John Arthur Cunliffe (16 June 1933 – 20 September 2018) was an English children's author and television presenter who created the characters of Postman Pat and co-wrote and presented the first two series of Rosie and Jim.
Early life
John Arthur Cunliffe was born in Colne, Lancashire, on 16 June 1933, the only child of Nelly and Arthur Cunliffe. His father left the family when John was a baby. His great-uncle Herbert introduced him to the literary works of Charles Dickens and William Shakespeare, and let him use the microscope he kept in his front room. Cunliffe was very tall for his age, and bullied at school because of this. Although Cunliffe wanted to become a writer when he left school, he was unsure how to go about this and between 1951 and 1973 was employed mainly as a librarian, including two years spent working for the British Council in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. During 1955 and 1956, he drove a van as a mobile librarian in rural Northumberland, and drew on this experience when creating Postman Pat.
After deciding to change career, in 1975 Cunliffe obtained a Certificate in Education from the Charlotte Mason College of Education in Ambleside, Cumbria, and taught at Castle Park Primary School in Kendal. He later worked for Manchester Education Committee as a visiting teacher/advisor on children's books. From 1981 to 1985 he was deputy head teacher at Crowcroft Park Primary School in Manchester,
Writing career
Postman Pat
Cunliffe's first book, Farmer Barnes Buys a Pig, was published in 1964 through contact with children's author and publishing editor Philippa Pearce. In 1979, whilst teaching in Kendal, he applied unsuccessfully for a director's job on the BBC TV programme Play School, but at lunch following the interview was asked if he could write a 13-part series for children set in the countryside. This resulted in the creation of Postman Pat, which was animated and directed by Ivor Wood, and first broadcast on 16 September 1981. Until 1986, he received limited income from libraries through the Public Lending Right scheme, for which most of his books did not qualify being under 32 pages long. His role as presenter was taken over by Pat Hutchins in 1995, and later by Neil Brewer in 1997.
Other work
In 2010, he released Ghosts, a children's story for the iPad. They lived at 32 Greenside in Kendal when they first came to the Lake District. Cunliffe was a keen fan of Alfred Wainwright, another Kendal resident, and annotated his copies of Wainwright's books after completing particular walks. Despite the success of Postman Pat, when interviewed in 1987, Cunliffe and his wife were still living in their "modest semi-detached house" in the Manchester suburb of Withington, and for two and a half days a week he was working as an advisor to City of Manchester Education Committee on the use of computers in schools.
- Fog Lane School and the Great Racing Car Disaster (1988)
- The Minister's Cat (1990)
- John Cunliffe's Fizzy Whizzy Poetry Book (1995)
- The Weather Baby (2000)
Non-fiction
- Play Logo: An Introduction to Computing for Parents and Children (1984)
VHS videos and DVDs
- My Favourite Nursery Rhymes
Notes
References
External links
- John Cunliffe at the British Film Institute
- [https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/55463.John_Cunliffe]
