How many kinds of talent does it take to make great tv drama? | thearticle

How many kinds of talent does it take to make great tv drama? | thearticle


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Betty Willingale died on Tuesday. She started out as a script editor in the 1960s, best known for her work on BBC TV drama adaptations of classic literature including _I, Claudius_ (1976),


_Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy_ (1979), _The Barchester Chronicles_ (1982) and _The Old Men at the Zoo_ (1983). Later in her career she produced acclaimed adaptations including _Bleak House_


(1985) and _Fortunes of War_ (1987). Her death is a sad reminder of how many kinds of talent and passion that go into making great TV drama and how many are unsung heroes and heroines.   For


example, there are the great executives. Denis Forman was chairman of Granada in the 1980s when it produced _Brideshead Revisited _and _The Jewel in the Crown_, two of the greatest drama


series in the history of ITV. Jeremy Isaacs was director of programmes for Thames in the 1970s when they produced dramas like _The Sweeney_, _The Naked Civil Servant_, _Rock Follies_ and


_Bill Brand_. A few years later, he gave David Rose the creative freedom to run Film on Four. During his time at Channel 4, Rose approved the making of 136 films, half of which received


cinema screenings. One of my favourite drama-documentaries was about the role of Sydney Newman in the creation of _Doctor Who_. He was also responsible for _The Avengers_, _Armchair Theatre


_and _The Wednesday Play_. The great executives have always been _enablers_, people with vision and ambition who gave others — Verity Lambert at Thames, David Rose at Channel 4 — the freed0m


(and the budgets) to make great drama.  Then there are casting directors. We all know that Peter Flannery wrote _Our Friends in the North_ but who cast Gina McKee, Christopher Eccleston,


Mark Strong and Daniel Craig, all in their late 20s or early 30s, and all of whom went on to have such exciting careers in TV and film? Or who was in charge of casting at _Spooks_, the


long-running BBC spy drama? During its ten series the cast included Matthew Macfadyen, Jenny Agutter, Keeley Hawes, Rupert Penry-Jones, Peter Firth, Hermione Norris, David Oyelowo, and


Nicola Walker — and that’s just some of those on the Grid. Others included Simon Russell Beale, Tom McInnerny, Hugh Laurie (pre-_House_), Anna Chancellor, Robert Glenister, and, again, many


more. Who chose the actors and actresses who made up the casts of _Dad’s Army _or _Blackadder_?  All fans of _Sherlock _know it was created and written by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss and


brought together Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman to reinvent Holmes and Watson. But how many know that David Arnold (who scored five Bond films) and Michael Price (music editor on


the _Lord of the Rings _trilogy and composer of more than thirty film scores) wrote the extraordinary music?   Some composers worked for years with particular directors. Adrian Johnston who


wrote the distinctive music for Stephen Poliakoff’s greatest TV dramas, from _Shooting the Past _and _Perfect Strangers _to _Gideon’s Daughter_, and which immediately give Poliakoff’s work


that distinctive feel. Then there are people who produce the “look” of programmes which can take so many different forms. It was the costume designer, Sarah Arthur, who came up with


Sherlock’s clothes, especially that sweeping coat. Luke Hull and Claire Levinson-Gendler won BAFTAs for the extraordinary production design on _Chernobyl_. Hull has just been signed to do


the production design for the _Game of Thrones_ prequel. Shortlisted in the same year were Martin Childs and Alison Harvey for _The Crown_ (which has so far won more than thirty awards and


has been nominated for more than one hundred more).  There are the unforgettable opening titles of _Mad Men_, designed by Steve Fuller and Mark Gardner, though Fuller generously said that


“the main idea came from Matthew Weiner, the show’s creator. He said on the briefing call ‘I imagine a guy walking into a building, taking the elevator up to his office, putting his


briefcase down and jumping out the window…but not that.’ I thought ‘Why NOT that?’” And, of course, the opening titles of _Doctor Who _which have undergone various changes over the years


along with _that _music, written by Ron Grainer and realised by Delia Derbyshire at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Of course, it’s not just TV drama where so many different talents come


together. For four years in the 1990s I worked at BBC2’s _The Late Show _with many talented directors and presenters, but also an astonishing team of gifted graphic designers, set designers,


editors and cameramen and women, among others, who could work under pressure, turning things around at incredibly short notice, sometimes still working on items when the show was live on


air.   This is a tribute to Betty Willingale, but she is just one of the many, many creative figures who made the masterpieces of British television.  A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the


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