Louis Marks(1928-2010)
- Script and Continuity Department
- Writer
- Producer
The son of a London jeweller, Louis Marks took the unusual step of
moving from the world of academia, as head of history at a boarding
school, to writing and producing for television. A serious scholar with
a PhD in history from Balliol College, Oxford, author of magazine
articles and founder/editor of the journal Books and Bookmen, Marks
entered television in 1959 by contributing four scripts to
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1955).
This led to more steady work as writer for ITC's The Four Just Men (1959) and as script editor of Associated-Rediffusion's crime series No Hiding Place (1959). He joined the BBC in the same capacity in 1970, eventually rising to becoming a producer of high-quality, critically-acclaimed single dramas and miniseries, specialising in the classics (including, Silas Marner (1985), Middlemarch (1994), Daniel Deronda (2002) and a series of staged plays, Theatre Night (1985)).
Marks also tackled supernatural themes, beginning with the ghost story The Stone Tape (1972) as script editor and including (as scriptwriter) several key chapters of Doctor Who (1963), notably Day of the Daleks: Episode One (1972) (which introduced the simian Ogrons and dealt with some of the complexities and issues that come with time travel), Planet of Evil: Part One (1975) and The Masque of Mandragora: Part One (1976) (an assignment for which he was eminently qualified, having worked in Florence to research the history of Renaissance Italy). Marks left the BBC in 2002 to operate a B&B with his wife, who predeceased him in 2006.
This led to more steady work as writer for ITC's The Four Just Men (1959) and as script editor of Associated-Rediffusion's crime series No Hiding Place (1959). He joined the BBC in the same capacity in 1970, eventually rising to becoming a producer of high-quality, critically-acclaimed single dramas and miniseries, specialising in the classics (including, Silas Marner (1985), Middlemarch (1994), Daniel Deronda (2002) and a series of staged plays, Theatre Night (1985)).
Marks also tackled supernatural themes, beginning with the ghost story The Stone Tape (1972) as script editor and including (as scriptwriter) several key chapters of Doctor Who (1963), notably Day of the Daleks: Episode One (1972) (which introduced the simian Ogrons and dealt with some of the complexities and issues that come with time travel), Planet of Evil: Part One (1975) and The Masque of Mandragora: Part One (1976) (an assignment for which he was eminently qualified, having worked in Florence to research the history of Renaissance Italy). Marks left the BBC in 2002 to operate a B&B with his wife, who predeceased him in 2006.