Ben Richards (writer)
Ben Richards (born 1964) is an English writer. Before writing novels and TV dramas, he worked for three years as a housing officer in Newham and Islington, London. As a research student at UCL's Department of Geography[1] he spent a year investigating public housing in Chile and on his return to Britain began his first novel "to alleviate the boredom of analysing questionnaires" for his PhD thesis.[2] Richards was a lecturer at the University of Birmingham and at University College London, where he taught development studies, specialising in South America.[2] He is now a full-time writer.
Ben Richards | |
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Born | 1964 (age 56–57) England, UK |
Occupation | Novelist, screenwriter and television producer. |
Period | 1996–present |
Genre | Drama, adventure, science fiction |
His novels are Throwing the House out of the Window (1996), Don't Step on the Lines (1997), The Silver River (1999), A Sweetheart Deal (2001), The Mermaid and the Drunks (2004) and Confidence (2006). He also contributed to the New Puritans anthology of 2000.
As a screenwriter, Richards has written for the BBC (Spooks and Party Animals), ITV (The Fixer) and Channel 4 (No Angels). He is the creator and writer of Outcasts. He has also written for the British/French crime drama television series The Tunnel.
Writing credits
Production | Notes | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|
Spooks | 16 episodes (2003–2006, 2008–2009) | BBC One |
No Angels | 3 episodes (2004–2005) | Channel 4 |
Party Animals | 6 episodes (2007) | BBC Two |
The Fixer | 9 episodes (2008–2009) | ITV |
Outcasts | 8 episodes (2011) | BBC One |
The Tunnel | 12 episodes (2013-2016) | Sky Atlantic Canal+ |
Fortitude | "Episode #1.7" (2015) | Sky Atlantic |
Strike | 3 episodes (2017) | BBC One HBO |
Cobra | 6 episodes (2020) | Sky One Altice Studio |
References
- "Prof. Alan Gilbert > Research Students". UCL Department of Geography. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
- Ben Richards (8 January 2001). "Confessions of a former housing officer". The Guardian.