth Winston Centre was another chance to see the film about Broomfield Park by Christine Lalla, and a fantastic new montage created specially for the event by Southgate Photographic Society, showing the way in which Palmers Green’s streetscape has changed within living memory.

Artfully compiled by the Society’s Kevin O Neill, the film ‘Remembering Palmers Green’ brings together stills of Palmers Green from Enfield Local Studies Archive and recent shots taken in exactly the same spot by members of the society. Old merges into new with stunning, and occasionally heartbreaking, results. If only we could go back and walk these streets as they were. Thanks to this fantastic film, it almost feels as if you can.

If the film sets off memories, a reminder about the Palmers Green oral history project. We would love to hear from you;  your story is yours only, and no one else can tell it.

Categories
Art and Culture Community Food Green Palmers Green History Music Palmers Green Shops

There are thousands of Palmers Green stories – and one of them is yours

Do you remember the Black and White Café? Have afternoon tea in Evans and Davies? Buy your undies in Grout’s, or your butter hewn from a big slab in Sainsbury’s?

Those were some of the memories and stories shared by local residents at a special event hosted by the Ruth Winston Centre in conjunction with Talkies Community Cinema a couple of weeks ago as part of the Palmers Green Festival celebrations.

IMG_0612[1]The aim was to look at what Palmers Green was like 50 years or more ago, and the way in which Palmers Green, and our feelings about it, have changed. Once with a reputation for being rather snobby and high falutin’, Palmers Green is now busier than many of its neighbours, excitingly  multicultural, and, in the words of Ralph Hutchings, one of the introductory speakers, ‘definitely on the up’ – a far cry from the 60s when ‘you couldn’t get a decent kebab!’.

The event has now given birth to a new oral history project.

“We have yet to agree a title, but the emphasis will be firmly on ‘now’ as well as ‘then’”, says former Hazelwood teacher Jenny Bourke who is coordinating the project team, which includes Palmers Green Jewel in the North. “The aim is to talk to as wide a range of people as possible, of all ages and from all parts of the community”.

Here are just a few of the many topics the team would love to know more about

  • Do you remember your first impressions of Palmers Green? How has it changed?
  • Can you help us piece together more of the story of Truro House?
  • Do you recall a gymkhana being held in Broomfield Park?
  • Did you have any notable, famous or infamous neighbours or stories about your own street?

“If you took part in the event, the team will be back in touch soon, “says Jenny. “But we’ll also be asking for more people to come forward with their local memories later in the year – we hope as many people as possible will want to be involved.”

But you don’t have to wait until then. If you are a Palmers Greener, old or new, we would love to hear your stories about Palmers Green, whether it be from of 1963 or something that happened just last week.

“We are keen to hear from everyone, but as we are looking in particular at the last 50 years, it  would be great to hear from some people who were actually born in 1963!”

A website will be set up in the New Year, but in the meantime you can contact the project group by emailing palmersgreenn13@btinternet.com.