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Stephen Volk

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Name
  
Stephen Volk


Role
  
Screenwriter

Stephen Volk wwwstephenvolknetuserimagesSvolk2MA931472100

Books
  
Dark Corners, Monsters in the Heart, Whitstable, Terror Tales of the Seaside, Gothic

Awards
  
BAFTA Award for Best Short Film

Movies and TV shows
  
Ghostwatch, The Awakening, Afterlife, Gothic, The Guardian

Similar People
  
Nick Murphy, David M Thompson, Lesley Sharp, Dan Greenburg, Ken Russell

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Stephen Volk (born 1954) is a Welsh screenwriter and novelist who specializes in the horror genre.

Contents

Stephen Volk Stephen Volk Writer YouTube

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Early life and work

Volk was born and raised in Pontypridd, Wales. Volk has stated his interest in horror was triggered by watching the TV drama The Stone Tape by Nigel Kneale, and the film Don't Look Now by Nicolas Roeg. He studied at Lanchester Polytechnic in Coventry, and Bristol University. Volk then worked as an advertising copywriter before becoming a full-time writer. Volk's first produced work was Ken Russell's film Gothic in 1986. Volk also wrote a script, Horror Movie, for Goldcrest Films that was never made due to Goldcrest's collapse.

Ghostwatch

His most famous work is Ghostwatch, a controversial drama shown on BBC One on Halloween 1992. It is commonly misrepresented as a hoax documentary, but this was never the intention. It was originally planned as a six-part series for the BBC. However, the producer of the series, Ruth Baumgarten, didn't believe it had commercial viability. Stephen reworked the script so that everything would be set "Like episode six" and repitched it as a 90-minute live broadcast drama on behalf of BBC's Screen One drama segment. Ruth accepted the new format.

Other Work

Volk's TV work often involves the supernatural and the paranormal, such as with the ITV1 thriller series Afterlife (2005–06). Volk has written fiction in the horror and ghost story genres; some of these stories were collected in the book Dark Corners (2006). Volk's fiction often features real people as characters: the novella Whitstable (2013) features the actor Peter Cushing, while Leytonstone (2015) deals with a young Alfred Hitchcock. Volk also wrote a monthly column about horror for Black Static magazine until the end of 2016.

References

Stephen Volk Wikipedia