David Agnew (writer): Difference between revisions
m (T:MOS BOT) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
* ''[[The Elusive David Agnew]]'' looked at the origins of the name. | * ''[[The Elusive David Agnew]]'' looked at the origins of the name. | ||
{{NameSort}} | {{NameSort}} | ||
* In A.L. Kennedy's [[The Death Pit]], the antagonist is called David Agnew, possibly a homage to the writer. | |||
[[Category:Doctor Who television writers]] | [[Category:Doctor Who television writers]] |
Revision as of 21:35, 11 December 2013
- You may wish to consult
David
for other, similarly-named pages.
David Agnew was a pseudonym employed by Graham Williams and others.
Background
The BBC in the late 1970s took a dim view of producers and script editors commissioning themselves, so when the occasion did arise, then-Doctor Who producer Williams disguised his actual authorship. 2 entertain did a tongue-in-cheek feature on The Invasion of Time DVD called "The Elusive David Agnew". The featurette included Terrance Dicks stating that Agnew was a good friend of Robin Bland (the pseudonym Dicks used on The Brain of Morbius). As a final joke, the director credit on the featurette is given to Alan Smithee, the infamous pseudonym used for decades by Hollywood film and TV directors.
Contrary to the mystery perpetuated in the comedy featurette The Elusive David Agnew, the identity of "Agnew" to Doctor Who is known.
- Anthony Read, (the script editor, at that time) collaborated with Graham Williams on the scripts for The Invasion of Time, written at the last minute to replace a script by David Weir which would have proven too expensive to film.
- Douglas Adams (the then-current script editor) and Graham Williams on City of Death as a late replacement for David Fisher's A Gamble With Time.
Other information
- The short story Playing with Toys in Short Trips and Side Steps was also credited to the pseudonym David Agnew.
- The Elusive David Agnew looked at the origins of the name.
- In A.L. Kennedy's The Death Pit, the antagonist is called David Agnew, possibly a homage to the writer.