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Geoffrey Orme
Geoffrey Orme
from Wikipedia

Geoffrey Percival Orme (10 June 1904 – 21 January 1978) was a British screenwriter for television and film.

Key Information

Orme's prolific film work extended from the 1930s to the 1960s and included a number of the popular Old Mother Riley films starring Arthur Lucan.

His script for the BBC television series Doctor Who, The Underwater Menace, was commissioned by producer Innes Lloyd and recorded with Patrick Troughton in 1967. It featured the notion of Atlantis being buried under the sea and controlled by the insane Professor Zaroff.[1][2]

Writing credits

[edit]
Production Notes Broadcaster
Sunshine Ahead
  • Feature film (1936)
N/A
Hearts of Humanity
  • Feature film (co-written with Herbert Ayres, Gerald Elliott and Jack Francis, 1936)
N/A
Talking Feet
  • Feature film (1937)
N/A
What Would You Do, Chums?
  • Feature film (co-written with David Evans and Con West, 1939)
N/A
Old Mother Riley in Business
  • Feature film (1941)
N/A
Old Mother Riley's Ghosts
  • Feature film (1941)
N/A
Old Mother Riley's Circus
  • Feature film (1941)
N/A
The Common Touch
  • Feature film (1941)
N/A
Let the People Sing
  • Feature film (1942)
N/A
Old Mother Riley Detective
  • Feature film (1943)
N/A
Theatre Royal
  • Feature film (1943)
N/A
Here Comes the Sun
  • Feature film (1946)
N/A
The Grand Escapade
  • Feature film (1946)
N/A
Fortune Lane
  • Feature film (1947)
N/A
Nothing Venture
  • Feature film (1948)
N/A
When You Come Home
  • Feature film (1948)
N/A
The Last Load
  • Feature film (1948)
N/A
Three Bags Full
  • Feature film (1949)
N/A
The Second Mate
  • Feature film (co-written with Anson Dyer, Barbara K. Emary and Jack Francis, 1950)
N/A
Judgment Deferred
  • Feature film (1952)
N/A
Miss Robin Hood N/A
Devil on Horseback
  • Feature film (1954)
N/A
Delayed Action
  • Feature film (1954)
N/A
Orders Are Orders
  • Feature film (1954)
N/A
The Love Match
  • Feature film (1955)
N/A
Ramsbottom Rides Again N/A
The End of the Road
  • Feature film (1957)
N/A
The Heart Within
  • Feature film (1957)
N/A
Ivanhoe
  • "The Witness" (1958)
  • "Lyman the Pieman" (1958)
  • "The Ransom" (1958)
  • "The Weavers" (1958)
  • "The Masked Bandits" (1958)
  • "Arms and the Women" (1958)
ITV
The Boy and the Bridge
  • Feature film (1959)
N/A
Interpol Calling
  • "Slave Ship" (1959)
ITV
The Avengers ITV
No Hiding Place
  • "Music for Murder" (1965)
ITV
Doctor Who BBC One
The Long Duel N/A

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Geoffrey Orme was a British screenwriter known for his prolific contributions to film and television across several decades, beginning in the 1930s with musical comedy and comedy features before expanding into episodic television work. He is particularly remembered for scripting episodes of adventure and spy series such as The Avengers and for authoring the Doctor Who serial The Underwater Menace (1967), his sole contribution to the long-running science fiction programme. Born Geoffrey Percival Orme in Ilford, Essex on 10 June 1904, he initially wrote for the theatre, with a focus on musical comedy, before transitioning to film screenwriting in the mid-1930s. He penned scripts for several entries in the popular Old Mother Riley comedy series and frequently collaborated with producer-director John Baxter on features including Here Comes the Sun (1946) and Judgment Deferred (1952). During the Second World War, Orme served in the Royal Air Force, returning to screenwriting afterward. In the late 1950s he began contributing to television, with credits on series such as Ivanhoe, The Avengers, and No Hiding Place. Following The Underwater Menace and additional material for the 1967 film The Long Duel, Orme shifted focus to producing biographical audio programmes until his death on 21 January 1978.

Early life

Birth and background

Geoffrey Percival Orme was born on 10 June 1904 in Ilford, Essex, England. He was of English nationality, with his early residence in the Essex region.

Screenwriting career

1930s: Entry into film

Geoffrey Orme entered the British film industry as a screenwriter in the mid-1930s, transitioning from earlier work in theatre and musical comedy. His initial credits appeared in 1936 with Sunshine Ahead, a musical comedy he co-wrote with Con West. That same year, he contributed to Hearts of Humanity as a co-writer, receiving credit for additional dialogue alongside Herbert Ayres, Gerald Elliott, and Jack Francis. In 1937, Orme shared story credit with Jack Francis on Talking Feet, a musical film with screenplay by H. Fowler Mear. He continued his early work in comedy with What Would You Do, Chums? in 1939, where he provided comedy dialogue alongside contributions from David Evans, Gordon Crier, and Con West. These pre-war credits, spanning musical comedy, drama, and light comedy genres, established Orme's presence in British cinema during the 1930s. This period represented his initial entry into screenwriting, preceding more prolific output in the following decade.

1940s: Old Mother Riley series and wartime films

In the 1940s, Geoffrey Orme became most active as a screenwriter, contributing to the long-running and popular Old Mother Riley comedy series as well as other British films amid World War II and its aftermath. The Old Mother Riley franchise, starring Arthur Lucan in drag as the boisterous Irish washerwoman and Kitty McShane as her daughter, offered broad slapstick humor and escapist entertainment that resonated strongly with wartime audiences. Orme wrote or co-wrote multiple entries in the series, including Old Mother Riley in Business (1941), Old Mother Riley's Ghosts (1941), Old Mother Riley's Circus (1941), and Old Mother Riley Detective (1943). These films exemplified the series' recurring formula of chaotic domestic and workplace misadventures, with Orme's recurring involvement underscoring his key role in sustaining the franchise's output during the decade. Outside the Old Mother Riley series, Orme also scripted other features reflecting the range of British cinema at the time, including The Common Touch (1941), Let the People Sing (1942), Here Comes the Sun (1946), Fortune Lane (1947), Nothing Venture (1948), and When You Come Home (1948). His steady contributions across these titles illustrated his productivity in the wartime and immediate postwar years. Orme's 1940s work eventually gave way to more varied feature films in the following decade.

1950s: Feature films

In the 1950s Geoffrey Orme continued his screenwriting career in British feature films, contributing to a variety of productions amid the post-war revival of UK cinema. His credits during this period included the co-written Miss Robin Hood (1952), Judgment Deferred (1952), Devil on Horseback (1954), Orders Are Orders (1954), The Love Match (1955), the co-written Ramsbottom Rides Again (1956), and The Boy and the Bridge (1959). These works reflect his steady output in the British film industry before his later shift toward television.

1960s: Television transition and Doctor Who

In the late 1950s and into the 1960s, Geoffrey Orme transitioned from feature film screenwriting to television, contributing scripts to various British series. He wrote several episodes of the adventure series Ivanhoe in 1958 and the episode "Slave Ship" for Interpol Calling in 1959. His 1960s television credits included the episode "Man in the Mirror" for The Avengers in 1963 and "Music for Murder" for No Hiding Place in 1965. Orme also provided additional material for the 1967 film The Long Duel. Orme is best remembered for his work on Doctor Who, where he wrote the four-part serial The Underwater Menace, broadcast in 1967 during Patrick Troughton's first season as the Second Doctor. The story follows the Doctor and his companions as they discover the lost city of Atlantis, submerged beneath the sea and controlled by the scientist Professor Zaroff, whose schemes involve the inhabitants and threaten catastrophe. This serial marked Orme's most prominent television credit and one of his final scripted works.

Death

Later years and death

Geoffrey Orme's active screenwriting career concluded after 1967, with no further credits in film or television. His work spanned from the 1930s through the late 1960s. He died on 21 January 1978 at the age of 73 in East Sussex, England.
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