Barbara Clegg

Barbara Clegg is a British actress and scriptwriter for television and radio.

Biography

She was born on 1 March 1926 in Manchester.[1] Her parents were Herbert Clegg and Ethel Moores, sister of Sir John Moores who founded the Littlewoods Empire and they ran an artificial flower making factory in Manchester. She spent her early years in Gatley.[2]

After obtaining an English degree at Oxford University, Clegg decided to pursue a career in the theatre. Initial work as an understudy led to more substantial roles, most notably her turn as Cleopatra opposite Cyril Luckham's Caesar at the Liverpool Playhouse. A high-profile tour of Australia with Katharine Hepburn followed, performing plays such as The Merchant of Venice, but by this point Clegg was looking to move into television, a medium where more money could be made with roles in Emergency – Ward 10 and The Dream Maker. She then started writing scripts and in 1961 contributed seven scripts for the television soap opera Coronation Street.

After writing for several radio and television serials, including for Crossroads and a radio dramatisation of The Chrysalids, Clegg was asked to submit ideas for the science fiction television series Doctor Who in 1981. Her storyline, titled The Enlighteners, involved a space-bound race using anachronistic sailing ships. Doctor Who script editor Eric Saward decided to use Clegg's story as the last part of a trilogy of three stories, known informally as the Black Guardian Trilogy, as it involved the return of the Black Guardian.

To integrate The Enlighteners into the trilogy, portions of the story were rewritten at the request of the production team and the Black and White Guardians replaced the originally planned "Enlighteners". Since the title could no longer refer to those entities, the story was renamed Enlightenment. She was the first woman to write a serial for Doctor Who.

The serial was Barbara Clegg's only commission for Doctor Who, other story line ideas being rejected by Saward, and later Andrew Cartmel. However one of those ideas, "Point of Entry", was later written up as a full script by Marc Platt and released as part of Big Finish's series of Doctor Who: The Lost Stories. Another "The Elite", was released in 2011.[3]

She wrote a book about the life of her Uncle Sir John Moores, called The Man Who Made Littlewoods, which was published five weeks before his death in 1993.

gollark: What if Intel and AMD come up with "AVX but more so"™?
gollark: For representing data like this within the program or serializing it in a way nothing else has to read, it seems reasonable.
gollark: Hey, I'm not saying the u16 is the wrong choice here, just that it also isn't really always right.
gollark: CBOR and whatnot are nicer than using custom binary formats if you plan to swap data between systems a lot, because you can add new fields without breaking things and there's parsers for basically every languæge.
gollark: (yes, this is impossible, but oh well)

References

  1. Barbara Clegg on IMDb
  2. Barbara Clegg (2009). Enlightenment (Single Write Female). 2 Entertainment.
  3. Mollmann, Steve (7 January 2012). "Doctor Who: The Elite review". Unreality SF. Retrieved 14 January 2018.
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