Sebastian Baczkiewicz

Sebastian Baczkiewicz (born 1962, Hammersmith, London[1]) is an English writer.

Biography

As a teenager, Baczkiewicz was a member of Questors Theatre in West London before training as an actor at The Drama Centre.[2] He was the BBC's first writer in residence in 2000.

Work

Author of a number of episodes of Holby City, Baczkiewicz has written a range of plays for BBC Radio including adaptations of Les Miserables and The Count of Monte Cristo and seven series of Pilgrim,[3] starring Paul Hilton as William Palmer, the immortal title character.

His stage plays include The Lives of the Saints, Hello Paris, The Man Who Shot the Tiger and Dancing under the Bridge.[4]

In 2004, he wrote half of a six-part series, Arthur,[5] for BBC Radio 4 using characters from Arthurian legend.

In 2012, his radio drama Pilgrim was nominated for the Prix Italia and awarded silver at the Prix Europa.

Baczkiewicz was lead writer on Radio 4's Home Front, a radio drama series broadcast across the centenary of the First World War, in 14 series, from 2014 to 2018.

Ghosts of Heathrow, with Paul McGann was broadcast in 2014. Recorded on location, An Angel in Miami and Elsinor were broadcast on Radio 4 in 2019.

gollark: There's an ore scanner example in there somewhere.
gollark: You don't need to use crafting. Turtles can (un)equip at runtime from their inventory.
gollark: GTech™ has refined this capability over several years. Although not very much.
gollark: Flight is done by using the entity sensor to sense your current look direction and whatever, and then kinetic-augmentally boosting you in that direction.
gollark: It probably has a kinetic augment, if you use it for flight.

References

  1. Register of Births Marriages and Deaths via Ancestry.com
  2. Willey, Omar. "The Ghastly Impermanence: An Interview with Sebastian Bączkiewicz". The Seattle Star. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  3. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b072sb6l
  4. "Sebastian Baczkiewicz Radio Plays". Suttonelms.org.uk. Retrieved 20 December 2012.
  5. "BBC Radio 4 Extra - Arthur". BBC. Retrieved 28 January 2020.



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