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Rachel Talalay

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 21:20, 6 December 2015 by Rob T Firefly (talk | contribs)

Rachel Talalayis an American director who directed the Doctor Who stories Dark Water / Death in Heaven and Heaven Sent / Hell Bent. She is the first woman in the show's history to direct a finale episode.

Rachel Talalay.jpg

She is known for films such as Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare in 1991, Ghost in the Machine in 1993, Tank Girl[1] in 1995, and The Wind in the Willows in 2006.

Career

Talalay graduated from Yale University, where she majored in mathematics[2]. She was working as a computer programmer at Johns Hopkins when she got her first job in film, a production assistant on the 1981 John Waters film Polyester, a job which led to her working at production company New Line. She most notably worked on New Line's Nightmare on Elm St. franchise, working her way up from accountant on the first Nightmare film, production editor on the second, produced the third and fourth, and then given her first directing job on the fifth.[1]

Doctor Who

Talalay was a fan of Doctor Who as a child, and identified Tom Baker as "her" Doctor. She was a fan of the revived series, and actively pursued a job on it through her British agents. She credited her work on genre films such as the Nightmare on Elm St. series with granting her experience invaluable to working on such a special-effects-heavy production as Doctor Who.[3]

Talalay's hiring to direct 2014's Dark Water and Death in Heaven made the news in feminist circles, due to Talalay being the first female Doctor Who director since Catherine Morshead directed Amy's Choice four years earlier.

I did joke around with [showrunner] Steven Moffat in our first meeting. Immediately there was press saying, "woman woman woman" and so I said, "It's clear if I read the internet that you hired me because I'm a woman." And he said, "Oh, you're a woman? Maybe I just looked at your resume and your reel and your credentials and hired you because of that." We both agree that that's what we hope I was hired on.Rachel Talalay[1]

Other work

Talalay has taught film production at the University of British Columbia.[2]

External links


Footnotes

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