Background
Roger Hall was born at Street Barts Hospital, London, on 26 December 1914, and brought up in Islington. His father was a stoker at Wimbledon Power Station.
Roger Hall was born at Street Barts Hospital, London, on 26 December 1914, and brought up in Islington. His father was a stoker at Wimbledon Power Station.
Hall began his career aged 15 painting front of house displays for cinemas for the London Art Service. He progressed quickly and was eventually able to paint up to 20 portrait panels per week. By this time he felt he was due a pay rise but after the firm prevaricated, he moved to Art Display Services in Shaftesbury Avenue who produced hand-painted cut-out cinema foyer displays.
In 1933, he created a 20 foot high portrait of the actor Charles Bickford made up of 12 plywood panels for display at the top of a cinema in Marble Architecture.
His career was interrupted when in 1941 he was called up to the British Army during the Second World War. He was demobbed in 1946.
In 1946, Hall joined Eric Pulford"s where he started on £16 per week, a high salary then for a poster artist. Pulford, who Hall regarded as an excellent artist, had a background in printing and asked Hall to teach him new techniques such as painting in oils, which he did.
He was based in Potters Bar from 1951.
He stayed with until 1953 when he left after growing frustrated with Pulford"s monopolisation of the design process. While there he produced up to three posters per week, and 200-300 in all, including his first quad poster for Fame is the Spur featuring a large portrait of the star, Michael Redgrave. After leaving, Hall began a career in book illustration, working first for Hutchinson producing hardback covers and later producing covers and illustrations for Ladybird Books and many notable post-war British paperback publishers such as Pan, Arrow, Corgi, and Mills & Boon.
His work was in a variety of styles from pulp thrillers to illustrations for children"s books
Foreign Ladybird he produced illustrations for Cooking with Mother and The Story of our Canals, along with 14 books in the "Famous People" series. He painted covers for the Hardy Boys mysteries.
In 1955, he painted the cover for the Pan paperback edition of Ian Fleming"s Casino Royale, which was the first James Bond paperback and the first depiction of Bond on a book cover. Hall died sometime after 2005.