Danny Brocklehurst

Danny Brocklehurst
Danny Brocklehurst
Born June 1971
Hyde, Manchester, UK
Occupation Screenwriter, Journalist

Danny Brocklehurst (born 1971, Hyde, Cheshire, England, U.K.) is a BAFTA-winning English screenwriter. Brocklehurst worked as a journalist for several years (as a freelancer for The Guardian, City Life and Manchester Evening News and senior feature writer for The Big Issue) before becoming a full-time screenwriter.

He has written acclaimed television drama series including the BAFTA-winning Clocking Off, Shameless and The Street; comedy-drama Linda Green; the critically lauded serials Exile and The Stretford Wives and 2006 BBC One hit Sorted. He has been nominated for both BAFTA and Royal Television Society writing awards.

Contents

TV work

Danny wrote several episodes of the BAFTA award winning series Clocking Off, as well as the acclaimed two part BBC film The Stretford Wives, which was shot by director Peter Webber.

With Shameless, Danny won a BAFTA for series one, co-wrote series two with Paul Abbott and became lead writer on series three. He left prior to the fourth series.

His self created series, Sorted, the BBC's high profile postal drama, starring Hugo Speer, achieved 5 million viewers in the summer of 2006 and was the only drama that year to grow week on week in the ratings. Despite this; and the largely good critical response; the then controller Jane Tranter did not recommission the show.

In 2007, Brocklehurst wrote a film about the Fathers4Justice campaign for producers Harbour Pictures. Whilst, his Company Pictures produced four-part ITV drama, Talk To Me, starring Max Beesley, Laura Fraser, Adrian Bower, Kate Ashfield and Emma Pierson.

He has written episodes of both Jimmy McGovern's The Street and his new crime drama Accused for BBC One. Liam's Story, starring Andy Serkis.

In 2011 he wrote a 3 part BBC 1 drama, Exile, “a tale of prodigal redemption” which becomes an investigative crime story. It starred John Simm and Jim Broadbent. It was critically acclaimed. It received an average of 5.5 million viewers and an Audience Appreciation score of 90%.

In 2011 it was announced that Danny would write a new HBO drama, Dirty, with Andrea Arnold attached to direct.[1]

Theatre

In theatre he has written three award winning plays, My Eight Times Table, Nobody and Loaded (transferred to Radio Four), as well being story adviser and book co-writer of the hit West End (and national touring) musical Never Forget.

Film

In film, he has adapted the Whitbread nominee Buddha Da (as Jimmy Buddha); written a book adaptation for Working Title Films.

Miscellaneous

He was featured in the writers' section of the Broadcast Magazine Hot 100 2007.

He has cited Tony Marchant, Jimmy McGovern and Alan Bleasdale as his writing inspirations. In a Creative Times feature in 2010, he wrote that Our Friends in the North was his favourite drama of all time.

In 2011 he has been nominated for TWO Writers Guild Awards for Exile and Accused. http://www.writersguild.org.uk/news-a-features/general/203-guild-awards-2011-shortlists-announced


Career in brief:

Awards

BAFTA

BAFTA TV Award

Year Series Category Result
2001 Clocking Off Best Writer Nominated
2002 Shameless Best Series Won 2002 Clocking Off Best Drama Series Nominated
2006 Shameless Best Writer Nominated

Royal Television Society

RTS Television Award

Year Series Category Result
2001 Clocking Off Best Writer Nominated
2002 Shameless Best Series Won
2006 Shameless Best Writer Nominated

Radio

Danny has written extensively for radio. His police series Stone is in its third series. It stars Hugo Speer as Detective Inspector John Stone and every episode features a morally complex crime. It has been described as 'gritty' (The Guardian), 'hard hitting' (The Times) and 'realistic in a way radio drama rarely is' (The Observer).

Danny has written a play about Thatcher's Mutually Assured Destruction policy in the 1980s, The End of The World, a thriller about a man who seems to have ceased to exist Nobody, an Australian set examination of greed, Loaded and a single drama about an eighty-year-old woman who admits to a series of brutal murders, Mary Shane.

He has appeared as a regular commentator on Radio 4 and 5Live.

External links

  • Guardian article, The decade that TV forgot.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2007/jun/06/broadcasting.tvandradio

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Cold Feet — For other uses, see Cold feet (disambiguation). Cold Feet Cold Feet intertitle Genre Comedy drama Created by …   Wikipedia

  • Never Forget (musical) — Never Forget The Take That Musical Never Forget Poster, 2008 Music Gary Barlow Lyrics Gary Barlow …   Wikipedia

  • Shameless — Infobox Television show name = Shameless format = Dramedy caption = Opening credits for series 1 4 network = Channel 4 creator = Paul Abbott executive producer = Paul Abbott head writer = Paul Abbott Danny Brocklehurst starring = David Threlfall… …   Wikipedia

  • Aaron Johnson — en marzo de 2010. Nombre real Aaron Perry Johnson Nacimiento 13 de junio, 1990 (21 años) …   Wikipedia Español

  • Company Pictures — Type Private Industry Film Founded 1998 Headquarters London …   Wikipedia

  • Clocking Off — Genre Drama Created by Paul Abbott Written by Paul Abbott, Danny Brocklehurst, Jan McVerry, John Fay. Starring Siobhan Finneran …   Wikipedia

  • Tony Marchant (playwright) — Tony Marchant (born 11 July 1959 in East London) is a British playwright and television dramatist. In 1982 he won the London Critics Theatre Award for Most Promising Playwright for The Lucky Ones and Raspberry . In 1999 he won the British Academy …   Wikipedia

  • Sorted (TV series) — Infobox Television show name = Sorted network = BBC One BBC HD format = Drama creator = Danny Brocklehurst starring = opentheme = Bang Bang You re Dead by Dirty Pretty Things country = UK first aired = July 18 2006 (July 20 in Scotland) last… …   Wikipedia

  • Hyde, Greater Manchester — Coordinates: 53°26′51″N 2°04′55″W / 53.4474°N 2.0820°W / 53.4474; 2.0820 …   Wikipedia

  • Alan Clarke — Infobox Writer name = Alan Clarke birthdate = birth date|1935|10|28|df=y birthplace = Birkenhead, Merseyside, England deathdate = death date and age|1990|7|24|1935|10|28|df=y deathplace =Alan Clarke (28 October 1935 – 24 July 1990) was a… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”