Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Creator / DennisPotter

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
I think we can make the picture without the flowery descriptions.


[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dennis_potter.jpg]]
%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]

Dennis Christopher George Potter (17 May 1935 – 7 June 1994) was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride – he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" – but when Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dennis_potter.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dennis_potter_9.jpg]]
%%[[caption-width-right:350:some %%[[caption-width-right:300:some caption text]]

Dennis Christopher George Potter (17 May 1935 – 7 June 1994) was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television television in Britain. Naturally, the The MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against weren't fond of his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly but he mostly took it in his stride – he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" – but when Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.



From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works – "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works – ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres – were broadcast, one on Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

to:

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he skin. He gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating ''Series/TheSingingDetective''; he stated it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works – "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works – ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres – were broadcast, one on Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

Added: 877

Changed: 938

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride – he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" – but when Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dennis_potter.jpg]]
%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]

Dennis Christopher George Potter (17 May 1935 – 7 June 1994) was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride – he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" – but when Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

Added: 203

Changed: -12

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works – "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works – ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres – were broadcast, one on Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

to:

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works – "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works – ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres – were broadcast, one on Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.4.
----
!!Works by Dennis Potter with their own pages on this wiki include:

* ''Theatre/BlueRememberedHills''
* ''Series/LipstickOnYourCollar''
* ''Series/PenniesFromHeaven''
* ''Series/TheSingingDetective''
----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

He frequently [[GenreMashup threw multiple genres together]] - ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', for example, is part wartime childhood memoir, part detective story, part medical drama, part musical, part commentary on the nature of drama itself - and for a long time, his SignatureStyle was a scene (or multiple scenes) where a character would "sing" by miming along to a record, often non-diegetic. Another notion he returned to several times was casting full-adult actors to play children (with scaled-up props and sets), as in ''Stand Up, Nigel Barton'' and ''Blue Remembered Hills''.

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

to:

Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

He frequently [[GenreMashup threw multiple genres together]] - ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', for example, is part wartime childhood memoir, part detective story, part medical drama, part musical, part commentary on the nature of drama itself - and for a long time, his SignatureStyle was a scene (or multiple scenes) where a character would "sing" by miming along to a record, often non-diegetic. Another notion he returned to several times was casting full-adult actors to play children (with scaled-up props and sets), as in ''Stand Up, Nigel Barton'' and ''Blue Remembered Hills''.

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mary claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

to:

Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mary Mrs. Whitehouse claimed that a pivotal scene in ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.



From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after Creator/RupertMurdoch (who he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

to:

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after Creator/RupertMurdoch (who UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch (whom he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on TheBBC, Creator/TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mary claimed that a pivotal scene in TheSingingDetective, in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

He frequently [[GenreMashup threw multiple genres together]] - TheSingingDetective, for example, is part wartime childhood memoir, part detective story, part medical drama, part musical, part commentary on the nature of drama itself - and for a long time, his SignatureStyle was a scene (or multiple scenes) where a character would "sing" by miming along to a record, often non-diegetic. Another notion he returned to several times was casting full-adult actors to play children (with scaled-up props and sets), as in ''Stand Up, Nigel Barton'' and ''Blue Remembered Hills''.

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of TheSingingDetective, stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after Creator/RupertMurdoch (who he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

to:

Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mary claimed that a pivotal scene in TheSingingDetective, ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

He frequently [[GenreMashup threw multiple genres together]] - TheSingingDetective, ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', for example, is part wartime childhood memoir, part detective story, part medical drama, part musical, part commentary on the nature of drama itself - and for a long time, his SignatureStyle was a scene (or multiple scenes) where a character would "sing" by miming along to a record, often non-diegetic. Another notion he returned to several times was casting full-adult actors to play children (with scaled-up props and sets), as in ''Stand Up, Nigel Barton'' and ''Blue Remembered Hills''.

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of TheSingingDetective, ''Series/TheSingingDetective'', stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after Creator/RupertMurdoch (who he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

Dennis Potter was an influential English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist, and the creator of several landmark television dramas which pushed the boundaries of what could be shown on Television in Britain. Naturally, the MoralGuardians of his time clutched at their pearls, threw themselves bodily onto their tizzy couches, and spent long hours composing epistolary broadsides against his productions, and, occasionally, him. Mostly he took it in his stride - he remarked of Mary Whitehouse that she at least understood the "central moral importance of – to use the grandest word – art" - but when Mary claimed that a pivotal scene in TheSingingDetective, in which the protagonist witnesses his mother's adultery, was based on reality, she got sued by Potter's mother and lost, resoundingly.

He frequently [[GenreMashup threw multiple genres together]] - TheSingingDetective, for example, is part wartime childhood memoir, part detective story, part medical drama, part musical, part commentary on the nature of drama itself - and for a long time, his SignatureStyle was a scene (or multiple scenes) where a character would "sing" by miming along to a record, often non-diegetic. Another notion he returned to several times was casting full-adult actors to play children (with scaled-up props and sets), as in ''Stand Up, Nigel Barton'' and ''Blue Remembered Hills''.

From his late twenties onwards, he suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a condition that gave him both arthritis in his joints and psoriasis in his skin; he gave the same condition to the central character of TheSingingDetective, stating it was not autobiographical, but simply because he was too lazy to research another medical condition. In late 1993 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer; a few months later, in 1994, he discovered he had terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver, probably caused by the medication he took to treat his psoriasis. He continued to care for his wife until her death, and died himself nine days later. His final interview, with Melvyn Bragg, was broadcast very shortly before he passed away; in it, he drank a morphine-champagne cocktail for pain relief, chain-smoked throughout, revealed he had named his cancer "Rupert" after Creator/RupertMurdoch (who he despised), and talked about his determination to finish writing his final two works - "My only regret is if I die four pages too soon", he confessed. At his suggestion, the two works - ''Cold Lazarus'' and ''Karaoke'', linked by a character despite being in wildly different genres - were broadcast, one on TheBBC, the other on Channel 4.

Top