WILLY BAD Actor in bare-bottomed monkey costume with fake penis appears at event to encourage children to read https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15566434/ ... ids-event/
That 'actor' came from a company called Mandinga Arts which has gone into damage control, locked down their website and scrubbed stuff from the web.12 July 2021:
AN actor in a bare-bottomed monkey costume with fake penis appeared at an event to encourage children to read. Worried mums and dads complained after snaps appeared online of the rainbow-coloured character at a event.It was part of the Redbridge Libraries Summer Reading Challenge run by Redbridge Council in East London.
One parent said: “Someone needs to lose their job over this.”
A second asked: “This is unbelievable. Have we completely lost our moral compass as a society?”
Redbridge Libraries apologised for the “inappropriate” costume.
Tweets about them : https://twitter.com/Amyah67/status/1414497229537169413
Boris Johnson was photographed with monkey man in 2008 when he was Mayor of London https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15595735/ ... ticle=truehttps://twitter.com/poppyca28972829/sta ... 4836954117From the (now deleted) website pictures it seems the monkeys have performed at lots of public events. Has no one raised an alarm before now?
https://twitter.com/PurpleSneakers3/sta ... 9290177543It would appear not, this is grooming in plain sight, Mandinga Arts are obviously aware since they have deleted all the photos similar to this from their website, of men displaying dildos and fake buttocks smirking next to children. Why are people laughing and taking photos?
Screenshots I took from their website earlier today. Now deleted. "Nothing makes them happier than a gentle stroke."
Mandinga Arts. British and Colombian artists Charles Beauchamp and Julieta Rubio trained as painter?printmakers and have had regular solo exhibitions in London. For the last 20 years they have designed and created award-winning giant puppets, costumes, masks and floats for carnivals, festivals, community projects and theatre. https://ivangonzalez.photoshelter.com/i ... clkYnm4a1k
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/ ... clnk&gl=ch
So, I went looking for more company info: https://find-and-update.company-informa ... 4/officers# No Julieta Rubio or Charles Beauchamp listed but I did find a Charles Gimpel and Julieta Gimpel listed at the company's official address.Mandinga Arts was founded by Julieta Rubio and Charles Beauchamp in 2002, in response to a clear need for artists to work together on performance opportunities – to practice, improve, educate, share and promote carnival arts.
And that's when I found the spooks story of the Gimpel family... Kay & Charles Gimpel -They fell in love at 1 Dorset Square https://www.alliancefrancaise.london/Ka ... Gimpel.php
Charles Beauchamp? Charles Gimpel? You can read the rest of the story at the link. Ernest and Kay were spooks. They were also the parents of the Charles Gimpel, listed as a founder of the Mandinga Arts Group....Kay was a British citizen born in Canada in 1914 of Irish parentage (her father was a major in WWI), who went to Paris in 1936 to study international relations until she abandoned the course and travelled in Europe. When war broke out, she was back in Paris, working in the British Embassy. As Brig. William Fraser for whom she worked in the military attachés office put it in a reference letter, “in that capacity she was in touch with secret matters. I consider her entirely reliable and discreet, and have a high opinion of her energy and capacity. […] She is an expert on filing and general office routine.”
She left France in a hurry in May 1940. Once in London, Kay held two jobs before joining SOE. She worked at the War Office, employed by MI5, then at Canada House, “coding and deciphering”, and as an official there wrote, “doing confidential work in our Cypher and De-cypher Department, where discretion, accuracy and industry are required. It gives me great pleasure to say that she has shown all these qualities while she has been with us.” She started work for SOE on 1st April 1941. Once in place, Kay, ever the organiser, got her Paris colleague and friend Mary a job in the Firm, and arranged for them and another girl working for MI5 to share a townhouse in Knightsbridge...
..Part of Kay’s job, like all RF staff, was to ease the agents’ pre-mission jitters, by making them laugh and lots of cups of tea. Her sunny personality was such that she knew everybody and everything in the organisation, was in contact with many agents and other exiles, and parties at her home (unbeknownst to SOE) were famous among them. She was close to a number of them but when she met Ernest Gimpel, it was love at first sight. The coup de foudre happened at 1 Dorset Square, as she was giving his codes to this dashing cavalry officer, now Charles Beauchamp, a special agent. They dated and got engaged before he left....
A party at Kay’s: Charles, with brother Peter on his right, and Canadian war artist Will Ogilvie. Charles and Kay https://files.catbox.moe/ehtnpm.jpg
..Ernest Gimpel was born in 1913 in France. His father, René Gimpel, was a renowned French art dealer. His mother, Florence Duveen was part of English aristocracy, and sister of influential art dealer Sir Joseph Duveen. Ernest had two brothers: Peter, two years his junior, and Jean, five years younger...
..In August 1943, he received a Grade A in his paramilitary training, showing a good standard in use of weapons, a quick and aggressive approach to close combat, and very good knowledge (in theory and practice) of explosives and demolitions...As the name Gimpel was too well-known, or his connection to British aristocracy, he took the nom de guerre of Charles Beauchamp. He would use the christian name Charles for the rest of his life, becoming Charles Gimpel to everybody. He was parachuted into France on 25 November 1943. His false papers were in the name of Charles Henri Blanc, civil servant, domiciled in Vichy. The reality was that he was joining the Military Delegate (DMR) to the Paris region, André Boulloche (codename SEGMENT) to be his deputy. Their job was to liaise with the local resistance leaders, coordinate and facilitate their actions by distributing British arms and materiel.
Ernest Gimpel https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Gimpel
http://www.gimpelfils.com/pages/about/about.phpErnest Gimpel (known as Charles Gimpel after the war), alias Charles Beauchamps , Cercle et Doucet , ( Vaucresson , Seine-et-Oise , France, August 5 , 1913- Cretingham , Suffolk, United Kingdom, January 26 , 1973) is a French resistance fighter, Compagnon de la Liberation , of an English mother, assigned to the Central Bureau of Intelligence and Action 1 , as well as an art dealer...
Released on April 24, 1945 by the advance of the allied troops, he was repatriated to France and attached to the General Directorate of Studies and Research (DGER).
He left the army with the rank of commander, and settled in England.
He married there, adopted the name Charles Gimpel and until his death ran an internationally renowned painting gallery, Gimpel fils , founded in 1946 with his wife Kay and his brother Pierre.
Charles Gimpel was also an amateur photographer who, during six trips to the Canadian Arctic , set out to document Inuit life during the 1950s and 1960s. His work was the subject of an exhibition in Cambridge in 1992, as well as a book by Canadian historian Maria Tippett ( fr ) 2
Company info for Gimpel Fils https://find-and-update.company-informa ... 3/officersGimpel Fils was founded in 1946 by brothers Charles and Peter Gimpel and Charles’ wife Kay. They added "Fils" in homage to their father René, the dealer and collector whose journal Diary of an Art Dealer was first published in 1966.
From that Kay and Ernest Gimpel link https://www.alliancefrancaise.london/Ka ... Gimpel.php
In London Charles was reunited with his brother Peter and in November 1946 they founded an art gallery named Gimpel Fils in honour of their father. Although both brothers were trained in the old masters, their gallery spearheaded the market for modern and contemporary British art by promoting emerging young artists. Kay was the queen of networking, armed with her rolodex.
Kay never lost touch with her Canadian roots, and it was through her that Charles became interested in the Arctic. In 1953, to honour the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, the Gimpel Fils art gallery hung the first show of Inuit art in London.
Gimpel, despite being awarded the cross of the Ordre de la Libération, is not mentioned in most books on the resistance, whether the Dictionnaire de la résistance or SOE in France. The DMRs’ work has been airbrushed from resistance history and is just beginning to resurface. Charles died prematurely, aged 59; Kay carried on at the gallery until her later years.