Friday 26 July 2024

BILL EV'S ZERO-X ACTION MAN

Today I visited my brother on his 50th birthday. And while we were chatting I noticed a photo cube he had sitting on one of his shelves. On one of the cube faces was a picture of me when I was about nine or ten years old. The very photograph I mentioned earlier in the blog post about Action Man in the Zero-X uniform.


So as I mentioned earlier, sometime in early 1968, I went Zero-X mad! This was probably prompted by me getting the Product SWORD toy for the 1967 Christmas. Easter time, my God Mother had bought me a Red Devils Parachute set for Action Man, and before the summer holidays, my imagination had already gone up a gear. It occurred to me that if I put the red jumpsuit on back to front, on Action Man it looked as if he were wearing a polo neck sweater. Furthermore, you could place a trousers and tunic over the jumpsuit as worn like that.

So I went to my Gran with numerous TV21s to show her the style of the outfit needed. I remember my Gran calling it a Mandarin Collar on the jacket. There was a fair bit of material over from the IR uniform she made me a few years previously. So, she marked out the pattern on that, measuring up Action Man, just as she would if she were making a Gentlemans suit. Gran then cut it all out, did something called 'hemming', and then assembled it, sewing it on her 1908 US made Singer sewing machine.


Once my Gran had completed it and checked it for size, she handed it to me to complete the ZX insignia on the upper arms. My mother was very good at embroidery, and as a child I learned from both of them how to sew and embroider. So I completed the ZX insignia myself and the outfit was complete.


Up until I reached something like eleven I had many adventures with Action Man who was on occasion joined by my dear friend Wayne's Action Man too. My Grandmother's house where we lived, had a large front, side and back garden. And I remember lots of adventures up trees, across the lawns and at the side of the Garage.

I count myself as extremely lucky, my parents, and the Fletcher family (who are my close relatives), always managed to give me the best years of my childhood they possibly could. Is it any wonder my cousin Tom Fletcher ended up founding McFly and going on to chart success.

For that I am so very grateful. I'm now in my mid sixties and although I'm very much a person of tomorrow, my home has many artifacts of those far off days when the sun seemed to be always shining, and the 1960s had yet to come to a close.

SIG
Bill

9 comments:

  1. Great memories. Thanks for sharing.

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  2. Yes, lovely memories, Bill

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  3. Paul Adams from New Zealand7/26/2024 8:09 am

    Wonderful memories, and the fact that you had a hand (or two) in the making of the Action Man outfit must have made it extra special.

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    1. Something I recall shortly after the uniform was completed, was an effect Gerry Anderson explained to me many years later. You need to use very thin material to make clothes for such little people! As its like trying to dress them in cardboard.

      Or in the instance of Actrion Man it gave the effect that his uniform was made out of a thick knitted jumper wool, even the trousers.

      But I didnt care, he had a Zero-X uniform...

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  4. Incredible memories of a lovely family. You were lucky in having folks with such skills, lost to most of us today! SFZ

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  5. Thanks for sharing your touching childhood memories Bill. How fortunate that that wonderful photo was taken as a precious document of your personal history. Your family seems to have been very supportive of your hobbies.

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    1. Thank you Arto. Yes my family were very supportive of my childhood interests. And being one of the youngest in my family I had a lot of support from both sides of my family.

      They were very loving, and I do miss them.

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  6. A beautiful memory Bill and thanks for sharing it. Your very own Paul Travers, how cool was that! Did you show it your mates?

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  7. I think he looked more like Brad Newman!

    My friend Wayne would have seen it as he used to bring his Action Man across to play. I did have a second Action Man too, by saving up 21 Stars from the various outfits and packs. This one had black hair, and "GI Joe made by Hasbro" moulded on his left buttock!

    It also must have been defective, as soon after old Joe arrived, part of the right hand cracked and broke away.

    They now live with my brother, but are scheduled to come back and live with me.

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