Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gallagher was later lead writer and story supervisor on NBC's 13-part series Crusoe, screened in 2008/2009, and contributed two episodes to the US version of Eleventh Hour including Medea, the season finale. In 2009 he served as Co-Executive Producer on Bruckheimer's crime show The Forgotten, starring Christian Slater.
Described by The Guardian as ITV's "answer to The X Files", [2] the series was inspired by, but unconnected to, the 1991 Channel 4 thriller Gray Clay Dolls, which broadcast under the Chiller banner, the series featured writing contributions from renowned playwrights Stephen Gallagher, Glenn Chandler and Anthony Horowitz. [1]
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Material was added to the scripts by producer Simon Stephenson after the early episodes went into production, and creator Stephen Gallagher left his role on the series because of it. Gallagher claimed that the reason behind his departure was because his essentially "science-based crime-drama" had unwanted sci-fi material written into it without ...
Oktober is a three-part British television psychological thriller, written and directed by Stephen Gallagher, that first broadcast on ITV on 2 April 1998. Based upon Gallagher's 1988 novel of the same name, [1] the series stars Stephen Tompkinson as Jim Harper, a schoolteacher who finds himself drawn into an international conspiracy when a pharmaceutical company eyeball him to be the human ...
Discover the best free online games at AOL.com - Play board, card, casino, puzzle and many more online games while chatting with others in real-time.
The only time I ever played hockey on an ice rink and wore the full equipment was at Madison Square Garden, with former N.Y. Rangers [in front of] 13,000 people. I didn’t have a heart attack. 24.
Gallagher had previously adapted the novel as a 90 minute dramatised audio drama for BBC Radio 4 in 1985. [1] The theme music of the TV mini-series was " Roisin Dubh " by Nigel Hess and Chameleon . Although set in rural Cumbria, filming took place in North Yorkshire with the village of Kettlewell providing the outdoor scenes.