Peter Moffat | |
---|---|
Born | Edinburgh, Scotland | June 2, 1962
Occupation | Playwright and screenwriter |
Spouse | Leonora Klein |
Alexander Peter Moffat (born 2 June 1962) [1] [2] is a British playwright and screenwriter.
Moffat was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, [1] to John Laidlaw Moffat, who was in the Royal Military Police, and Norma Guthrie. His grandfather and great-grandfather were shepherds in Tweedsmuir. [3] Their lives inspired his TV series The Village. Moffat's father joined the Colonial Police Force in Tanganyika and later the Army, so the family, including young Peter, moved from country to country every two years, [4] which inspired his series The Last Post . [5]
Moffat's first play was Fine and Private Place and was broadcast on BBC Radio in 1997. [6] His best-known plays are Nabokov's Gloves and Iona Rain. [7]
Moffat is a former barrister; one of his early commissions was for an episode of Kavanagh QC . He has since created three British television legal dramas: North Square , Criminal Justice and Silk . He also wrote the miniseries Cambridge Spies and the television film Einstein and Eddington , as well as a reinterpretation of William Shakespeare's Macbeth for the BBC's ShakespeaRe-Told series. [8]
Moffat wrote the historical drama The Village , depicting life in a Derbyshire village through the eyes of a central character, Bert Middleton. The first series, covering the years 1914 to 1920 in six episodes, premiered on BBC1 in 2013, and a second and final series, set in the 1920s, was made in 2014. [9] Moffat envisions more series totalling up to 42 episodes that will continue the story through the 20th century. The proposed project is similar to the German film series Heimat , written and directed by Edgar Reitz, which told the story of a German family from 1919 to 2000. [10]
The BBC broadcast Moffat's drama series Undercover in 2016. [11] Moffat took inspiration for the fictional drama from real-life revelations about British police officers who had formed long-term relationships with activists they were investigating while undercover, as well as from the London Metropolitan Police Service's secret surveillance of the family of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence. [12]
His drama series Your Honor , starring Bryan Cranston as a conflicted New Orleans judge, began its run on Showtime on 6 December 2020.
In 2022, it was announced that Moffat would be writing a new film called Scoop based on Prince Andrew's 2019 interview with Newsnight. [13]
In February 2024, it was reported that Moffat was writing a drama series about the contaminated blood scandal for ITV. [14]
Moffat won the Writer's Award from the Broadcasting Press Guild for North Square, [15] and was nominated for a BAFTA Award in 2004 for writing Hawking , a TV drama about the scientist Stephen Hawking. [16] In 2009, he was awarded two BAFTAs for Criminal Justice, one for Best Television Drama Serial [17] and one for Best Craft Writer. [18]
Peter Moffat is married to barrister and author Leonora Klein [19] and has two children. [4]
Steven William Moffat is a Scottish television writer, television producer and screenwriter. He is best known for his work as the second showrunner and head writer of the 2005 revival of the BBC sci-fi television series Doctor Who (2010-17), and for co-creating and co-writing the BBC crime drama television series Sherlock (2010-17). In the 2015 Birthday Honours, Moffat was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his services to drama.
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Sherlock is a British mystery crime drama television series based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes detective stories. Created by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss, the show stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Doctor John Watson. Thirteen episodes have been produced, with four three-part series airing from 2010 to 2017 and a special episode that aired on 1 January 2016. The series is set in the present day in which it aired, while the one-off special features a Victorian period fantasy resembling the original Holmes stories. Sherlock is produced by the British network BBC, along with Hartswood Films, with Moffat, Gatiss, Sue Vertue and Rebecca Eaton serving as executive producers. The series is supported by the American station WGBH-TV Boston for its Masterpiece anthology series on PBS, where it also airs in the United States. The series is primarily filmed in Cardiff, Wales, with North Gower Street in London used for exterior shots of Holmes and Watson's 221B Baker Street residence.
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The Village is a BBC television series written by Peter Moffat. The drama is set in a Derbyshire village in the early 20th century. The first series of what Moffat hoped would become a 42-hour televised drama following an extended family through the 20th century, was broadcast in spring 2013 and covered the years 1914 to 1920. A second series was broadcast in autumn 2014, and continued the story into the 1920s. The programme did not return after the second series.
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