Mervyn Pinfield: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (Robot: Cosmetic changes)
Tag: apiedit
No edit summary
Tag: sourceedit
Line 1: Line 1:
{{real world}}
{{real world}}
'''Mervyn Pinfield''' ([[28 February (people)|28 February]] [[1912 (people)|1912]]-[[20 May (people)|20 May]] [[1966 (people)|1966]]) was [[associate producer]] for ''[[Doctor Who]]'' from ''[[An Unearthly Child (TV story)|An Unearthly Child]]'' to ''[[The Romans (TV story)|The Romans]]''. He also directed episodes of the ''Doctor Who'' stories ''[[The Sensorites (TV story)|The Sensorites]], ''(episodes 1, 2, 3 and 4) ''[[Planet of Giants (TV story)|Planet of Giants]] ''(episodes 1 and 2) and all the episodes of ''[[The Space Museum (TV story)|The Space Museum]]''. His non-''Doctor Who'' directing credits include ''The Monsters'', {{wi|The Franchise Affair}} and {{wi|Compact (TV series)|Compact}}.
{{Infobox Person
| name            = Mervyn Pinfield
| image            = Mervyn_Pinfield.jpg|thumb
| birth date      = [[28 February (people)|28 February]] [[1912 (people)|1912]]
| death date      = [[20 May (people)|20 May]] [[1966 (people)|1966]]
| role            =
| job title        = [[Associate producer]], [[Director]]
| story            = [[#Credis|See Credits Section]]
| time            = 1963-1965
| non dwu          = ''Starr and Company'', ''The Franchise Affair'', ''The Monsters'', ''Compact''
| imdb            = 0684129
}}
'''Mervyn Pinfield''' ([[28 February (people)|28 February]] [[1912 (people)|1912]]-[[20 May (people)|20 May]] [[1966 (people)|1966]]) was [[associate producer]] for ''[[Doctor Who]]'' from ''[[An Unearthly Child (TV story)|An Unearthly Child]]'' to ''[[The Romans (TV story)|The Romans]]''. He also directed episodes of the ''Doctor Who'' stories ''[[The Sensorites (TV story)|The Sensorites]], ''(episodes 1, 2, 3 and 4) ''[[Planet of Giants (TV story)|Planet of Giants]] ''(episodes 1 and 2) and all the episodes of ''[[The Space Museum (TV story)|The Space Museum]]''. He was also the original choice to direct ''[[Galaxy 4 (TV story)|Galaxy 4]]'' before [[Derek Martinus]] took over. His non-''Doctor Who'' directing credits include ''The Monsters'', {{wi|The Franchise Affair}} and {{wi|Compact (TV series)|Compact}}.


Before joining the [[BBC (real world)|BBC]] early in the 1950s to work on live drama at [[Alexandra Palace]], he spent over four years in "weekly rep" as director/theatre manager at the Royalty Theatre, Morecambe. Pinfield was the inventor of an early type of teleprompter, or autocue, which he called the Piniprompter.
Before joining the [[BBC (real world)|BBC]] early in the 1950s to work on live drama at [[Alexandra Palace]], he spent over four years in "weekly rep" as director/theatre manager at the Royalty Theatre, Morecambe. Pinfield was the inventor of an early type of teleprompter, or autocue, which he called the Piniprompter.
Line 7: Line 19:


== Note ==
== Note ==
The production notes on the 2010 DVD release of ''The Space Museum'' give Pinfield's date of death as [[20 August (people)|20 August]] 1966.
The production notes on the 2010 DVD release of ''The Space Museum'' give Pinfield's date of death as [[20 August (people)|20 August]] [[1966 (people)|1966]].


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{imdb name|id=0684129}}
{{imdb name|id=0684129}}
{{NameSort}}
{{NameSort}}
[[Category:Doctor Who directors]]
[[Category:Doctor Who directors]]
[[Category:Doctor Who associate producers]]
[[Category:Doctor Who associate producers]]

Revision as of 06:12, 12 July 2017

RealWorld.png

Mervyn Pinfield (28 February 1912-20 May 1966) was associate producer for Doctor Who from An Unearthly Child to The Romans. He also directed episodes of the Doctor Who stories The Sensorites, (episodes 1, 2, 3 and 4) Planet of Giants (episodes 1 and 2) and all the episodes of The Space Museum. He was also the original choice to direct Galaxy 4 before Derek Martinus took over. His non-Doctor Who directing credits include The Monsters, The Franchise Affair and Compact.

Before joining the BBC early in the 1950s to work on live drama at Alexandra Palace, he spent over four years in "weekly rep" as director/theatre manager at the Royalty Theatre, Morecambe. Pinfield was the inventor of an early type of teleprompter, or autocue, which he called the Piniprompter.

Out of all the people who worked on Doctor Who, his death was one of the earliest to occur over the long history of its production, less than three years after it had debuted.

Note

The production notes on the 2010 DVD release of The Space Museum give Pinfield's date of death as 20 August 1966.

External links