
Terry Nation started his career writing jokes. He worked on many radio
shows, including
The Goon Show and
Tony Hancock, before
turning to the more lucrative world of television drama. There he
contributed scripts to many of the most popular shows of the 60's and
70's, including
The Persuaders,
The Avengers, and
The
Saint. It was during this period that he created perhaps his most
famous, and certainly his most enduring characters: the Daleks, the
pepper pots with attitude for
Dr Who. The Daleks would later go
on to menace the universe in a number of series, two films, and even
the Oxford English Dictionary.
As well as working on other peoples series, he created his own, most
notably
Survivors (the tale of a group of people who survive a
deadly plague which obliterates the world's population) and
Blake's
7. Originally pitched as "The Dirty Dozen In Space", the challenge -
to come up a series that would appeal to both children and adults,
replacing
Survivors and
Doomwatch - was a tall order but
Nation's concept (which became more like Robin Hood than The Dirty Dozen)
was tremendously popular, and the final episode was watched by more than
9 million viewers.
Nation wrote the entire first series and many episodes for the second and
third before he moved to California in 1979. There he worked as a writer
and producer for the likes Columbia and 20th Century Fox, hoping to achieve
larger scale success than he could in the UK. He continued doing what he
did best, but his work did not take off in the same way as before, and it
was there that he died on the 9th of March 1997 aged just 66.
With the continuing popularity of many of his series - both
Blake's 7
and the
Avengers seem to be enjoying a resurgence, while
Dr Who
continues to make money in video and merchandise sales - we can be sure
that Terry Nation's imprint on the national psyche will remain for some time
to come.