Paddington Bear gets a British passport
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Paddington Bear has finally been issued with a British passport, 66 years after he was first said to have arrived in London, according to the producers of the famous bearâs next movie.
Film-makers requested a passport for the Peruvian bear, to be used as a prop in Paddington in Peru.
âWe wrote to the Home Office, asking if we could get a replica, and they actually issued Paddington with an official passport â thereâs only one of these,â co-producer Rob Silva told the Radio Times.
âYou wouldnât think the Home Office would have a sense of humour, but under official observations, theyâve just listed him as Bear.â
Paddington was created in 1958 by Michael Bond, who said the much-loved bear from âdarkest Peruâ was inspired by his childhood during World War Two.
âWhen I was small, I had memories of children being evacuated from London with a label around their necks and all their possessions in a suitcase, and this became part of Paddington as well,â he told the BBC in 2017.
âPaddington Bear was a refugee with a label â âPlease look after this bear. Thank youâ, and he had a little suitcase.â
Paddington arrives as a stowaway on a boat from South America and settles with the Brown family, who name him after the London train station where they found him.
The successful movie series, based on Bondâs books, sees Ben Whishaw voice the famous bear. Paddington in Peru, the third film, will be released in November.
Paddington also famously had tea with the late Queen Elizabeth II during the celebrations for her Platinum Jubilee.