Torquil Norman

Sir Torquil Patrick Alexander Norman CBE (born 1933) is a British businessman, aircraft enthusiast, and arts philanthropist.

Life

An Old Etonian, graduate of Harvard and Trinity College, Cambridge, he stands 6' 7". Torquil gained his pilot’s licence at eighteen, did National Service in the Fleet Air Arm and when he left bought a Piper Comanche, flew in No. 601 Squadron RAF,[1] and took up skydiving, a passion shared by his wife Anne.

After working as an investment banker in the United States for eleven years, he returned to the UK in the 1960s and subsequently entered the toymaking industry, first as chief executive of Berwick Timpo toy company from 1973, and then in 1980 founding Bluebird Toys, makers of the Big Yellow Teapot House, the Big Red Fun Bus, and the very successful Polly Pocket line of dolls. [2]

A long-term Camden resident, he bought the derelict Roundhouse arts venue in Chalk Farm for £3 million in 1996 "as an impulse buy", having read it was proposed to turn it into an architectural museum.[3] As founder and chairman of the Roundhouse Trust he then raised £27 million from public and private sources, including almost £4 million more of his own personal funds, to restore the crumbling Victorian former railway repair shed, which had been a major arts venue in the 1960s and '70s.

The restored venue reopened in June 2006 as a 1,700 seat performance space, with a state-of-the-art creative centre for young people in the undercroft, and a new wing with a purpose-built bar and café.[4][5] It was soon the base for a major season by the Royal Shakespeare Company, played host to regular big-name rock concerts, and by 2008 had involved over 12,000 teenagers in creative arts projects.[6]

Sir Torquil, who had previously received a CBE, stepped down as chairman of the Roundhouse Trust in 2007,[7] and was knighted the same year for his "services to the arts and to disadvantaged young people".[8] In 2007 he won the Beacon Fellowship Prize for his work with young people through the Roundhouse Trust.[9]

A collector of classic aeroplanes, he wrote a vivid account of flying a DH Leopard Moth across the Atlantic.[10] In 1995 Torquil Norman and Henry Labouchere undertook a long distance flight in a light aircraft, culminating in their East-West trans-Atlantic flight in a (then) 59 year old de Havilland Dragonfly. Earning both a Certificate of Merit award from the Royal Aero Club.

He has five children, including Conservative Party MP Jesse Norman, and ten grandchildren. His brother was Desmond Norman, co-founder of Britten Norman aircraft.

Published works

Quotes

References

  1. 601: The Flying Sword, RAF Museum Podcast Series
  2. BBC Interview with Sir Torquil Norman, Desert Island Discs, 12 December 2010
  3. Jane Wright, Torquil's not cheap at the Roundhouse, Camden New Journal, 22 May 2003
  4. Richard Morrison, The magic round about, The Times, 3 February 2006
  5. Tom Foot, The beginning of a new era as the Roundhouse re-opens, Camden New Journal, May 2006
  6. Sara Newman, Roundhouse night of glamour raises £900,000 for charity, Camden New Journal, 19 June 2008.
  7. Dan Carrier, Tributes to outgoing Torquil, Camden New Journal, 18 January 2007
  8. Birthday honours: London list, BBC News, 16 June 2007
  9. Beacon Special Prize 2007, Beacon Fellowship, 2007
  10. Pilot, June 1996
  11. BBC Interview with Sir Torquil Norman, Desert Island Discs, 12 December 2010

External links