Lucy Gannon

Lucy Gannon (born 1948) is a British playwright and television writer, and producer.

Life

Lucy Gannon once worked as a military policewoman, a residential social worker, and a nurse, and lived in a concrete council house with no central heating. She later moved to a converted barn in Derbyshire and now lives near Cardigan, in Wales.

She started in 1987, to enter the Richard Burton Award for New Playwrights. Her play, Keeping Tom Nice, about a disabled boy whose father commits suicide, earned her the award and a six-month writer-in-residence at the Royal Shakespeare Company. In 1988 Keeping Tom Nice was shown at the Almeida Theatre in London, and in 1989 shown as a BBC TV Screenplay starring Linus Roache.[1]

Gannon has written several single or short run dramas, including Dad, Tender Loving Care, Trip Trap, The Gift, Big Cat, Pure Wickedness, The Best Of Men, The Children.

In 2008 Lucy Gannon criticised the BBC, saying that delays in commissioning programmes threaten writers and producers.[2]

In 1996 she was awarded the MBE for services to Drama, and among her awards are The Eileen Anderson Award, The Richard Burton Drama Award, The Susan Smith Blackburn Award, The BAFTA Cymru, and the Contribution To The Media Award (Women in Film and Television) and, most recently, the RTS Award (South West England) for Best Writer for her film The Best Of Men.

In 2012 Gannon wrote the one-off BBC2 drama The Best of Men which told the story of the first Paralympic Games and starred Eddie Marsan and Rob Brydon. She is the lead writer and creator of the 2013 BBC One drama series Frankie.[3]

She is developing a three-part drama for the BBC, a four-part drama, a radio play and a film.

Works

Plays

Teleplays

References

  1. James Rampton (19 June 1999). "Television: A class act - Lucy Gannon". The Independent.
  2. Matthew Hemley (6 August 2008). "Gannon accuses BBC's commissioning process of ruining writers and production companies". The Stage News.
  3. "Eve Myles to star in new BBC One drama series, Frankie". bbc.co.uk. BBC. 6 September 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  4. "BBC - Press Office - Dad". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 April 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.