Christopher Hall (producer)

British TV drama producer Christopher Hall (born 30 March 1957 in London) is the son of the director Sir Peter Hall and the actress Leslie Caron. Educated at Bedales School and St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, he has produced dramas primarily for the BBC, ITV, and Channel 4 networks, and worked for major British production companies including Kudos, Carnival Films, Hat Trick Productions, and Tiger Aspect.

Hall started his career as an assistant director on feature films with David Hare (Strapless (1989) and Paris by Night), Ken Russell (The Lair of the White Worm (1988)), and as a floor manager and/or assistant director on TV shows such as Inspector Morse and Porterhouse Blue. Working his way up through the grades, he became a line producer and then a fully fledged producer. In 1996, he produced The Final Passage, directed by his father Sir Peter Hall, which won BAFTA and RTS awards for Cinematography.

Hall's best-known productions include The Lost World (2001) starring Peter Falk, Bob Hoskins, James Fox, and Matthew Rhys. The production was noted for stripping the Conan Doyle text of racial overtones.[1] He also produced Archangel (2005) for BBC, starring Daniel Craig, which was adapted from a 1998 Robert Harris thriller by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais and filmed on location in Moscow and Latvia. In 2011, for Hat Trick and ITV, Hall produced Case Sensitive starring Olivia Williams. Hound of the Baskervilles (2002), which starred Richard E. Grant, John Nettles, Ian Hart, Richard Roxburgh and Geraldine James and received a BAFTA nomination for best sound, was another of Hall's productions.[2] Aristocrats, based on the Stella Tillyard biography of the Lennox sisters in 1999, was another major production. One of Hall's drama productions, made as a Christmas show for the BBC in 2003, was the BAFTA-winning The Young Visiters starring Jim Broadbent, Hugh Laurie, Bill Nighy, Sally Hawkins and Simon Russell Beale. It was narrated by Alan Bennett, and directed by David Yates.[3] The score, by Nicholas Hooper, won the BAFTA award for Original Television Music.[4]

Christopher Hall won a 2005 Emmy award[5] for producing the animated natural history drama, Pride.

In 2011 he produced Hidden, a four-part drama written by Ronan Bennett, starring Philip Glenister, and was creative producer on Labyrinth and, in August 2012, an adaptation of The Last Weekend by Blake Morrison, scripted by Mick Ford for Carnival and ITV. In 2013, he produced the Carnival Films ITV pilot Murder on the Home Front.[6] He also completed a ten-part series Dracula for NBC and Sky Living, starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers. He has just completed the 13-part medical drama Critical[7] for Sky One and Hat Trick written by Jed Mercurio and is in pre-production on The Durrells a six part series based on Gerald Durrell's Corfu Trilogy written by Simon Nye

Christopher Hall is the half-brother of film actress Rebecca Hall and of Edward Hall, the artistic director of Hampstead Theatre. He is married to Jane Hall (née Studd) and father of Freddie Hall and Ben Hall.

Productions

As producer
As associate producer

References

  1. Poole, Oliver (12 November 2000). "BBC will strip Conan Doyle of racial overtones". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  2. "Craft Nominations 2002". BAFTA. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  3. Lowry, Brian (31 October 2004). "The Young Visiters". Variety. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  4. "Craft Nominations 2003". BAFTA. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  5. "Outstanding Children's Program – 2005". Emmys. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  6. Murder on the Home Front. Netflix. 2013.
  7. Critical (2015-)—cast and crew at IMDb
  8. Murder on the Home Front. Rotten Tomatoes. 2013.
  9. Murder on the Home Front. IMDb. 2013.

External links

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