Derek Lamb
{{Short description|Former Producer / Animation Filmmaker}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2023}}
Derek Reginald Lamb (20 June 1936 – 5 November 2005) was a British animation filmmaker and producer. While serving as executive producer of the National Film Board of Canada's English Animation Studio from 1976 to 1982, he produced the Oscar-winner Special Delivery, directed by John Weldon and Eunice Macaulay, and produced and scripted Eugene Fedorenko's Every Child. He also created numerous animated sketches for Sesame Street, sometimes in collaboration with John Canemaker.
In 1983, he and a former wife, animator Janet Perlman, formed an independent production company. Among their productions was the Sports Cartoons series, which aired on Nickelodeon in the United States. Lamb and Fedorenko collaborated on the first animation sequences for an IMAX film, Skyward, first presented at Expo '85 in Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
With Fedorenko and Perlman, Lamb created the animated title sequence of the PBS series Mystery! based on the art of Edward Gorey, and a series of network ID's for YTV in 1991.
Lamb was also a musician. In 1962, he released an album of songs on Folkways Records titled She Was Poor But She Was Honest after its title track, which included songs drawn from London music halls and pubs.{{cite web |url=https://folkways.si.edu/derek-lamb/she-was-poor-but-she-was-honest-nice-naughty-and-nourishing-songs-of-the-london-music-hall-and-pubs/celtic-world/music/album/smithsonian |title=She Was Poor but She Was Honest: Nice, Naughty and Nourishing Songs of the London Music Hall and Pubs |first=Derek |last=Lamb |website=Smithsonian Folkways |date=1962 |accessdate=18 June 2020}}
Two years before his death, Lamb appeared, as himself, in the 2004 Oscar-winning animated documentary short film Ryan, directed by Canadian-based animation filmmaker Chris Landreth.
From his first marriage, he had two sons: Richard Steven Lamb (born in London on 27 September 1963) and Thomas Derek Lamb (born in Cambridge on 3 March 1966). He died at the age of 69 from cancer, at a friend's home in Poulsbo, Washington on 5 November 2005.{{cite news|url=https://www.contactmusic.com/derek-lamb/news/oscar-winner-lamb-loses-cancer-fight|title=OSCAR WINNER LAMB LOSES CANCER FIGHT|date=6 November 2005|work=Contact Music|accessdate=23 September 2009|archive-date=6 June 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606155001/http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/story/oscar-winner-lamb-loses-cancer-fight|url-status=dead}}{{cite news|title=Tribute to Derek Lamb|url=https://www.awn.com/animationworld/tribute-derek-lamb|accessdate=8 June 2022|newspaper=Animation World Network|date=22 December 2005}}
References
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External links
- {{IMDb name|id=0482943|name=Derek Lamb}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20070929091340/http://filmreferencelibrary.ca/index.asp?layid=46&csid1=1412&navid=87 Canadian Film Encyclopedia] [online publication, The Film Reference Library of the Toronto International Film Festival Group]
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Category:British film producers
Category:British animated film directors
Category:British animated film producers
Category:Harvard University faculty
Category:Deaths from cancer in Washington (state)
Category:National Film Board of Canada people
Category:Producers who won the Best Animated Short Academy Award
Category:20th-century British businesspeople
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