Guernsey Press

Cheers and then boos for evil penguin Feathers McGraw as statue unveiled

Wallace and Gromit creator Nick Park revealed the sculpture in his home city of Preston.

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A 4ft-high bronze statue of evil penguin Feathers McGraw has been unveiled near to his arch enemies Wallace and Gromit.

Crowds gathered in Preston, Lancashire, to watch Nick Park, the creator of the popular animation film franchise, reveal the sculpture in his home city and then greet the new artwork with cheers… and then playful boos.

One onlooker shouted “arrest that chicken” to laughter.

Animate statue
Wallace and Gromit creator Nick Park joins the Mayor of Preston, Councillor Philip Crowe, at the unveiling of a statue of Feathers McGraw at Animate in Preston (Peter Byrne/PA)

Long thought to be a chicken, Feathers was exposed as a penguin when Wallace and Gromit foiled his plan to rob a museum of a precious diamond.

Preston-born Park and the Mayor of Preston, Councillor Philip Crowe, performed the ceremony on Thursday as part of the opening of Animate, the city’s new £45 million entertainment and leisure complex on the site of its former indoor market.

The silent criminal mastermind character stands outside Animate but ominously close to the existing Wallace and Gromit bronze statue bench at nearby Preston Markets, also opened by Park in September 2021.

Wallace and Gromit creator Nick Park speaks in Preston
Nick Park speaks following the unveiling of the statue (Peter Byrne/PA)

“I’m not sure how happy Wallace and Gromit will be though to have their arch nemesis clutching the limelight and a little too close for comfort.”

Animate features The Arc Cinema with eight screens and the 16-lane Hollywood Bowl bowling alley, along with various food outlets.

Councillor Matthew Brown, leader of Preston City Council, said: “To have Nick Park officially opening our flagship regeneration scheme, Animate, is a genuine honour and landmark moment for the council and the city.

“In addition, the new Feathers McGraw statue is a fantastic complement to the Wallace and Gromit bench which has drawn so many visitors to Preston, its popularity has blown us away.”

Nick Park sits on the Wallace and Gromit bench statue
Nick Park, creator of Wallace and Gromit, at the September 2021 unveiling of the bronze Wallace and Gromit bench sculpture at Preston Markets (Danny Lawson/PA)

Park’s Aardman animation studio has previously won four Oscars over the years.

The first win came for the 1989 stop-motion comedy Creature Comforts, while the second film starring Wallace and Gromit, The Wrong Trousers, picked up the best animated short film Oscar in 1994.

Wallace & Gromit: A Close Shave won the same award in 1996, and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit won best animated feature in 2005.

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