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Laurence Marks (British writer)
Laurence Marks (born 8 December 1948) is a British screenwriter and one half of writing duo Marks and Gran (with Maurice Gran).
| Laurence Marks |
|---|
| (1948-12-08) 8 December 1948London, England |
| Scriptwriter |
| 1979–present |
| Television |
| Holding the Fort (1980–82)Shine on Harvey Moon (1982–85, 1995)Roll Over Beethoven (1985)The New Statesman (1987–92)Birds of a Feather (1989–98, 2014–2020)Love Hurts (1992–94)Get Back (1992–93)Goodnight Sweetheart (1993–99, 2016)Unfinished Business (1998–99)Believe Nothing (2002)Mumbai Calling (2007) |
Laurence Marks (born 8 December 1948) is a British screenwriter and one half of writing duo Marks and Gran (with Maurice Gran).
Born to a Jewish family, Marks attended Holloway Comprehensive School (formerly Holloway County Grammar School until 1955).
Marks became a reporter for a local weekly paper, the Tottenham Weekly Herald. In 1975, he was working as a freelance journalist when he was asked to report from the scene of the Moorgate tube crash. He only discovered later that his father, Bernard Marks, was one of 43 victims of the accident.
Soon after, Marks joined The Sunday Times' Insight investigative journalism team, and reported in depth on the investigation into the crash. In 2006, Marks made a documentary for Channel 4, Me, My Dad and Moorgate, in which he rejected the verdict of accidental death by the coroner's jury, and advocated his theory that the driver of the train had committed suicide by crashing the train.
Marks also worked as writer/researcher for Thames Television's current affairs programme, This Week. Following a chance encounter with comedy writer Barry Took, he and childhood friend Maurice Gran got an opportunity to write a radio show for comedian Frankie Howerd, which led to their becoming full-time comedy writers.
Marks subsequently wrote with Gran the TV comedy-drama Shine on Harvey Moon (1982–85, 1995) and the popular sitcoms The New Statesman (1987–92), Birds of a Feather (1989–98, 2014–2020) and Goodnight Sweetheart (1993–99, 2016). They are also the authors of Prudence at Number 10, a fictional diary written as though by a P.A. of prime minister Gordon Brown. Their theatre works include Dreamboats and Petticoats, Von Ribbentrop’s Watch, Love Me Do, Playing God, Save the Last Dance for Me, and Dreamboats and Miniskirts.
Marks is an Arsenal fan and wrote the book A Fan for All Seasons (1999), a diary of his life as a writer and an Arsenal supporter. He is a member of the Labour Party.
| Production | Notes | Broadcaster |
|---|---|---|
| The Marti Caine Show | 5 episodes (1980) | BBC2 |
| Roots | 6 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1981) | ITV |
| Holding the Fort | 20 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1980–1982) | ITV |
| Shine on Harvey Moon | 25 episodes (1982, 1984–1985, 1995) | ITV |
| Roll Over Beethoven | 12 episodes (1985) | ITV |
| Relative Strangers | 3 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1985–1987) | Channel 4 |
| The Bretts | 3 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1987) | ITV |
| Alan B'Stard Closes Down the BBC | Comic Relief special (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1988) | BBC1 |
| Young, Gifted and Broke | 7 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1989) | ITV |
| Snakes and Ladders | 7 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1989) | Channel 4 |
| Birds of a Feather | 102 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1989–1994, 1996–1998) | BBC1 |
| Bullseye! | Feature film (co-written with Leslie Bricusse, Maurice Gran, Nick Mead and Michael Winner, 1990) | N/A |
| So You Think You've Got Troubles | 6 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1991) | BBC1 |
| Screen One | "Wall of Silence" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1993) | BBC1 |
| Get Back | 10 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1992–1993) | BBC1 |
| Love Hurts | 30 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1992–1994) | BBC1 |
| The New Statesman | 29 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1987–1992) | ITVBBC1 |
| A. B'Stard Exposed | Television film (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1994) | BBC1 |
| Goodnight Sweetheart | 59 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1993–1999, 2016) | BBC1 |
| Mosley | 4 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran and Nicholas Mosley, 1998) | Channel 4 |
| Unfinished Business | 12 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1998–1999) | BBC One |
| Starting Out | 8 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 1999) | BBC One |
| Believe Nothing | 6 episodes (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2002) | ITV |
| The Last Laugh | "Pilot" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2005) | BBC Three |
| Mumbai Calling | "Pilot" (co-written with Maurice Gran and Sanjeev Bhaskar, 2007) | ITV |
| Birds of a Feather | 8 episodes (2014–2020): |
"Gimme Shelter" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2014) "Hot Stuff" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2014) "Tattoo You" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2014) "Back to Zero" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2014) "Text Santa Special" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2014) "Birds on a Plane" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2014) "Guess Who's Coming to Essex?" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2015) "The Chief, The Cook, His Mum and Her Lodger" (co-written with Maurice Gran, 2015) | ITV |
| Year | Award | Work | Category | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1990 | British Academy Television Awards | The New Statesman | Best Comedy Series (with Tony Charles, Geoffrey Sax and Maurice Gran) | Nominated | |
| 1991 | British Academy Television Awards | Best Comedy Series (with Tony Charles, Geoffrey Sax and Maurice Gran) | Won |
- Official website
- Laurence Marks at IMDb
- Laurence Marks at the BFI's Screenonline
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