'Cluedo was my father's lockdown project'

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Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cdrz8vpj4e5o
Credit: Louise Brierley, BBC, Reporting from Birmingham
Archive: https://archive.ph/wip/6V8Hi

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Anthony Pratt's wife Elva designed the Cluedo board and its original 11-room layout, although two of the rooms would be dropped
Board game Cluedo has sold in the millions, spawned dozens of editions, books, computer games, game shows and even a film, but it all began as a "lockdown" project, the daughter of its inventor has said.

Professional musician Anthony Pratt came up with the idea to stave off the boredom of the blackouts during World War Two in Birmingham, with his wife Elva designing the now iconic board.

Their daughter Marcia Lewis returned to the city this month to hand over one of the first versions of the game, letters and other memorabilia to Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, saying it deserved to "come home".

"Without Birmingham, Cluedo would never have been invented," she said.
Her father had toured the world, performing on cruise ships as well as giving piano recitals at country hotels, but like many others switched careers to help with the war effort after 1939.

Due to his poor eyesight he did not fight on the front line, but worked at an engineering factory making parts for tanks.

Ms Lewis said it left him "time on his hands to think" and create what would become a cherished game across the world.

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Among other items, Marcia Lewis has donated one of the original versions of the game to Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery


The game itself was inspired by Anthony Pratt's evenings playing piano in grand country hotels, where murder mystery games were a regular form of entertainment.

The couple were also fans of detective fiction from writers like Agatha Christie.

Ms Lewis added that her father had partly been inspired their neighbour in Kings Heath, called Geoffrey Bull, who had invented the game Buccaneer about a decade earlier.

"That planted the idea of inventing a board game in my dad's mind," Ms Lewis said.

Mr Bull also provided the contact for the manufacturer Waddingtons, who went on to make and distribute both games.

Originally named Murder! the murder mystery game featured 10 characters and nine weapons, including a bomb and a poison-filled syringe when it was provisionally patented in 1944.

It would not be launched until 1949 because of war-time delays and a shortage of materials.

"They were delighted and relieved when they saw it in the shops because it was a long time appearing," said Ms Lewis.

More than 150 million copies of the game have been sold around the world, according to toy manufacturer Hasbro, which bought Waddingtons 30 years ago.

"It's just lovely to think that they've left that legacy of something that gives so much pleasure to people".

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Cluedo is still one of the most played games at this board game cafe in Digbeth


And it continues to be popular today, with dramas and TV shows like Traitors showing there is still life in the murder-mystery format.

Kit Carnell owns Chance & Counters, a board game cafe in the Digbeth area of Birmingham.

"Despite having 500 different games to play, we still get loads and loads of people playing Cluedo, " he said.

"It's a bit like the feeling of putting on an old record, the nostalgia and cosiness of playing it."

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The game has spawned many versions, but the traditional nine-room layout remains popular


Modern editions of the game include Harry Potter, Star Wars, The Office and Game of Thrones versions among many, many others.

It has also spawned dozens of computer games and even VHS and Betamax editions over the years.

And yet its inventor would only get to see a portion of the royalties after selling off some of the rights prematurely.

In 1953 Ms Lewis said Waddingtons told her father "they were rather disappointed in sales" and offered him £5,000 in exchange for the international rights.

She said in those days that was a good deal of money, enough to buy two average houses and a car.

"I think it was a very tempting proposition, I'd just been born and I'm sure my dad thought it was the responsible thing to do."

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Anthony Pratt sold the foreign rights to Cluedo shortly after his daughter was born


He continued to receive UK royalties till they ran out in 1967, but he lost out on a fortune when the US version, marketed under the name Clue, became hugely popular across the Atlantic.

Ms Lewis said her father didn't mind.

"At the end of the day, what do you get remembered for? Making a shed load of money or creating something that brings genuine pleasure, happiness and escapism to people," she said.

Today, the couple are buried close together in Bromsgrove's old cemetery in Worcestershire.

Unlike his characters, Anthony Pratt lived a long life, dying at the age of 90. On his gravestone it reads, "Inventor of Cluedo".

Ms Lewis said her parents lived long enough to witness the success of the game and see the original film Clue come out in 1985, as well the first stage play, adding that they were "quite blown away by that".

Now 72, she said there was a "bit of a pang" of emotion about handing over treasured letters and other items to the museum.

But she felt it was the "right thing to do" and knew they were in "safe hands".

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One letter from Waddingtons detailing the name change was handed over to the Birmingham archives


Jo-Ann Curtis from Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery said the city had a "tendency not to shout about the things it has done in the past".

The senior curator described the moment Ms Lewis got in touch regarding donating memorabilia to the museum as a "dream call".

She said they hoped to display some of the material in the future as part of a collection about amazing inventions.

Many of the documents and letters donated to the Library of Birmingham are already available to the public to view.

Peter Dore, Head of Archives and Collections, said it was "great to see the process from the initial idea, to the game going to market and how long and drawn out that was".
 
The blackouts were nothing like the lockdowns you disingenuous fucks.
 
Oh they're absolutely up to something. They're frothing at the gash for it.
A 'souped up' version is definitely on its way.

My guess is that early next year it'll either be war declared on Russia (as Starmer tries to 'do a Maggie' and get the country behind him... little realising that the Falklands War will not be the same as going to war with Russia) or if we can't get enough troops then the distract will be Coofy Shots Part Deux.
 
A 'souped up' version is definitely on its way.

My guess is that early next year it'll either be war declared on Russia (as Starmer tries to 'do a Maggie' and get the country behind him... little realising that the Falklands War will not be the same as going to war with Russia) or if we can't get enough troops then the distract will be Coofy Shots Part Deux.
It'll be interesting if it's coof two: total bullshit boogaloo. Lots of people talking a good game about how they wouldn't fall for it again, but is there any merit to their words, or are they hollow and meaningless?

As someone who refused to participate completely last time, and who is now hearing people who previously wanted people like me locked up in camps now being billy big baws about it, it feels like hollow lip service.
 
I'm sure the blackouts didn't involve you getting a mysterious jab and being denied a job if you didn't, disingenuous fucks.
There were serious direct and indirect wartime restrictions on all kinds of activities, with decently severe penalties for violating them. But they sure weren't lockdowns. And most of them actually made sense, considering there was a war actually habbening. Not just a new kind of flu. With nearly all the nation's human and material resources devoted to the war effort
 
It'll be interesting if it's coof two: total bullshit boogaloo. Lots of people talking a good game about how they wouldn't fall for it again, but is there any merit to their words, or are they hollow and meaningless?

As someone who refused to participate completely last time, and who is now hearing people who previously wanted people like me locked up in camps now being billy big baws about it, it feels like hollow lip service.

The ironic thing would be that if you didn't take the new vaccinations or 'medication' then you will actually die because this time they released 'the mother load' onto us.

The first round was awful, but the majority of us survived and the authorities relented when the push-back got too much for them to handle.

Covid 2 would be way more deadly but ironically would do more harm to the non-whites who are less susceptible to aortic and respiratory issues. Blacks and Asians would die off quicker than Whites and the Whites who would go are elderly and those with COPD/heart issues.

If we consider that one in four black men will die of cancer, but the odds are greater for white men (one in eight) and that one in two black men will develop holes in the heart and collapse and die before their time or natural allocated lifespan, then Covid 2 would remove over 90% of Blacks and a good amount of Asians as well.

We'd probably then be left with a population of 40-45 million in the UK, fields and/or warehouses full of dead non-whites (Dead Nigger Storage would be a real thing) once the Covid 2 has abated.

Now, whilst nobody wants another bout with Covid, it would result in closure of the ports except for freight and we could legally stop all migrants coming here under emergency laws. Only thing then is no World Cup in the USA for the home nations teams and no Nations League Rugby Union or a rejigging of these matches if Ireland could travel to England/Wales/Scotland for instance.
 
The ironic thing would be that if you didn't take the new vaccinations or 'medication' then you will actually die because this time they released 'the mother load' onto us.

The first round was awful, but the majority of us survived and the authorities relented when the push-back got too much for them to handle.

Covid 2 would be way more deadly but ironically would do more harm to the non-whites who are less susceptible to aortic and respiratory issues. Blacks and Asians would die off quicker than Whites and the Whites who would go are elderly and those with COPD/heart issues.

If we consider that one in four black men will die of cancer, but the odds are greater for white men (one in eight) and that one in two black men will develop holes in the heart and collapse and die before their time or natural allocated lifespan, then Covid 2 would remove over 90% of Blacks and a good amount of Asians as well.

We'd probably then be left with a population of 40-45 million in the UK, fields and/or warehouses full of dead non-whites (Dead Nigger Storage would be a real thing) once the Covid 2 has abated.

Now, whilst nobody wants another bout with Covid, it would result in closure of the ports except for freight and we could legally stop all migrants coming here under emergency laws. Only thing then is no World Cup in the USA for the home nations teams and no Nations League Rugby Union or a rejigging of these matches if Ireland could travel to England/Wales/Scotland for instance.
Sorry but I disagree. Covid was a lie. People who died fell into two categories: people who were so unhealthy a decent cold would have done for them, and people who were killed by hospitals using excessive treatment by way of sedating them and sticking them on ventilators. It was not the big super serious total threat it was made out to be, not by a long shot.

As for "long covid" this is just post viral syndrome, and this has existed for years, nobody gave a shit until they realised there was money to be had by way of PIP and benefits.

Coof was a nothing burger and most people who died did so because they whipped themselves into histrionics, went to hospital, were put onto ventilators and were killed because of this.

Everything about it was a complete lie and every single person I know who was working in the NHS as "frontline health staff" (good fucking lord I despise that expression) was directly and completely flouting the laws in place, because they knew it was all BS. The only people buying into it sincerely were cluster B, basic bitch nurses who are always desperate to have something that makes them special.
 
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A 'souped up' version is definitely on its way.

My guess is that early next year it'll either be war declared on Russia (as Starmer tries to 'do a Maggie' and get the country behind him... little realising that the Falklands War will not be the same as going to war with Russia) or if we can't get enough troops then the distract will be Coofy Shots Part Deux.
there's some real nastiness in cuba. really only a matter of time before it travels up through mexico and down from canada to the us.
 
I bet the latest editions of Cluedo has niggers. Think ill go and find out just to annoy myself.
 
No worries @BongoMongo - I could well be wrong, but I would not put it past the authorities to 'Reverse Uno' us with something which is actually very bad indeed.

They know that we don't trust them, therefore they could release 'the nasty' and instead of lockdowns etc. they'll just watch us die. After all, 'anybody who doesn't agree with the establishment is a literal right-wing crackpot Nazi nut job' will continue to be their mantra and the idiots would still swallow it because that's all their brains and group-think allows them to do.

Was in Brummyland earlier today and the hospitals there are rife with people ill from a superflu which has similarities with Covid and an evolved spike protein which is proving hard to treat even with the vaccinations for flu and Covid. A&E's in the city and also Wolverhampton, Stafford and Coventry won't see people unless it's unavoidable, and last Friday they almost had to declare a state of emergency.
 
It was not the big super serious total threat it was made out to be, not by a long shot.
I got the coof in Israel (having been long since vaccinated).

I just thought I was hungover. I was partying pretty hard the night before. I just took a Tylenol and powered through it and I was good by the next day. I only learned I had the coof a few days later when they were testing us to fly us out.
 
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