Christopher Wicking | |
Birth Date: | 1943 |
Birth Place: | London, England United Kingdom |
Death Date: | 2008 |
Death Place: | Toulouse, France |
Occupation: | Film and television screenwriter |
Spouse: | the stage director Lily Susan Todd |
Christopher Wicking (10 January 1943 – 13 October 2008), also known as Chris Wicking, was a British screenwriter, often in the horror and fantasy genres, notably for the British arm of American International Pictures and with Hammer Film Productions,[1] for whom he was the last 'resident script editor'.[2]
Wicking was born in London and educated at Coopers' Company's School.[1] While studying at St Martin's School of Art, London, he determined to break into the film industry.
He began as a film booking clerk for Anglo-Amalgamated Film Distributors and, while working as an assistant film editor on documentaries in London, he began writing profiles of directors for the influential French movie magazine Cahiers du cinéma. He was a lifelong fan of westerns and wrote movie feature articles and interviews about the genre for various British magazines including the Monthly Film Bulletin and Time Out.[3] He also continued to write for French magazines including Cahiers du cinéma, Positif[3] and Midi Minuit Fantastique.[4]
His first credit as a screenwriter[1] was on the 1969 movie The Oblong Box, initially with Michael Reeves and, after Reeves' death, for director Gordon Hessler. Although Wicking was only credited for "additional dialogue", Hessler later verbally credited him as writing the entire filmed script.[3]
Wicking also wrote episodes for British TV series The Professionals (1979–1982),[3] Jemima Shore Investigates and the TV dramas The Way to Dusty Death (1995),[3] On Dangerous Ground (1996).[3] and Powers (2004).[5]
He taught screenwriting at various UK institutions including the Royal College of Art, the Arvon Foundation, the National Film and Television School, Leeds Metropolitan University and King Alfred's College, Winchester; and, in Ireland, at University College Dublin, the Dublin Institute of Technology and the Irish Film Institute's Education Department.[4] It was said that he had a fondness for "termite art" - less "precious" work that valued personal vision and idiosyncrasy.
Wicking died of a heart attack[6] in Toulouse, France, on 13 October 2008.
The Madness of Mickey Hamilton (1979);[7] The Gun (1980);[8] Discovered in a Graveyard (1982) [9]