Wilkinson was born in
Watford,
Hertfordshire, in 1888. He was the last of five children born to William and Emily Wilkinson. His father had come from a farming family near
Underbarrow in
Cumbria, but he had left in the 1870s to become a porter for the
London and North Western Railway. By the time that Wilkinson was born, his father had become a clerk for the railway and the family lived in Watford. Wilkinson attended Watford Grammar School and eventually worked for Cook's Travel firm in London as a clerk in their banking department. In 1910, he left to join his brother Arthur, the only child in the family who followed his dream to be an artist, to recoup after an illness. From 1910 to the outbreak of
World War I, Wilkinson travelled with Arthur and his family in a caravan, leading a
Bohemian existence as itinerant puppeteers in England for part of the year and living in a villa in Florence in Italy, where Arthur painted, for the remainder. In 1915, the family returned to England, to Hampstead, where they launched the Gair Wilkinson Marionettes, a series of puppet shows featuring a troupe of
stringed puppets they had made themselves. Their whereabouts from when they returned to England until 1918 remains uncertain, but in that year the brothers were arrested for not registering for Army service as required by the Militia Act of 1916. They were imprisoned for the remainder of the war as
conscientious objectors. On their release in 1919, the brothers moved to
Gloucestershire with Arthur's wife Lilian, and their two teenage children. It was here in 1923, that Walter decided to make a collection of glove puppets and to tour round Devon and Somerset with a hand cart on his own, giving impromptu performances in villages and towns. It was the first of at least eight trips he did over the next twenty years for which he was to write an account describing his adventures. In 1926, Wilkinson joined his brother in again in Florence, where their new neighbours were
D. H. Lawrence and his wife Frieda who were renting the villa next door. Lawrence wrote a review of Wilkinson's first book,
Peep Show which was published in 1927. The book, like the ones to come, was published by George Bless.
Vagabonds and Puppets followed in 1930,
Puppets in Yorkshire was published, to much acclaim, in 1931 and
A Sussex Peep Show in 1933. In 1931, Wilkinson married Amy Winifred Cramp, a
Quaker who worked with international students to find accommodation and resources, which was particularly stressful in the aftermath of war. Her novels such as
God in Hell describe some of the difficulties she encountered. With Winifred, Wilkinson toured
Lancashire and
Scotland. In addition to the tours he made over several months, Wilkinson was becoming well known and was in constant demand to perform with his puppets. As his fame grew, Wilkinson's outstanding ability to work his puppets made him internationally famous. In 1937 he was invited by Paul McPherson be guest of honour at the 2nd American Puppet Festival in Cincinnati. The Wilkinsons stayed in America for several months, incorporating a vacation in New Mexico, an area in the country which had been attracting many artists and writers. Although the Wilkinsons did return to England briefly, they had arranged to go back to the States when war in Europe looked inevitable. This time they stayed for several years, only to return in 1947. On his return, Wilkinson found things were very different in post-war England. Many of his own family and those of Winifred's had died in the intervening years, through old age or ill-health. His nephew who had been in the
RAF was killed on a practice surveillance in 1942. Wilkinson, suffering a bout of depression, decided to walk around Wales with his puppets but this time it was less about the puppets than trying to heal himself. He found that few people wanted puppet shows now and although he had lost none of his skill, he was unable to draw the audiences as he had once done before the war. Nevertheless, the Wilkinsons took off for Australia in 1954 for a puppet tour, primarily for school children, at the request of the Rayner sisters. The Rayner sisters had founded the Australian Children's Theatre and hosted many world- class entertainers to perform for children with limited access to the arts. Wilkinson died on 31 May 1970 at his home in Selworthy, Somerset. == Works ==