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Wilfred Greatorex
Wilfred Greatorex
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Wilfred Glyn Greatorex (27 May 1921 – 14 October 2002[1]) was an English television and film writer, script editor and producer.

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

Born in Liverpool, he was educated at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Blackburn. After wartime service with the RAF, he became a reporter on The Blackburn Times, The Lancashire Evening Post[2] and Reynold's News. He began his television career at Associated Television.[3]

Career

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He was creator of such series as Secret Army, 1990, Plane Makers and its sequel The Power Game, Hine, Brett, Man From Haven and The Inheritors.[4] He also wrote the screenplay for the 1969 film Battle of Britain.[1] He was described by The Guardian newspaper as "one of the most prolific and assured of television script-writers and editors from the 1960s into the 1980s".[5] Starting off as a journalist, he got his big break as a TV writer on Lew Grade's ATV service writing dramas about journalism, such as Deadline Midnight and Front Page Story.[5] He wrote a number of books, including one about the Battle of Arnhem as ghostwriter for Major General Roy Urquhart.

As a TV script editor he also worked on series such as Danger Man[1] and was also creator/producer of The Inheritors, Hine and The Power Game.[1] Papers discovered at a Norfolk auction house in 2011 reveal that 'Hine' had a budget of £84,000, the equivalent of close to £1m some forty years later.

In 1977, he came up with the dystopian drama series 1990 for BBC2, starring Edward Woodward. Greatorex dubbed the series "Nineteen Eighty-Four plus six".[6] Over its two series it portrayed "a Britain in which the rights of the individual had been replaced by the concept of the common good – or, as I put it more brutally, a consensus tyranny."[5] The same year he also devised (with Gerard Glaister) the BBC1 wartime drama Secret Army. The show later inspired the sitcom parody 'Allo 'Allo!.[7]

When talking about his writing style he said "I am opposed to soft-centred characters, which is why I don't create a lot of Robin Hoods. The world's full of hard cases, real villains. And they need to be confronted with other characters just as hard."[4]

His last series for television was Airline in 1982 (starring Roy Marsden).[7] He died in of renal failure in Buckinghamshire in 2002.[1]

Writing credits

[edit]
Production Notes Broadcaster
The Net
  • "Tender Job" (1962)
  • "A Date with Janie" (1962)
  • "Not for Peanuts" (1962)
  • "Dover Relief" (1962)
  • "The Weekend Fliers" (1962)
  • "Not Wanted on Voyage" (1962)
BBC1
Look at Life
  • "Look at Life: Men of the Woods" (1963)
  • "Look at Life: High, Wide and Faster" (1963)
  • "Look at Life: Europe Grows Together" (1963)
  • "Look at Life: Draw the Fires" (1963)
  • "Look at Life: Caught in the Cold" (1963)
  • "Look at Life: Back*"room of the Sky" (1963)
  • "Look at Life: The New Australians" (1964)
  • "Look at Life: Off the Sheeps Back" (1964)
  • "Look at Life: Men of the Snowy" (1964)
  • "Look at Life: Constant Hot Water" (1964)
  • "Look at Life: City of the Air" (1964)
  • "Look at Life: The Big Take*"Off" (1966)
  • "Look at Life: School for Skymen" (1966)
  • "Look at Life: Evening Paper" (1966)
  • "Look at Life: Eating High" (1966)
  • "Look at Life: Murder Bag" (1967)
N/A
Taxi!
  • "Everybody's in: Goodnight!" (1963)
BBC1
The Plane Makers
  • "A Question of Sources" (1963)
  • "Strings in Whitehall" (1963)
  • "The Island Game" (1964)
ITV
Danger Man
  • "The Professionals" (1964)
  • "Fair Exchange" (1964)
ITV
The Power Game
  • "Point of Balance" (1966)
  • "Late Via Rome" (1966)
  • "The Man with Two Hats" (1966)
  • "The Front Men" (1966)
  • "The Chicken Run" (1966)
  • "Safe Conduct" (1966)
  • "One Via Zurich" (1969)
  • "The Outsider" (1969)
  • "The Heart Market" (1969)
  • "The New Minister" (1969)
  • "Mergers" (1969)
ITV
ITV Playhouse
  • "The Curtis Affair" (1968)
ITV
Nobody Runs Forever
  • Feature film (1968)
N/A
Man in a Suitcase
  • "The Boston Square" (1968)
  • "Property of a Gentleman" (1968)
ITV
Battle of Britain
  • Feature film (1969)
N/A
Big Brother
  • Television miniseries (1970)
ITV
Hine
  • 13 episodes (1971)
ITV
Love Story
  • "Night of the Tanks" (1972)
ITV
The Man from Haven
  • "Pilot" (1972)
ITV
The Frighteners
  • "You Remind Me of Someone" (1972)
ITV
The Inheritors
  • 6 episodes (1974)
ITV
Oil Strike North BBC1
The Mackinnons
  • "Whose Side Are You On?" (1977)
BBC1
1990 BBC2
Airline
  • 9 episodes (1982)
ITV

Books

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  • Greatorex, Wilfred; Fleming, William Ernest (1 January 1957). Diamond Fever, an account of the experiences of William E. Fleming as a diamond prospector in British Guiana. Cassell.
  • Urquhart, Major-General Robert Elliott; Greatorex, Wilfred (May 1958). Arnhem. Cassell.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (16 October 1975). The Freelancers. Littlehampton Book Services. ISBN 978-0297770145.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (9 September 1976). Crossover. Littlehampton Book Services. ISBN 978-0297771616.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (February 1977). Three Potato Four. Putnam. ISBN 978-0698107649.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (1977). 1990: Book One. Sphere. ISBN 9780722140093. Based on the BBC television series.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (23 March 1978). 1990: Book Two. Sphere. ISBN 978-0722140017.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (1979). Quicksand. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0297774549.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (1 January 1982). Airline, Take Off. Futura Publications. ISBN 978-0708821411. Based on the Yorkshire Television series.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (25 February 1982). Airline, Ruskin's Berlin. Futura Publications. ISBN 978-0708821695.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (4 March 1986). The Button Zone. Signet. ISBN 978-0451141521.
  • Greatorex, Wilfred (30 August 1990). Eminent Persons. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0297840343.

Quotes

[edit]

I am opposed to soft-centred characters, which is why I don't create a lot of Robin Hoods. The world's full of hard cases, real villains. And they need to be confronted with other characters just as hard. (The Sunday Times, 1972).[8]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Wilfred Glyn Greatorex (27 May 1921 – 14 October 2002) was a British screenwriter, producer, and script editor known for his work in television drama during the 1960s and 1970s. He created several notable series, including the business-oriented dramas The Plane Makers and its sequel The Power Game for ATV, and the dystopian science fiction series 1990 for the BBC. Greatorex also contributed scripts to adventure series such as Man in a Suitcase and Danger Man. His work often explored contemporary issues through dramatic and speculative storytelling, establishing him as a significant figure in British television writing and production.

Early life

Birth and early career

Wilfred Greatorex was born on 27 May 1922 in Liverpool, England. He was educated at Blackburn Grammar School in Lancashire. During the Second World War, Greatorex served in the Royal Air Force, where he joined at the age of eighteen and was assigned to a bomber squadron. After the war, he turned to journalism, beginning as a reporter for local newspapers in northern England, including the Blackburn Times and the Lancashire Evening Post. He later moved to London to work as a reporter for Reynold's News. This background in print journalism preceded his transition into television writing in the 1950s.

Career

Entry into television writing

Wilfred Greatorex transitioned into television writing in the early 1960s after a background in journalism and magazine editing. He began his TV career in 1961 by writing his first play for the BBC, After the Crash. In 1962, Greatorex contributed scripts to several ITV series, including episodes of Probation Officer and 24 Hour Call, as well as the dramatised documentary series The Net, which explored the work of the Immigration Service. These early credits marked his initial steps as a freelance television writer within the British independent television landscape, building on his prior experience as assistant editor of the magazine John Bull. No earlier television writing credits are documented for Greatorex prior to 1961, indicating a relatively late entry into scripted television compared to some contemporaries. His work during this period focused on dramatic and documentary formats typical of early ITV programming.

Major television series

Wilfred Greatorex gained significant recognition for creating and writing two major industrial-political drama series for ITV in the 1960s that explored contemporary British economic and corporate tensions. The Plane Makers, which he created and to which he contributed numerous scripts, aired from 4 February 1963 to 2 February 1965 and ran for three seasons comprising 39 episodes. The series centered on the fictional Scott Furlong aircraft company, depicting conflicts between management, trade unions, government policy, and international competition in the British aviation industry, offering a realistic examination of industrial challenges and power dynamics. It earned praise for its authoritative portrayal of corporate and political maneuvering, establishing Greatorex as a key figure in gritty, issue-driven television drama. The success of The Plane Makers led directly to its spin-off sequel The Power Game, which Greatorex also created and wrote for extensively; it broadcast on ITV from 8 October 1965 to 1969 across three seasons with 39 episodes. The series followed characters including the ambitious executive John Wilder as he navigated boardroom intrigues and political pressures within the context of a nationalized industry, delivering sharp commentary on power struggles, bureaucratic interference, and economic policy in postwar Britain. Critically acclaimed for its intense dramatic tension and insightful depiction of institutional conflicts, The Power Game reinforced Greatorex's reputation for incisive industrial-political storytelling. During the late 1960s, Greatorex also contributed scripts to adventure series including Man in a Suitcase and The Champions. These works represent Greatorex's prominent contributions as a creator and writer in 1960s television, with their focus on workplace and political realism influencing his subsequent work in feature films and speculative drama.

Feature film screenwriting

Wilfred Greatorex's feature film screenwriting credits were relatively few compared to his prolific television career, but they included significant contributions to high-profile productions in the late 1960s. His most notable work in this area was co-authoring the screenplay for Battle of Britain (1969), collaborating with James Kennaway on a script adapted from the non-fiction book The Narrow Margin by Derek Wood and Derek Dempster. The film, directed by Guy Hamilton and produced by Harry Saltzman and Benjamin Fisz, dramatized the Royal Air Force's defense against the Luftwaffe in 1940, blending large-scale aerial sequences with character-driven moments among pilots and commanders. Greatorex substantially rewrote Kennaway's initial draft to refine the narrative for the production's ambitious scope and ensemble cast. He also wrote the screenplay for Nobody Runs Forever (1968, released in the United States as The High Commissioner), directed by Ralph Thomas and starring Rod Taylor. Adapted from Jon Cleary's novel, the thriller centered on an Australian detective assigned to protect a controversial New Zealand diplomat suspected of war crimes, allowing Greatorex to apply his television-honed skills in tense, plot-driven drama to a feature-length format. These projects marked Greatorex's primary engagements in theatrical screenwriting, running parallel to his major television work.

Later television and production work

In the early 1970s, Greatorex served as script editor on Gerry Anderson's live-action series UFO (1970), contributing to its narrative structure and writing several episodes. He created the BBC science fiction series Doomwatch (1970–1972), writing numerous episodes and overseeing its examination of contemporary scientific and environmental dangers through dramatic storytelling. In 1974, Greatorex created and wrote all six episodes of the ITV adventure series The Zoo Gang, which centered on four retired criminals reuniting to pull off daring schemes against those who had wronged them in the past. The show featured a cast including Brian Keith, Lilia Kedrova, Barry Morse, and John Mills, and aired as a single season of light-hearted heist stories. In the late 1970s, Greatorex contributed to the revival series Return of the Saint (1978–1979), writing the episode "The Nightmare Man" (1978). His television writing credits tapered off after the late 1970s with no major contributions in the 1980s or beyond.

Personal life

Family and personal details

Wilfred Greatorex was the oldest son of a former soldier and had a younger brother, Gerald, who was born with Down’s syndrome and died at the age of seven. He married his childhood sweetheart, Beryl, who had also grown up in Blackburn. Greatorex bought a plot of land in Taplow, near Maidenhead, where he built the house he shared with Beryl, which she designed as she had always dreamt of becoming an architect. The couple shared this residence during their marriage. Beryl died approximately ten years before Greatorex's death in 2002. He reflected that everything he wrote in his career had been for Beryl, and her passing removed his incentive to continue. In his later years, Greatorex was a sad and reclusive figure who had suffered mild strokes and a bad fall. He died on October 14, 2002, of renal failure. No details about children are documented in reliable sources.

Death

Later years and death

In his later years, Wilfred Greatorex lived in retirement in Buckinghamshire, England, with his last major credited work in television being the series Airline in 1982. After the death of his wife Beryl, his childhood sweetheart, around 1992, he wrote no more, became a reclusive figure, and suffered strokes and a bad fall. He died of renal failure on 14 October 2002 in Taplow, Buckinghamshire, at the age of 80. His passing was noted in industry obituaries that highlighted his prolific contributions to British television drama.
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