Gerald Savory: Difference between revisions
Shambala108 (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tag: sourceedit |
No edit summary Tag: sourceedit |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
'''Gerald Savory''' was [[Donald Wilson]]'s replacement as [[Head of Serials]] at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation|BBC]]. He 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 28 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 (TV story)|The Celestial Toymaker]]''. | '''Gerald Savory''' was [[Donald Wilson]]'s replacement as [[Head of Serials]] at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation|BBC]]. He 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 28 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 (TV story)|The Celestial Toymaker]]''. | ||
Prior to his employment as Head of Serials, he had been a successful playwright, coming to notice due largely to his 1937 play, ''George and Margaret'' (adapted into a film in 1940). When [[Donald Tosh]] re-wrote ''The Celestial Toymaker'' so it included Savory's characters of George and Margaret, the story was swiftly rejected on the grounds that it used the characters without permission, forcing [[Gerry Davis]] to rewrite the [[serial]] and replace the characters of George and Margaret with other pairs of characters who would act as opponents for [[Steven Taylor|Steven]] and [[Dodo Chaplet|Dodo]] — namely the clowns [[Joey the Clown|Joey]] and [[Clara the Clown|Clara]]; the [[King of Hearts|King]] and [[Queen of Hearts]]; and Sergeant [[Rugg]] and [[Mrs Wiggs]]. ([[REF]]: ''[[The First Doctor Handbook]]'') | Prior to his employment as Head of Serials, he had been a successful playwright, coming to notice due largely to his 1937 play, ''George and Margaret'' (adapted into a film in 1940). When [[Donald Tosh]] re-wrote ''The Celestial Toymaker'' so it included Savory's characters of George and Margaret, the story was swiftly rejected on the grounds that it used the characters without permission, forcing [[Gerry Davis]] to rewrite the [[serial]] and replace the characters of George and Margaret with other pairs of characters who would act as opponents for [[Steven Taylor|Steven]] and [[Dodo Chaplet|Dodo]] — namely the clowns [[Joey the Clown|Joey]] and [[Clara the Clown|Clara]]; the [[King of Hearts|King]] and [[Queen of Hearts]]; and Sergeant [[Rugg]] and [[Wiggs (The Celestial Toymaker)|Mrs Wiggs]]. ([[REF]]: ''[[The First Doctor Handbook]]'') | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 22:36, 5 April 2016
Gerald Savory was Donald Wilson's replacement as Head of Serials at the BBC. He 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 28 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 successful playwright, coming to notice due largely to his 1937 play, George and Margaret (adapted into a film in 1940). When Donald Tosh re-wrote The Celestial Toymaker so it included Savory's characters of George and Margaret, the story was swiftly rejected on the grounds that it used the characters without permission, forcing Gerry Davis to rewrite the serial and replace the characters of George and Margaret with other pairs of characters who would act as opponents for Steven and Dodo — namely the clowns Joey and Clara; the King and Queen of Hearts; and Sergeant Rugg and Mrs Wiggs. (REF: The First Doctor Handbook)