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Peter Harness

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Peter Harness

Books
  
Singular (male) Voices

Years active
  
2005–present

Movies
  
Is Anybody There?

Occupation
  
Dramatist, actor

Education
  
Oriel College, Oxford

Alma mater
  
University of Oxford

Role
  
Playwright


Peter Harness www4picturesgizimbiocomPeterHarnessAnybody

Born
  
1976 (age 39–40)
Hornsea, East Yorkshire, England

Television
  
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell Wallander Case Histories City of Vice Doctor Who

TV shows
  
Wallander, Case Histories, City of Vice, Doctor Who

Shows
  
Wallander, 1066: The Battle for Middle Earth

Similar People
  
John Crowley, Conor McPherson, Marc Turtletaub, Peter Saraf, David Heyman

Writer peter harness adapting a novel


Peter Harness (born 1976) is an English playwright, screenwriter and actor. He grew up in Hornsea, East Yorkshire and attended Oriel College, Oxford where he studied English and graduated with a first. He is a former president of the Oxford Revue. He was one of Screen International's Stars of Tomorrow, 2007 and is a recipient of the Dennis Potter Screenwriting Award.

Contents

Writer peter harness first draft


Career

Mongoose, his first original stage play, was performed at the Southwark Playhouse in 2003 (directed by Thea Sharrock) and later at the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh and the Trafalgar Studios, London. The text is published by Nick Hern Books.

In 2005, he adapted the M.R. James short story "A View From A Hill" for BBC4. It was the first in a new annual series of BBC Ghost Stories for Christmas. Harness went on to write several other single films for BBC4, including a biopic of Frankie Howerd, Rather You Than Me, starring David Walliams and Rafe Spall, which was part of the Curse of Comedy season, as well as the Spanish Flu drama, The Forgotten Fallen, starring Bill Paterson, Mark Gatiss and Charlotte Riley, which dealt with the efforts of a medical team in Manchester to combat the disease in 1918.

Harness was the lead writer of the third and fourth seasons of the BBC's Wallander, starring Kenneth Branagh. He wrote all of season three, comprising three films: The Dogs of Riga, Before the Frost, and a new story developed by Henning Mankell and Harness called An Event in Autumn. He wrote two out of three films for season four, A Lesson in Love and The Troubled Man, and was executive producer for the series as a whole.

Aside from Wallander, Harness has worked on several other successful series. City of Vice, starring Ian McDiarmid and Iain Glen, was shown on Channel Four to critical acclaim. Harness (along with co-writer Clive Bradley) was nominated for a Writers Guild of Great Britain Award for Best Series. In 2011, he adapted Kate Atkinson's novel When Will There Be Good News? as part of the BBC1 series Case Histories, starring Jason Isaacs as private detective Jackson Brodie. Harness's episodes of the series won a Scottish BAFTA for Best Television Drama, 2011. Harness also adapted the fourth Jackson Brodie book, Started Early, Took My Dog for the second series of Case Histories, which filmed in Summer 2012.

His first original screenplay, Is Anybody There? was filmed by award-winning Irish director John Crowley in 2007. The movie, set in an old people's home, starred Michael Caine, David Morrissey, Anne-Marie Duff and Bill Milner. It was premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, 2008, and released theatrically across Europe and the US in 2009. Harness was nominated for a Writers Guild Award for the film.

He has also been active in the Malmö theatre community as part of the theatre group Teater Insite both as an actor and a writer.

In November 2012 it was announced that he would adapt Susanna Clarke's novel Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell into a television series of the same name.

In April 2014 it was announced that he would be writing the seventh episode for the eighth series of Doctor Who, starring Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor. The episode is titled "Kill the Moon".

On 8 May 2015, the BBC press office officially confirmed Harness would be writing a 2-part story titled "The Zygon Invasion" and "The Zygon Inversion" (the latter co-written with Steven Moffat) for the ninth series of Doctor Who. The story sees the return of UNIT, Jemma Redgrave, Ingrid Oliver and the Zygons. He also co-wrote the seventh episode of the tenth series with Steven Moffat, titled "The Pyramid at the End of the World".

References

Peter Harness Wikipedia