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Jack Odell, who died on Saturday, July 7, in London, was an engineer when he joined a British die-casting company in the late 1940's that had begun producing toys. Odell was inspired to create a tiny toy car when, in 1952, his daughter stated her school allowed only personal items that would fit into a matchbox. The tiny steamroller he created for his daughter would be the forerunner of the
Matchbox Toy empire. With business partner and fellow World War II veteran Leslie Smith, Odell created a line of miniature vehicles in 1953, with
Queen Elizabeth's coronation coach an early favorite with over one million copies sold. At its peak, Matchbox sold more than one million cars a day, more than the number of real ones the world's automakers were producing. "We produce more
Rolls-Royces in a single day than the Rolls-Royce company has made in its entire history," Odell told the
New York Times in 1962. In the late 1960's, Mattel Incorporated began their own line of miniature toy cars called
Hot Wheels. In 1982, Matchbox was sold to Universal Toys, then later to Tyco Toys, which was acquired by Mattel in 1997. Matchbox cars are still sold today through
Mattel. Odell was 87.
Sources: BBC News, NYTimes.com
Posted by Corey Anderson at July 19, 2007 11:41 AM
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Composer
Will H. Schaefer died of cancer Saturday, June 30, in a nursing home in
Cathedral City near
Palm Springs, California. Schaefer was born in
Kenosha, Wisconsin, and was the arranger and assistant conductor with the
U.S. Fifth Army Band during the Korean War. During his service he wrote music for "
Radio Free Europe" and "
The Voice of America." During his prolific career, Schaefer composed and recorded music for over 700 commercials, earning three
Clio Awards for his work. Schaefer also created background music for TV shows, including
Super Friends,
Hogan's Heroes,
The Jetsons,
The Tonight Show,
The Flintstones,
Scooby Doo, and
The Flying Nun. His music for the Disney TV movie
The Skytrap earned Schaefer an
Emmy Award nomination, and his concert piece for the
1976 Bicentennial celebration, "The Sound of America," earned him a
Pulitzer Prize nomination. Schaefer was 78.
Sources: imdb.com, Associated Press, Variety.com
Posted by Corey Anderson at July 18, 2007 4:20 PM
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