Bill Strutton
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Bill Strutton | |
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Born | William Harold Strutton 23 February 1918 |
Died | 23 November 2003 | (aged 85)
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation | screenwriter |
Known for | Doctor Who, Ivanhoe |
William Harold "Bill" Strutton (23 February 1918 – 23 November 2003)[1] was a screenwriter and novelist from South Australia. He worked on some of the best-remembered 1960s television shows including Ivanhoe, The Saint, The Avengers, Riptide and Doctor Who.
Early life
Born in Australia, Bill Strutton won a state scholarship to university at 14 but dropped out after two years to go and work as an office clerk in Adelaide. At the outbreak of WWII he joined the Australian army. He was captured by the Germans in Crete and sent to Stalag VII, learning to swear in several languages. It was there he also began to take an interest in writing. He says: "My first year as a prisoner-of-war was the most interesting in my life. The ensuing three were the most boring, but more instructive, I think, than any university. I learned several languages: German from a Serbian horse-doctor; Spanish from a Basque; a Parisian taxi-driver bequeathed me a startling vocabulary. I also ran a camp newspaper, caught up on my reading, and finally celebrated my liberation by tearing up a novel." After being demobbed, he lived in England. In 1961 he lived with his Australian wife, Marguerite and two children in Woddingham, East Surrey.
Career
After the war he took up journalism as a career and in the mid-fifties he began writing military books, including The Secret Invaders, A Jury of Angels in 1957 and Island of Terrible Friends in 1961. Also, three films. In 1958 he scripted Ivanhoe, which starred a young Roger Moore. He wrote for more than 15 television series in 11 years, the last of which was Strange Report, starring Anthony Quayle, and several episodes of Paul Temple before retiring in 1978 following a heart attack.
His Doctor Who story was The Web Planet in 1965. It is remembered as a unique Doctor Who serial. It was the first programme to feature a completely alien cast, including Martin Jarvis as a butterfly Menoptera, and introduced the menacing Zarbi. Two of its six episodes are amongst the handful of Doctor Who instalments to be seen by more than 13m people on original transmission. Bill Strutton went on to adapt the serial as the third Doctor Who book in 1965. In 1972, Strutton submitted another storyline to Doctor Who entitled The Mega but this was rejected and was later adapted as an audio drama that was released in 2013.
Death
Bill Strutton died on 23 November 2003, the day of Doctor Who's 40th anniversary, aged 85 years.
References
External links