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Andrew is a Brighton based writer and director. He also acts (BEST ACTOR, Brighton And Hove AC for 'Art'), does occasional stand-up, & runs improv workshops every Sunday. This blog can be delivered to your Kindle: By subscribing via this link here -or you can carry on reading it here for free ..

Thursday 20 December 2012

Cult Box Feature

Just a grab from something I wrote for CultBox earlier this week:

5 female writers we'd like on 'Doctor Who'

It’s time for the girls to get their geek on: since Doctor Who returned to our screens in 2005, only one woman has written for the series: Helen Raynor, who gave us ‘Evolution Of The Daleks’ and ‘The Sontaran Stratagem’. With such a wealth of creative women in this country, it seems an imbalance that can be easily corrected. So here are five of the best female writers working today whose names we’d like to see at the top of an episode...
Jane Espenson
Former writer for Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Jane Espenson is responsible for some of that series’ most sharp, witty and scary episodes, (‘Gingerbread’, ‘Earshot’, ‘Band Candy’) and won an award for ‘Conversations With Dead People’.
Her affinity with British genre TV is evident: she is reported to be currently working on a Syfy remake of Randall And Hopkirk (Deceased). Perhaps more pertinently, however, she’s already indulged in the universe of Doctor Who with writing duties on Torchwood: Miracle Day.
Jane Goldman
Goldman’s star can only rise further, with Kick AssStardust and X Men: First Class already under her belt, as well as modern Hammer Horror hit The Woman In Black.
Her ability to mix wildly colourful fantasy with gothic horror could inspire a Hinchcliffe-era style adventure. One of the most successful writers under both the criteria that we’re discussing here (female, genre), the TARDIS crew would be wise to nab her before she’s out of our reach.
Caitlin Moran
Her columns (in The Times) are funny, furious, pithy and moving – usually all at once, and in five hundred words or less. Frankly, it seems a slinky fit for Doctor Who’s DNA.
A prolific tweeter, which should keep the fanboys happy, Moran is currently working on an ‘anti-chick flick’ based on her own bestseller How To Be A Woman, and has a BBC sitcom in the pipeline. She has a devoted army of fans, and of all the people on our list, an episode by Moran is the most likely to pump up the audience figures with people who perhaps wouldn’t usually watch the show.
Abi Morgan
If Team Moffat are able to persuade the great and good Gaiman to knock out an episode or two, then there’s no reason whatsoever why they couldn’t fire off a request to Abi Morgan, who is frankly one of the UK’s most important screenwriters, full stop – no matter about the gender.
Garnering praise and controversy for film projects such as Brick Lane and Shame, she also writes BBC Two’s drama about the BBC, The Hour. As Doctor Who sails past its fiftieth year, who better to celebrate the Verity Lambert/Delia Derbyshire magic that started it all?
Michelle Paver
As yet, Michelle Paver hasn’t written for TV, but that hasn’t stopped her books being some of the must hungrily devoured in the fantasy fiction section.
Her stories involve an Earth of the past – namely, the Prehistoric and Bronze eras, and in the case of Wolf Brother, feature a lonely traveller, cast adrift from his clan but finally assisted by his loyal companions. Which pretty much sounds like every episode of Doctor Who we’ve ever watched...
Who would you like to see write for the show? Let us know below...
Watch the Series 7 trailer...

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