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David Wolstencroft

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Nationality
  
British

Occupation
  
Writer


Name
  
David Wolstencroft

Role
  
Television writer

David Wolstencroft wwwdeadlinecomvimgnetwpcontentuploads2013

Born
  
1969 (age 46–47)
Honolulu, Hawaii, United States

Alma mater
  
Emmanuel College, Cambridge

Books
  
Good News, Bad News, Contact Zero, Communication for Business, Pet Power, Pile ou face: roman

Education
  
University of Cambridge, Emmanuel College, Cambridge

Nominations
  
CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger

Movies and TV shows
  
Spooks, The Escape Artist, Shooting Dogs, Versailles, Spooks: Code 9

Similar People
  
Simon Mirren, Hugh Simon, Peter Firth, David Belton, Nicola Walker

David Wolstencroft (born 16 July 1969), is an American-born British screenwriter and author. He is best known as creator of the BAFTA award-winning TV spy drama Spooks and its spin-off series, Spooks: Code 9.

Contents

Early life

Wolstencroft was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States in 1969 and grew up in Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom, studying at George Watson's College, later going on to read history at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. While at Cambridge, he was active in the Footlights where he collaborated with Mark Evans, Sue Perkins, Andy Parsons, Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller, and had served as Footlight's vice-president and revue director.

Career

Wolstencroft won the Royal Television Society's Network Newcomer award after producing his first drama, Psychos, for Channel 4 in 1999. He then began working on Spooks. The pilot episode was watched by over 9 million people (a 41% share) and the series won a number of BAFTA awards and nominations.

More recently, he has written, created and executive produced The Escape Artist for BBC One and Versailles for Canal+ with fellow Spooks scribe and ex-Criminal Minds producer and writer Simon Mirren. Wolstencroft also wrote the screenplay for the film Shooting Dogs. He is also the author of two espionage thriller novels: Good News, Bad News and Contact Zero, which was nominated for the Ian Fleming Silver Dagger.

References

David Wolstencroft Wikipedia