The Gongman (also known as the "Man-with-the-Gong") is a company trademark for The Rank Group plc, and previously The Rank Organisation (originally known as the J. Arthur Rank Organisation). It was used as the introduction to all Rank films, many of which were shot at their Pinewood Studios, and included those Rank distributed. The Gongman logo first appeared on films distributed by General Film Distributors, which was established in 1935 by the British producer C. M. Woolf and J. Arthur Rank; it was C.M. Woolf's secretary who thought of the man-with-a-gong trademark.[1] The Man-with-the-Gong was first seen on screen in 1936.[2] When the Rank Organisation was established in 1937, with General Film Distributors as one of its cornerstones, the logo was adopted for the whole organisation. When the company was restructured as The Rank Group in the 1990's, the new successor company continued to use the logo.
The Gongman film logo sequence depicts a man striking a huge gong with a deep resonant sound. The gongs used in the sequence were props made of plaster or papier-mâché. The sound came from James Blades striking a real gong—specifically a Chinese instrument called a tam tam that was much smaller than the prop. During the sequence, the text "General Film Distributors", " J. Arthur Rank Film Distributors", "J. Arthur Rank presents" or "'The Rank Organisation" appeared over the gong.
The first "Gongman" was Carl Dane, a circus strong man who was paid a one-time fee by General Film Distributors.