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LEGO

Creator of Denmark’s iconic LEGO figure dies aged 78

Jens Nygaard Knudsen, who designed the iconic Lego minifigure with interchangeable legs and torsos, has died while in hospice care from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), his former colleague said Saturday.

Creator of Denmark’s iconic LEGO figure dies aged 78
Jens Nygaard Knudsen designed in 1978 the Lego minifigure, now emblematic of the toy brand. Photo: Bax Lindhardt/SP/Ritzau Scanpix

The 78-year old former designer passed away on Wednesday at a hospice centre where he had stayed for a week, according to Lego designer Niels Milan Pedersen, a former colleague for Nygaard Knudsen.

“His imagination was so fantastic. If we had a brainstorm it was more like a brain hurricane, because he had so many ideas,”Milan Pedersen told AFP.

Nygaard Knudsen, who died at the Anker Fjord Hospice outside the small town of Hvide Sande on the Danish west coast, was a designer at the Danish toy brick maker from 1968 to 2000.

He worked with developing the now legendary minifigure with movable arms and legs in the 1970s, before it was first released in 1978.

According to Lego, it was decided when the figure was created that it – besides having a yellow face with a neutral happy expression – would have no sex or race as these would be “determined by the child's imagination and play.”

“He was a man of ideas. The figure was created so that there would be life in the houses,” his widow Marianne Nygaard Knudsen told broadcaster TV2.

“At the time Lego's houses were empty, but then he drew this man,” she added.

In addition to the Lego figure, Nygaard Knudsen was also responsible for developing some of Lego's classic themes, such as Space and Pirates.

Founded in 1932 by Ole Kirk Christiansen, the group employed over 17,000 people at the end of 2018.

The iconic Lego brick started being manufactured in the 1940s, but was launched in its modern form in 1958, according to the company.

READ ALSO: Lego to turn all its bricks 'green' by 2030

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BUSINESS

Denmark’s toy giant Lego offers staff bonus after bumper year

Danish toymaker Lego, the world's largest toymaker, Denmark's Lego, said on Tuesday it will offer its 20,000 employees three extra days of holiday and a special bonus after a year of bumper revenues.

Lego is rewarding staff with a Christmas bonus and extra holiday after a strong 2022.
Lego is rewarding staff with a Christmas bonus and extra holiday after a strong 2022. File photo: Ida Guldbæk Arentsen/Ritzau Scanpix

Already popular globally, Lego has seen demand for its signature plastic bricks soar during the pandemic alongside its rapid expansion in China.

“The owner family wishes to… thank all colleagues with an extra three days off at the end of 2021,” the company said in a statement.

The unlisted family group reported a net profit of more than 6.3 billion Danish kroner (847 million euros) for the first half of 2021.

Revenues shot up 46 percent to 23 billion kroner in the same period.

It had been “an extraordinary year for the Lego Group and our colleagues have worked incredibly hard,” said the statement, which added that an unspecified special bonus would be paid to staff in April 2022.

Lego, a contraction of the Danish for “play well” (leg godt), was founded in 1932 by Kirk Kristiansen, whose family still controls the group which employs about 20,400 people in 40 countries.

READ ALSO: Lego profits tower to new heights as stores reopen

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