Paddy Russell

Patricia "Paddy" Russell (4 July‌ 1928 – 2 November 2017) was a British television director. She was among the earliest female directors at the BBC.

Early life and career

Born in Highgate, to Bertie Russell, a P&O clerk, and his wife, Alicia (née Quinn)[1] It was only by including a stage management element to her course at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama that Russell was able to her father's resistance to her pursuing such a career.[1] She began her brief career as an actress while still a student working on productions supervised by Michael Barry who cast her in Toad of Toad Hall, and later in the same year in The Insect Play (both 1950). She became more interested in working in television than acting, preferring a three-week assignment in the medium over a ten-week touring production in Ireland.[1]

She was the first female floor manager to work for the BBC, her non-gendered credit being a means of avoiding problems with prospective technical crews.[1] Although she appeared in the first two episodes of The Quatermass Experiment (1953), her main role was a production assistant for television director Rudolph Cartier.[2] She worked on the later Quatermass science-fiction serials,[3] as well as the 1954 adaptation of George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.[3][4] In the Studio 4 series, she appeared on screen in the Cartier directed Holocaust drama Doctor Korczak and the Children (1962) instructing the actors on the roles they were to perform. The production was made in the unadorned studio without sets or the actors in costume.[5]

She progressed to becoming a director herself, one of the first two women directors in BBC television. She directed many television programmes from 1962. She became the first woman to direct episodes of Doctor Who when she directed The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve (1966). She directed three further Doctor Who serials: Invasion of the Dinosaurs (1974), Pyramids of Mars (1975), and Horror of Fang Rock (1977).[6] The last two Doctor Who serials featured Tom Baker in the title role. She told Doctor Who Magazine: "Tom Baker was easy to deal with at first, but the part went to his head completely. By the time I did Horror of Fang Rock, he was desperately difficult to work with".[2] Her other work included Out of the Unknown (1965), Pere Goriot (1968), The Moonstone (1972) and The Omega Factor (1980).

Later life and death

By the 1980s, Russell was living in a cottage in Oxenhope, on the Yorkshire Moors near Keighley. She was working regularly for Yorkshire Television for whom she directed many episodes of Emmerdale, the quiz programme 3-2-1 in its early years and the local news programme, Calendar. She was actively involved in charitable work in the area with particular emphasis on domestic cats.[4]

Russell moved to a care home, where she died in 2017, aged 89.[3]

gollark: > The "Write Pattern" command is new for DDR5; this is identical to a write command, but no data is transmitted. Instead, the range is filled with copies of a 1-byte mode register (which defaults to all-zero). Although this takes the same amount of time as a normal write, not driving the data lines saves energy. Also, writes to multiple banks may be interleaved more closely.
gollark: I think DRAM actually has a command for zeroing regions nowadays.
gollark: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3654905/faster-way-to-zero-memory-than-with-memset#3655024
gollark: I would be surprised if CPUs lacked dedicated zeroing capabilities, actually.
gollark: You can do something something SIMD to zero large regions at once.

References

  1. Hadoke, Toby (7 November 2017). "Paddy Russell obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  2. "Remembering Paddy Russell". Directors UK. 7 November 2017. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  3. Marcus (2 November 2017). "Doctor Who News: Paddy Russell 1928–2017". News in Time and Space. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  4. "Paddy Russell, television director". The Yorkshire Post. 4 November 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  5. Wake, Oliver (11 January 2014). "Doctor Korczak and the Children (1962)". British Television Drama. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  6. "Paddy Russell (1980s)". Doctor Who Interview Archive. 14 October 2009. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.