Chris Boucher (writer)
Chris Boucher | |
---|---|
Born | 1943 (age 77–78) |
Alma mater | University of Essex |
Occupation | Television screenwriter script editor novelist |
Chris Boucher (born 1943) is a British television screenwriter, script editor and novelist. He is known for his frequent contributions to two genres, science fiction and crime fiction, and worked on the series Doctor Who, Blake's 7, Shoestring, Bergerac, The Bill and Star Cops.
Early life[]
Prior to becoming a television writer, Boucher worked at Calor Gas as a management trainee and gained a Bachelor of Arts in economics at the University of Essex.[1]
Career[]
Boucher began his work in television science fiction for the series Doctor Who, writing the serials The Face of Evil, The Robots of Death and Image of the Fendahl (all broadcast in 1977). One of his contributions to Doctor Who was the creation of the companion Leela (Louise Jameson), the savage who featured in the series from 1977 to 1978. The character was inspired by the Palestinian terrorist Leila Khaled.[2] Boucher was commissioned for the programme by script editor Robert Holmes, who suggested that Boucher should be appointed in that role for the science fiction series Blake's 7 (1978–81). He served in this role for the entirety of its four-series run, and also wrote several episodes himself, including the final episode.[2]
Boucher was the script editor of the second season of the drama series Shoestring in 1980, which followed the investigations of private detective and radio show host Eddie Shoestring (Trevor Eve). Following the end of Blake's 7, Boucher script-edited and wrote for the third season of the police drama series Juliet Bravo in 1982. He then moved on to script-edit another detective show, Bergerac, working on the programme from 1983 to 1987.
All of the above programmes were produced in-house by the BBC and broadcast on the BBC1 network. For the ITV network, he worked on Thames Television's police drama series The Bill as script editor in 1987. In that year he also returned to the BBC to create his own series, Star Cops, which combined the science fiction and crime genres. The series encountered several production problems and was not a ratings success, lasting only nine episodes on BBC2,[2][3] but has maintained a cult following among fans of science fiction.[4]
Later works included several Doctor Who novels for BBC Books, all featuring the character of Leela,[5] and a series of straight-to-CD full-cast audio dramas entitled Kaldor City, which combine elements from his Doctor Who serial The Robots of Death with his Blake's 7 work.
Views and advocacy[]
Boucher is an avowed atheist. He disapproves of the introduction of religion into government policy and the education of children.[6]
Writing credits[]
Production | Notes | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|
Braden's Week |
|
BBC1 |
The Saturday Crowd |
|
ITV |
That's Life! |
|
BBC1 |
Dave Allen at Large |
|
BBC1 |
Romany Jones |
|
ITV |
Slater's Day |
|
ITV |
Doctor Who |
|
BBC1 |
Shoestring |
|
BBC1 |
Blake's 7 |
Script editor for all 52 episodes (1978–1981) Wrote:
|
BBC1 |
Juliet Bravo |
|
BBC1 |
Bergerac |
|
BBC1 |
Star Cops |
|
BBC2 |
Home James! |
|
ITV |
The Bill |
|
ITV |
Novels[]
- 1998: Doctor Who: Last Man Running
- 1999: Doctor Who: Corpse Marker
- 2001: Doctor Who: Psi-ence Fiction
- 2005: Doctor Who: Match of the Day
References[]
- ^ David J. Howe; Mark Stammers; Stephen Walker (1994). Doctor Who: The Seventies. Dr Who. p. 103. ISBN 978-1852274443.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "1992 Interview with Chris Boucher".
- ^ "BBC - Cult - Classic TV - Star Cops".
- ^ Jeffery, Morgan (29 May 2018). "Star Cops: How Big Finish revived and reshaped the cult TV series for Mother Earth". Digital Spy. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
- ^ "Interview with Chris Boucher".
- ^ Alan Stevens. "Chris Boucher Interview". Kaldor City.
External links[]
- 1943 births
- Living people
- Alumni of the University of Essex
- British atheists
- British science fiction writers
- British television writers