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Original 'prisoner' Mini Moke?


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#1 mab01uk

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 09:02 AM

It is reported on the Moke Club forum that one of the original Mini Mokes that featured in The Prisoner has turned up in The Netherlands :thumbsup:

Moke1965013.jpg

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More pictures:
http://s52.photobuck.../Projects/moke/

http://www.flickr.co...@N06/5800970604

patrick02.jpg

Quote:
"Basically, there were at least four 'Prisoner' Mokes, converted by Wood and Pickett in the summer of 1966 and transported to North Wales in September to be used on location in Portmeirion. Each was subtly different, and parts and fittings were swapped round during the course of filming. Some, if not all of the Mokes later returned to London, for use in studio filming. The registrations for two vehicles are believed to be CFC 916C and HLT 709C (this registration was seen briefly on screen). CFC 916C did survive, and was on display at Portmeirion for some years before being restored and then sold to an American buyer. HLT 709C was featured in publicity material produced by Barton Motors, leading to some confusion that they were responsible for carrying out the original conversions. Each Moke had 'spats' added over the rear wheel arches, and the windscreens repostioned to be upright rather than slanted back. New hoods plus seat and spare wheel covers were also produced in a candy striped fabric. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be any surviving studio documentation regarding registration numbers etc."


Edited by mab01uk, 05 October 2017 - 07:05 PM.


#2 mininuts

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 09:57 AM

Great find, I love The Prisoner :lol:

Posted Image

In your last picture, the mokes are parked outside what was the hospital in the series. Here's a piccie of my Cooper 1.3i taken outside the hospital back in '93. Don't look quite as good as the mokes though, does it?

Posted Image

Be seeing you.

#3 daveeeeee

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 10:55 AM

That screen doesn't look that upright ^^

#4 Bean

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 11:17 AM

I share my office with the founder of the Prisoner Appreciation Society! :)

I'll pass the message on! :lol:

#5 Body stylist

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 12:50 PM

That screen doesn't look that upright ^^

its adjustable ...

#6 Mini-Mad-Craig

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 05:21 PM

The netherlands has all the special Minis!!

#7 Tupers

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Posted 25 June 2011 - 05:36 PM

The netherlands has all the special Minis!!



Pffff try Japan.

#8 mab01uk

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Posted 04 August 2015 - 07:50 PM

Prisoner Mini Moke up for auction:-

"Four Mini Mokes were said to have been converted by Wood & Pickett in the summer of 1966 for the Prisoner series, and transported to Portmeirion in September 1966. Each were subtly different, and parts and fittings were swapped around during the course of filming. Some of the Mini Mokes, if not all, were later returned to London for use in studio filming. Two registrations were CFC 916C and HLT 709C, the first having been owned by Max Hora the once proprietor of the Prisoner shop at Portmeirion. It is the exciting news that HLT 709C has been discovered in storage in a barn in Holland, where it has been for many years and is now back home in the UK.
The Mini Moke, still complete with its original candy striped canopy and the remnants of the canopied Penny Farthing on the bonnet can be seen. It is believed that this Mini Moke was owned by someone involved in the original series production of the Prisoner.
Whilst previous Mini Mokes connected to the series have not been one hundred percent verified to have appeared in the series, there can be no doubt whatsoever of this Mini Mokes provenance, which is proven by the license plate HLT 709C as seen in picture 3
It is this Mini Moke which featured the Prisoner episode ‘Living In Harmony' driven onto a back lot at MGM Studios, which was used for the American Wild west frontier Town of Harmony, by actor David Bauer as No.2, as seen in the next picture taken from the episode.
Certainly in the past there have been many finds to be linked to the Prisoner, but none so in recent years, this amazing little car has remained in dry storage since 1974. HLT 709C, for fans of the Prisoner is an amazing find and where better to release this car to the public than here at CarFest South 2015."

http://www.classicca...orris-mini-moke


Edited by mab01uk, 04 August 2015 - 07:53 PM.


#9 mab01uk

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Posted 07 August 2015 - 06:26 AM

Prisoner Moke makes it to the market:-

http://maximummini.b...-to-market.html


Edited by mab01uk, 07 August 2015 - 06:26 AM.


#10 mab01uk

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Posted 29 August 2015 - 09:41 PM

Sold for £12,500 (plus fees).



#11 mab01uk

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Posted 05 October 2017 - 07:04 PM

Quote and photos below from the 'Six of One' website:
"Six of One is delighted to announce that the fully restored “Prisoner” Mini Moke, HLT 709C, will be at the next convention, after being purchased in auction and fully restored by two of our longstanding members.
http://www.sixofone-...co.uk/index.htm

The Mini Moke restored by Six of One members Phil Caunt & Jeremy Guy in Portmeirion 29 September.

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The vehicle can be seen in the photo below, taken from the “Prisoner” episode “Living in Harmony”.
EpuiZJr.jpg



#12 mab01uk

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Posted 04 November 2017 - 09:19 AM

Mini Moke from The Prisoner restored 50 years after starring in the TV series
A tall, grim-faced gentleman has found himself transported against his will from his London home in Buckingham Place to a brightly coloured realm where "local" appears to be the mantra - as in "'Oh, we're only the local service". The telephone exchange cannot connect him to the outside world and when he summons a taxi, an Austin Mini Moke can only transport him within the confines of "the Village". He subsequently steals one of these elaborately decorated cars to effect an escape, only to encounter a large and very irate beach ball named Rover...

These were the scenarios witnessed by countless startled television viewers when "Arrival", the first episode of The Prisoner, was transmitted on September 29, 1967. Fifty years later, that same Moke taxi has returned to Portmeirion to commemorate one of the few television series that can be fairly described as "iconic".

Taking part in the celebrations were several of the programme's stars and one of the highlights of the day was a school party, all seemingly engaged on a GCSE art project, reacting to Fenella Fielding's tannoy announcement that "Number Six has escaped". Their response described an arc from bemusement to mild terror - which was entirely in keeping with the spirit of Patrick McGoohan's masterpiece.

Several vehicles will forever be associated with The Prisoner, from the Princess 4-litre hearse of the opening credits to the Scammell Highwayman lorry of the final episode, but two cars have televisual legends.

The first is Number Six's personal transport - the Lotus Super Seven Series II that the character built "with my bare hands". McGoohan spurned the chance to drive an Elan on screen and most editions show him from behind the wheel of a factory demonstrator Seven. This car was subsequently sold to an Australian enthusiast and so a second Lotus was sourced from a private owner who lived near to the MGM-British studios at Borehamwood, while "Fall Out" featured a third Seven powered by a Ford 100E engine rather than a Cosworth-tuned 1.5-litre unit. One detail that truly dates KAR 120C is that it lacks direction indicators, but then our hero is not the sort of chap who believes in any form of decadent luxury.

And then there is the Moke, or rather four of them. Anyone watching The Prisoner gains the impression that Number Two had an endless fleet to assist his/her cunning plans, but this was due to the magic of editing. Just as the series combined location work with scenes shot in the studio, an overdubbed siren could turn a taxi into a police car or an ambulance.

The car that is now co-owned by Phil Caunt and Jeremy Guy was converted by Wood & Pickett in May of 1965, the year that the Moke's image underwent a sea change. The vehicle that British Motor Corporation originally intended as light utility transport for the military or for use by manly chaps to tour oil explorations or building sites was increasingly perceived as a "fun car". John Boorman used a customised Moke in the Dave Clark Five pop film Catch Us If You Can and by the mid-Sixties one of the cheapest four-wheel cars in Britain was increasingly favoured by dedicated followers of fashion.

When HLT 709C was converted, the plan was apparently for it to be offered as a regular option, retailing at just £664 9s 2d. The Moke featured in the coachbuilder's publicity, being photographed at the Hilton Hotel and other fine venues. One theory as to how it came to be cast in The Prisoner is that a member of the production company saw it in the capital and realised that it was ideal for their latest project.

Three other cars were subsequently built although, in Phil's words, "they are similar but not identical", with a detachable canopy, brightly striped PVC upholstery, mock-wood decorations plus a more upright windshield to reduce camera reflections. The fiendish authorities were evidently too parsimonious to specify the optional seat belts, second windscreen wiper, heater or windscreen washers, but the Caunt-Guy Moke does boast one very useful modification.

Unlike its three sister models, there is a 998cc Cooper engine under the bonnet, which is more than sufficient to cope with an escapee from the Village. Filming ended in 1967 and, although many memories of The Prisoner are lost to time, it is believed that HLT 709C appeared at the programme's press conference.

Today, just two of the Village's fleet survives - one that was restored by Phil in the Nineties now lives in the USA, plus the only British-based model. The latter was acquired at auction by Messrs Guy and Caunt in 2015 and according to Phil, "Nobody knows what had happened to it until it was found in a barn in Holland in 2011." It is possible that a former member of the crew had privately exported it during the mid-Seventies and, 20 years later, ''the condition can best be described as 'poor'; it was structurally unsound and a non-runner. At least it did retain its number plate, the Village motif on the bonnet and the candy-striped roof."

And so, Phil embarked on a mammoth restoration, possibly with the threat of an irate Rover and/or an even more irate Leo McKern serving as an extra incentive. He refers to the Moke's performance as "nippy" and when being transported through Portmeirion in a completely open car that is devoid of doors, one does indeed feel the sensation of speed.

Most importantly, to experience a car that has entered the lexicon of popular culture is beyond price.

KAR 120C was said to have been written off in an accident circa 1969, but rumour has it that the hearse now lives in France while the Mini Moke taxi looks primed and ready to reinforce the message of the Village - jollity with an iron fist.

Be seeing you...

Full Telegraph article with photos here:-
http://www.telegraph...ring-tv-series/



#13 mab01uk

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Posted 03 August 2020 - 07:14 PM

Restored Prisoner Moke is up for sale:-

https://maximummini....n-be-yours.html

 

http://maximummini.b...ini-market.html


Edited by mab01uk, 03 August 2020 - 07:14 PM.





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