English writer
John Elliot |
---|
Born | (1918-07-04)4 July 1918 Castle Hill, England |
---|
Died | 14 August 1997(1997-08-14) (aged 79) Clifton, England |
---|
Occupation | Screenwriter and television producer. |
---|
Period | 1954โ1993 |
---|
Genre | Drama, adventure, science fiction |
---|
Spouse | Elizabeth Haynes (m. 1945) |
---|
Children | two daughters, and one son (deceased) |
---|
John Herbert Elliot (4 July 1918 – 14 August 1997) was a British novelist, screenwriter, director, and television producer[1] active from 1954 to 1993. Between 1954 and 1960, he scripted a succession of one-off television plays including War in the Air and A Man from the Sun.[2][3] A Man from the Sun was a pioneering work aimed at a West Indian audience.[4] In 1961, he collaborated with astronomer Fred Hoyle to write the groundbreaking TV science fiction serial, A For Andromeda. The success of A For Andromeda prompted a sequel, The Andromeda Breakthrough, in 1962.[5]
Following Andromeda, Elliot wrote more one-off plays for the BBC. He resigned from the corporation in 1963, though he would later work with them again, producing a concept for the 1965 drama series Mogul (renamed. The Troubleshooters from the second series) and later being credited as a writer on various episodes of the show.[6]
His other works include programs such as Fall of Eagles and Survival, as well as novels, namely Duel and Blood Upon the Snow. He additionally worked with Fred Hoyle to produce novelisations of A For Andromeda and "The Andromeda Breakthrough".[7]
Writing credits
Production
|
Notes
|
Broadcaster
|
War in the Air
|
- 15 episodes (1954โ1955)
|
BBC1
|
A Man from the Sun
|
|
BBC1
|
Television Playwright
|
|
BBC1
|
Who Pays the Piper?
|
|
BBC1
|
BBC Sunday-Night Play
|
|
BBC1
|
They Met in a City
|
- "Ladies from a Spa" (1961)
|
BBC1
|
A for Andromeda
|
|
BBC1
|
The Andromeda Breakthrough
|
- 6 episodes (co-written with Fred Hoyle, 1962)
|
BBC1
|
Maigret
|
|
BBC1
|
First Night
|
- "The Youngest Profession" (1963)
- "Hunt the Man" (1964)
|
BBC1
|
Love Story
|
|
ITV
|
Z-Cars
|
- "A Morning's Sport" (1965)
|
BBC1
|
Mogul
|
- 20 episodes (1965โ1970)
|
BBC1
|
Rainbow City
|
- "What Sort of a Boy?" (1967)
- "Why You Marry?" (1967)
- "A Better Fortune" (1967)
- "Always on Sunday" (1967)
|
BBC1
|
A Stranger on the Hills
|
|
BBC1
|
BBC Play of the Month
|
|
BBC1
|
Brett
|
|
BBC1
|
Play for Today
|
- "Better Than the Movies" (1972)
- "The Chief Mourner" (1979)
|
BBC1
|
The Shadow of the Tower
|
|
BBC2
|
Shelley
|
|
BBC2
|
The Fox
|
|
BBC2
|
Fall of Eagles
|
- Television miniseries (1974)
|
BBC1
|
The Double Dealers
|
- "Come in Number One" (1974)
|
BBC2
|
The Madness
|
|
BBC2
|
According to Hoyle
|
|
BBC2
|
A Life at Stake
|
|
BBC
|
Spy!
|
- "The Murder Machine" (1980)
- "The Venlo Incident" (1980)
|
BBC1
|
Escape
|
- "Hijack to Mogadishu" (1980)
|
BBC2
|
The Brack Report
|
- "Chapter 3" (1982)
- "Chapter 4" (1982)
- "Chapter 9" (1982)
|
ITV
|
Natural World
|
- "Man Eaters of India" (1986)
|
BBC
|
Flying for Fun: An Affair with an Aeroplane
|
|
BBC1
|
A Chance to Dance
|
|
ITV
|
A for Andromeda
|
|
BBC
|
Awards and nominations
Books by John Elliot
- A for Andromeda (with Fred Hoyle), 1962, Souvenir Press, ISBN 978-0-285-63588-3
- Andromeda Breakthrough (with Fred Hoyle), 1964, Souvenir Press; 1966, Corgi Books
- MOGUL: The Making of a Myth, 1970, Barrie & Jenkins
Further reading
- MacKenzie, S. (2006), "War in the Air : Churchill, the Air Ministry and the BBC response to Victory at Sea", Contemporary British History
References
External links
|
---|
International | |
---|
National | |
---|
Artists | |
---|
Other | |
---|