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The Wombles
An almost complete set of Wombles. Photograph: ITV / Rex Features
An almost complete set of Wombles. Photograph: ITV / Rex Features

The Wombles becoming (Wimbledon) common again with new film and TV show

This article is more than 10 years old
Mike Batt reveals big plans for the furry orange eco-creatures from Wimbledon Common, including a movie, new series and 'interactive experience'

Missing believed lost on Wimbledon common, the Wombles could be set for a big-screen return under the auspices of co-creator Mike Batt. The gentle, point-nosed eco-activists were a mainstay of British television in the 1970s, going on to enjoy film and chart success. And now, it seems, they could be back.

The British songwriter Batt recently gained a controlling interest in Wombling Copyright Holdings, the company that owns the creatures and is now angling for a major relaunch. Batt previously enjoyed a 50-50 share of the company with the estate of the author Elizabeth Beresford, who wrote the original Wombles story back in 1968.

Wombles
Ex Wizzard singer Roy Wood with Madame Cholet at a photo call to launch the Wombles christmas single, I Wish It Could Be A Wombling Merry Christmas Every Day in 1973 Photograph: Peter Jordan/PA Archive/PA Photos

"We have plans for two new 26-part TV series, a feature-length movie and an interactive Womble World experience," announced Batt.

He added: "We think there are audiences of new children and international audiences who missed the Wombles the first time around and will be thrilled to see the brilliant high-quality animations and new musical productions we shall be mounting."

Batt cut his teeth writing songs for the Wombles' BBC TV show in the mid-1970s. The Wombles went on to enjoy a string of UK chart hits, including Remember You're a Womble, and featured in the 1977 movie Wombling Free, which co-starred Frances de la Tour and Bonnie Langford.

In 2011 the Wimbledon-based creatures were brought out of retirement to perform as a novelty act at that summer's Glastonbury festival. Michael Eavis, the festival's founder, later described the decision to book them as "a bit of a mistake".

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