Sue Birtwistle

Susan Elizabeth Birtwistle, Lady Eyre, (born 9 December 1945)[1] is a producer and writer of television drama. Birtwistle has won awards for several of her productions, including Hotel du Lac, Pride and Prejudice and Emma, and was one of the nominees for the 2008 BAFTA Awards for her production of Cranford.[2]

Early life

She was born in Northwich, Cheshire, England, and attended Northwich County Grammar School for Girls (now The County High School, Leftwich). She studied drama and English at Coventry College of Education (became part of the University of Warwick).

Career

She is known for producing well-known costume dramas.

Partial filmography as producer

  • Oi For England
  • Educating Marmalade
  • Dutch Girls, 1985
  • Hotel du Lac, 1986
  • Scoop, 1987
  • Ball Trap on the Cote Sauvage 1989
  • Or Shall We Die?
  • v.
  • Pride and Prejudice, 1995
  • Emma, 1996
  • Armadillo
  • King Lear
  • Wives and Daughters, 1999
  • Cranford, 2007
  • Return to Cranford, 2009

Personal life

In 2008, she was awarded an honorary doctorate at the University of Chester.[3]

She married the English film, theatre, television and opera director Richard Eyre in 1973 in Chelsea, London; they have one daughter, Lucy (born in 1974).[4]

gollark: There's no *known* reason you couldn't get them all the way to human performance. It might not be possible or it might be hilariously inefficient, but as far as I know the lines on the graphs remain straight.
gollark: Apparently this tends to improve with scale. I'm not sure if the details of Delphi are available anywhere.
gollark: Or, well, my rough model of that.
gollark: It's evidently not quite a magic 8 ball because it generally appears to agree with random humans' judgement.
gollark: I'd assume they took some kind of pretrained language model and finetuned it on crowdsourced scenario/response pairs.

References

  1. Companies House
  2. BAFTA awards site, accessed on 6 April 2008
  3. "News release". University of Chester. Archived from the original on 26 October 2008. Retrieved 6 April 2008.
  4. "Made in heaven". Daily Telegraph. 18 November 2006. Retrieved 6 April 2008.


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