Peter Tinniswood

Peter Tinniswood (21 December 1936 – 9 January 2003) was an English radio and TV comedy scriptwriter, and author of a series of popular cricketing novels. He was born in Liverpool, but grew up above a dry cleaner's on Eastway in Sale, Greater Manchester.

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Early career

Tinniswood started out in journalism, spending four years in Sheffield, first, from 1958, on The Star, then on the Sheffield Telegraph, where he was a leader writer and specialised on feature writing. He won widespread admiration for a week-long series 'Travels with a Donkey', an account of a tramp round the Peak District with a reluctant donkey.

Television and radio work

In 1964 Tinniswood collaborated with long-term writing partner David Nobbs both on the BBC sketch show The Frost Report[1] and the comedy Lance At Large, starring Lance Percival. This was an innovative attempt to update the sitcom formula, as Percival's character Alan Day, was involved in different scenarios and meeting different people in each episode.

The short-lived ITV series Never Say Die (1970) drew upon Tinniswood's days as a hospital porter, and was set in Victoria Memorial Hospital and focused on the comedy created between the patients and the staff. It starred Reginald Marsh and Patrick Newell.

Perhaps Tinniswood's best known comedy was 1975's I Didn't Know You Cared featuring the Brandons, a dour northern family. Adapted from his novels for the BBC, this programme ran until 1979, and featured Liz Smith, Robin Bailey, John Comer and a young Stephen Rea.

In 1980 the BBC produced a series based on other Tinniswood books, featuring the character of The Brigadier, an erstwhile cricketer and slightly over-the-top raconteur, played by Robin Bailey. Some of these stories were also adapted for BBC Radio 4. The series was also remade in 1985 for Channel 4.

For ITV in 1983 Tinniswood wrote The Home Front, again set in the north of England. It starred Brenda Bruce as Mrs Place, a nosey, arrogant mother who lorded it over her three children. Two years later ITV also produced Mog, based on Peter's 1970 novel and starring Enn Reitel as the titular character. This had episodes written by Ian La Frenais and Dick Clement, but it was not a success. Also in 1985 was South Of The Border, starring Brian Glover as Edgar Rowley, a Yorkshireman forced to migrate to the south of England.

In later years Tinniswood's output was mostly for Radio 4 and included the continuing adventures of Uncle Mort and Carter Brandon in Uncle Mort's North Country, Uncle Mort's South Country and Uncle Mort's Celtic Fringe and a continuing series about poacher Winston Hayballs, his "bit of fluff" Nancy and her family originally adapted from his novel "Winston". Liz Goulding, his second wife, played Rosie.

A lifelong pipe smoker, Peter Tinniswood died of throat cancer, at the age of 67. Since his death, the Writers' Guild of Great Britain and the Society of Authors have jointly administered the annual Tinniswood Award in his memory, to honour the best original radio drama script broadcast in the UK during the previous year, with a prize of £1500 awarded to the winner.

TV credits

Novels and other fiction[2]

Radio credits

Radio drama

(snt = BBC Saturday Night Theatre; aft = BBC Afternoon Theatre, m = monologue)

Serials

(numbers show no. of episodes) [4]

External links

References

  1. ^ Obituary for Peter Tinniswood, The Independent, Jan 11, 2003.
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ http://www.rslit.org/content/holtby
  4. ^ [2]