- Jim Allen (writer)
Jim Allen (1926 — 1999) was a British writer from Manchester known for his many collaborations with film director
Ken Loach .Allen was a Roman Catholic from the
Miles Platting area ofManchester . He worked as a miner and became convinced of the validity ofTrotskyism . He joined the Revolutionary Communist Party, and as a member of a successor organisation, The Club, he edited arank and file newspaper "The Miner", which rapidly ran foul of the authorities. As a punishment and warning he was put on 'permanent nights' and would write his editorials by the light of his lamp whilst sitting at the coal face. He was eventually black-listed on every coal mine inLancashire and became a builder instead (which inspired his first TV play "The Lump"). As a builder he helped build the Langley estate of Middleton where he lived with his family, and where he set both "The Spongers " and "Raining Stones ". He would find success as a writer for the popular soap opera "Coronation Street " for which he wrote during a two year period.His collaborations with Loach included the mini-series "
Days of Hope ", the films "Hidden Agenda ", "Raining Stones " and "Land and Freedom " and various one-off dramas for the acclaimed BBC series "Play for Today ". He wrote numerous other "Play for Today " TV plays including "The Spongers " and "United Kingdom" withRoland Joffe , and "Willie's Last Stand ". His work was always concerned with political issues, told from aleft-wing perspective.He wrote the play "Perdition" (1987) for the
Royal Court Theatre which deals with alleged collaboration between Zionists and Nazis up to, during and afterWorld War II . A controversial work, the court cancelled the production while it was still in rehearsal.Allen was a
Manchester United supporter, which according to actorRicky Tomlinson in an episode of theSouth Bank Show , showed he had a "sense of humour".External links
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0020654/ Jim Allen] at the
Internet Movie Database
* [http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/531525/ Jim Allen biography at BFI Screenonline]
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