Barbara Kidd: Difference between revisions

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However, this was not her first experience of ''Doctor Who''.  Between [[1973]] and [[1975]], she was the dominant [[costumes|costumer]] on the [[1963]] version of ''Doctor Who'', lending her expertise to ''[[Frontier in Space]], [[The Green Death]], [[Invasion of the Dinosaurs]], [[The Monster of Peladon]], [[The Ark in Space]], [[The Sontaran Experiment]], [[Genesis of the Daleks]]'', and ''[[Pyramids of Mars]]''.  She later returned for a one-off story in the [[JNT]] era, ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]''.
However, this was not her first experience of ''Doctor Who''.  Between [[1973]] and [[1975]], she was the dominant [[costumes|costumer]] on the [[1963]] version of ''Doctor Who'', lending her expertise to ''[[Frontier in Space]], [[The Green Death]], [[Invasion of the Dinosaurs]], [[The Monster of Peladon]], [[The Ark in Space]], [[The Sontaran Experiment]], [[Genesis of the Daleks]]'', and ''[[Pyramids of Mars]]''.  She later returned for a one-off story in the [[JNT]] era, ''[[Kinda (TV story)|Kinda]]''.


Kidd's career between her two stints on ''Doctor Who'' was a busy one.  Her most noteworthy work of the [[2000s]] was her Emmy and RTS award-winning turn on ''[[wikipedia:Little Dorrit (TV serial)|Little Dorrit]]'', on whiich she worked with [[director]] [[Adam Smith (director)|Adam Smith]] and actors [[Arthur Darvill]], [[Bill Paterson]], [[Eve Myles]], [[Ruth Jones]], [[Annette Crosbie]], [[Russell Tovey]] and [[Freema Agyeman]], amongst others.  In the year [[2001]] she won an RTS and BAFTA award for another [[Charles Dickens]] adaptation, ''[[wikipedia:The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (2001 film)|The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby]]'' which featured [[Sophia Myles]] and was directed by [[Stephen Whittaker]].
Kidd's career between her two stints on ''Doctor Who'' was a busy one.  Her most noteworthy work of the [[2000s]] was her Emmy and RTS award-winning turn on ''[[wikipedia:Little Dorrit (TV serial)|Little Dorrit]]'', on whiich she worked with [[director]] [[Adam Smith (director)|Adam Smith]] and actors [[Arthur Darvill]], [[Bill Paterson]], [[Eve Myles]], [[Ruth Jones]], [[Annette Crosbie]], [[Russell Tovey]] and [[Freema Agyeman]], amongst others.  In the year [[2001]] she won an RTS and BAFTA award for another [[Charles Dickens]] adaptation, ''[[wikipedia:The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (2001 film)|The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby]]'' which featured [[Sophia Myles]].


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 17:52, 4 July 2010

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Barbara Kidd is a BAFTA, Royal Television Socitety, and Emmy award-winning costume designer who succeeded Ray Holman during the Steven Moffat era of the BBC Wales version of Doctor Who.[1]

However, this was not her first experience of Doctor Who. Between 1973 and 1975, she was the dominant costumer on the 1963 version of Doctor Who, lending her expertise to Frontier in Space, The Green Death, Invasion of the Dinosaurs, The Monster of Peladon, The Ark in Space, The Sontaran Experiment, Genesis of the Daleks, and Pyramids of Mars. She later returned for a one-off story in the JNT era, Kinda.

Kidd's career between her two stints on Doctor Who was a busy one. Her most noteworthy work of the 2000s was her Emmy and RTS award-winning turn on Little Dorrit, on whiich she worked with director Adam Smith and actors Arthur Darvill, Bill Paterson, Eve Myles, Ruth Jones, Annette Crosbie, Russell Tovey and Freema Agyeman, amongst others. In the year 2001 she won an RTS and BAFTA award for another Charles Dickens adaptation, The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby which featured Sophia Myles.

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References