Sneha Girap (Editor)

David Whitaker (screenwriter)

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Cause of death
  
Cancer

Plays
  
The Curse of the Daleks

Role
  
Television writer


Name
  
David Whitaker

Years active
  
1957–73

Shows
  
Doctor Who

David Whitaker (screenwriter) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen997Dav

Full Name
  
David Arthur Whitaker

Born
  
18 April 1928 (
1928-04-18
)
Knebworth, Hertfordshire, England, United Kingdom

Occupation
  
TV script editor and writer

Known for
  
First Doctor Who script editor

Died
  
February 4, 1980, Fulham, United Kingdom

Books
  
Doctor Who and the Daleks

Movies
  
Dr Who and the Daleks, Daleks – Invasion Earth: 21, Subterfuge, Doctor Who: The Crusade

Similar People
  
Terry Nation, Terrance Dicks, Malcolm Hulke, Barry Letts, Verity Lambert

David Whitaker (18 April 1928 in Knebworth, Hertfordshire – 4 February 1980 in Fulham, London) was an English television writer and novelist known for his work in the early years of the science-fiction TV series Doctor Who. He served as the programme's first story editor, supervising the writing of its first 51 episodes from 1963 to 1964.

Contents

Career

Prior to joining the BBC, Whitaker worked as a writer, actor and director with the York Repertory Group. A play he wrote for them, ‘A Choice of Partners’ (1957), gained the attention of the BBC’s script department. They commissioned Whitaker to work on the programmes Garry Halliday (1962) and the long-running Compact (1962).

Whitaker also contributed his own scripts for a number of Doctor Who serials, including The Crusade (1965), The Power of the Daleks (1966), The Evil of the Daleks (1967), The Enemy of the World (1967–68) and The Wheel in Space (1968, from a story concept by Kit Pedler). Although he left the post of story editor in 1964 his final script for the show was The Ambassadors of Death (1970). He had not planned to stay longer than a year as Doctor Who's story editor, as he thought the serial might not be renewed. He had therefore agreed to take up a role working on another production. His other work included writing the Dalek comic strip for the weekly children's magazine TV Century 21, in addition to the stage play The Curse of the Daleks (1965).

In 1964, Whitaker published the first novelisation of a Doctor Who serial; more than 150 other such books would be published in the course of the next 30 years). His own, Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks, was based on Terry Nation's script for the first Dalek TV serial. He completed a second novelisation the following year, this time based on his own script for The Crusade. Both books were originally published by Frederick Muller, with the first also being given a paperback release by Armada. In 1973, Whitaker's novelisations (along with a third, written by Bill Strutton and based on The Web Planet) were re-issued by Target Books as part of its launch of a new series of novelisations; Whitaker's Dalek story was re-titled Doctor Who and the Daleks.

From 1966 to 1968 Whitaker was the chairman of the Writers Guild of Great Britain.

Before his death in 1980, Whitaker had been undergoing treatment for cancer. He died leaving his novelisation of The Enemy of the World unfinished and his plans to adapt The Evil of the Daleks unrealised. The adaptation of The Enemy of the World was ultimately written by Ian Marter without using any of the material prepared by Whitaker, while The Evil of the Daleks was eventually novelised by John Peel and published in 1993.

As writer (1963–69)

  • The Edge of Destruction
  • The Rescue
  • The Crusade
  • The Power of the Daleks (Patrick Troughton's first serial as the Second Doctor, with uncredited script re-writes by Dennis Spooner)
  • The Evil of the Daleks
  • The Enemy of the World (with uncredited re-writes by Barry Letts and Derrick Sherwin)
  • The Wheel in Space (from a story by Kit Pedler)
  • The Ambassadors of Death (with uncredited re-writes by Terrance Dicks, Trevor Ray and Malcolm Hulke)
  • Although tasked with writing the serial that would later be produced as The Invasion (1968), Whitaker was ultimately unable to contribute a script, leaving then-story editor and future Doctor Who producer Derrick Sherwin to write it himself.

    As story editor (1963–64)

  • An Unearthly Child
  • The Daleks
  • The Edge of Destruction
  • Marco Polo
  • The Keys of Marinus
  • The Aztecs
  • The Sensorites
  • The Reign of Terror
  • Planet of Giants
  • The Dalek Invasion of Earth
  • References

    David Whitaker (screenwriter) Wikipedia