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John Fay (writer)

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
John Fay

Role
  
Television writer


Occupation
  
Screenwriter, playwright

Genre
  
Drama, soap opera, science fiction

Notable works
  
Brookside, Coronation Street, Torchwood, Mobile

Notable awards
  
Best Continuing Drama 2005 Coronation Street

Movies and TV shows
  
The Mill, The Gathering, Mobile

Books
  
The Helicopter: History, Piloting and how it Flies, Kernel Functions, Analytic Torsion and Moduli Spaces

Awards
  
British Academy Television Award for Best Soap and Continuing Drama

Similar People
  
Kerrie Hayes, Michael Kitchen, Paul Abbott, Jamie Draven, Tony Warren

Profiles

John Fay is a British television writer, and playwright from Merseyside. He is known for his work on television soap operas Brookside and Coronation Street as well as his later work on original dramatic production.

Contents

Television career

Fay began his television career on Brookside, although he states in an interview that it took him 16 years and several speculative scripts to get taken on to the writing staff full-time. He stayed on the creative team for two years, writing 54 episodes, before joining the writing staff of Coronation Street, writing 94 episodes and becoming lead writer. In 2005 he received the British Academy Television Award for Best Continuing Drama, sharing the BAFTA with Coronation Street producer Tony Wood and director Ian Bevitt. One of his notable scripts for Coronation Street was "Richard Hillman's murder confession" which attracted over 19 million viewers. Fay's other television contributions include episodes of Clocking Off, Blue Murder and Robin Hood. In 2007, Fay created the three-part ITV drama series Mobile. Fay is a self-confessed hater of mobile telephones and in Mobile chose to explore the themes of "people's paranoid desire to always be in contact with each other" and whether mobile phones are actually necessary.

Russell T Davies, having been an admirer of John Fay's work on Coronation Street and Mobile, approached Fay to write for the third series of Torchwood. Fay wrote two episodes of the award-winning third series of Torchwood, subtitled Children of Earth, which aired 7 and 9 July 2009. He returned to write the ninth episode of the shows' fourth series, Torchwood: Miracle Day a collaboration between BBC Wales, BBC Worldwide and US cable channel Starz. In 2011 he also wrote for the fourth series of Primeval.

Fay has written two episodes of the Jimmy McGovern Drama Moving On, Sauce for the Goose – the first episode of the second series, and an episode of the third series, airing Autumn 2011, which he will also direct. He is in the progress of writing an upcoming episode of Doctor Who.

Theatre writing

Fay began his writing career by writing and producing his own stage plays for local theatres around Liverpool, including several plays for Kirkby Response Theatre during the nineties. His later credits include the stage plays The Cruel Sea and Eat My Eyes. He has also written 'Joe Hill's Dream', based on the life of Joe Hill, the famous Swedish-American labour activist and songwriter.

Personal life

John Fay is originally from Merseyside, and is currently based in Maghull, to the north of Liverpool, where he lives with his wife. His father died shortly before he came to write Children of Earth, which Fay acknowledges when retroactively considering his views on the serial. He cites John Proctor from Arthur Miller's The Crucible as his favourite fictional character of all time, and Rhys Williams as his favourite Torchwood character.

Selected credits

  • Coronation Street (2003–2007)
  • Blue Murder
  • Up in Smoke (2004)
  • The Spartacus Thing (2006)
  • Mobile (2007)
  • Three Episodes
  • Robin Hood
  • Episode #2.9: Lardner's Ring (2007)
  • Torchwood
  • Children of Earth: Day Two (2009)
  • Children of Earth: Day Four (2009)
  • Torchwood Miracle Day: The Gathering (2011)
  • Primeval
  • Episode #4.5 (2011)
  • The Mill (2013)
  • References

    John Fay (writer) Wikipedia