Gerald Savory: Difference between revisions
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(delinking, de-capitalising head of serials. tbh i'm not sure we're going to get a solid defintion of the position.) |
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' ([[17th November]] [[1909]] — [[6th February]] [[1996]]) was [[Donald Wilson]]'s replacement as | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' ([[17th November]] [[1909]] — [[6th February]] [[1996]]) was [[Donald Wilson]]'s replacement as head of serials at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation|BBC]]. He therefore had oversight of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' during the latter portion of [[William Hartnell]]'s tenure as [[the Doctor]]. He was likely most famous for two decisions. First, he was the executive who requested, on or about [[28th May]] [[1965]], that ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]'' be a 12-part story. Second, he prevented [[producer]] [[John Wiles]] from writing out [[William Hartnell]] in ''[[The Celestial Toymaker]]''. | ||
Prior to his employment as Head of Serials, he had been a successfull playwright, coming largely to notice due to his [[1937]] play, ''George and Margaret''. When [[Donald Tosh]] re-wrote ''Toymaker'' such that it included his characters of George and Margaret, he swiftly rejected ''Toymaker'' on the grounds that it used his characters without permission, thus forcing [[Gerry Davis]] to rewrite the [[serial]]. ([[REF]]: ''[[The First Doctor Handbook]])'' | Prior to his employment as Head of Serials, he had been a successfull playwright, coming largely to notice due to his [[1937]] play, ''George and Margaret''. When [[Donald Tosh]] re-wrote ''Toymaker'' such that it included his characters of George and Margaret, he swiftly rejected ''Toymaker'' on the grounds that it used his characters without permission, thus forcing [[Gerry Davis]] to rewrite the [[serial]]. ([[REF]]: ''[[The First Doctor Handbook]])'' |
Revision as of 13:45, 7 January 2011
Gerald Savory (17th November 1909 — 6th February 1996) was Donald Wilson's replacement as head of serials at the BBC. He therefore had oversight of Doctor Who during the latter portion of William Hartnell's tenure as the Doctor. He was likely most famous for two decisions. First, he was the executive who requested, on or about 28th May 1965, that The Daleks' Master Plan be a 12-part story. Second, he prevented producer John Wiles from writing out William Hartnell in The Celestial Toymaker.
Prior to his employment as Head of Serials, he had been a successfull playwright, coming largely to notice due to his 1937 play, George and Margaret. When Donald Tosh re-wrote Toymaker such that it included his characters of George and Margaret, he swiftly rejected Toymaker on the grounds that it used his characters without permission, thus forcing Gerry Davis to rewrite the serial. (REF: The First Doctor Handbook)