Written by Jon Williams
As the British television series Doctor Who moves toward its 50th anniversary, to be celebrated with a television special in November, the show’s producers wanted to add a new edge to a classic enemy, the Cybermen. To do so, they turned to popular fantasy writer Neil Gaiman, who penned the episode “Nightmare in Silver,” which aired earlier this month. It was Season 7’s penultimate episode. Gaiman previously contributed an episode, “The Doctor’s Wife,” to the series’ sixth season.
Even before
writing for the series, Gaiman was no stranger to Doctor Who, having watched the series since the very beginning,
when he was a young child. Along with fantasy classics like The
Lord of the Rings and The
Chronicles of Narnia, it helped to set a tone that would serve him well
in his coming career.
Gaiman began
his career in journalism, writing for a number of British publications. He
moved from there into comics and graphic novels. In 1990, he published his
first novel, Good
Omens, in collaboration with fellow fantasist Terry Pratchett. His
first solo novel, Neverwhere,
was actually a novelisation of a screenplay he wrote for a BBC miniseries. He
followed that with Stardust
in 1999, which was turned into a
film starring Claire Danes, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Robert DeNiro in 2007.
Gaiman’s latest work, The
Ocean at the End of the Lane, will be released on June 18, and has
received a great deal of advance acclaim.
Of course,
not all of Gaiman’s fiction is aimed at an adult audience. He is also an
acclaimed children’s author, known for works such as Coraline
(upon which the innovative
animated film was based). In 2008 he released The
Graveyard Book, a Newbery Medal and Hugo Award winner based heavily
upon Rudyard Kipling’s classic The
Jungle Book. His next children’s title, Fortunately, the Milk, is scheduled for release in September.
Gaiman also
writes for film and screen, having co-written the script for 2007’s Beowulf.
In addition to the episodes he wrote for Doctor
Who, he also wrote an episode for season five of the sci-fi TV series Babylon
5. Currently he’s adapting his novel American Gods into a television series for HBO, which is
tentatively slated to begin airing sometime later this year. He’s also writing
a sequel to that book, which will be incorporated into the series’ later
seasons.
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