Chris Lang

Chris Lang

Publicity photo of Lang taken in 2014.
Born 1961 (age 5455)
Peckham, London, England
Occupation Screenwriter, television producer
Nationality British
Period 1993–present
Notable works Amnesia (2004)
Torn (2007)
A Mother's Son (2012)
Undeniable (2014)
Unforgotten (2015)

Chris Lang (born 1961) is a British television writer, actor and producer.

Career

Screenwriter

Lang has written for many British television series but is best known as the writer, creator and executive producer of the critically acclaimed Unforgotten. The series starred Nicola Walker, Trevor Eve, Sir Tom Courtenay, Sanjeev Bhaskar and Bernard Hill.[8] and was first broadcast in Autumn 2015. In November 2015, ITV announced it would be returning for a second series, with filming set to begin in June 2016.[1]

He has written a number of British television series including Undeniable starring Peter Firth and Claire Goose,[2] (April 2014); A Mother's Son starring Hermione Norris, Paul McGann and Martin Clunes (September 2012) which was nominated for a Broadcast Award,[3] and adapted as a single film for TF1 in France, as Tu Es Mon Fils (April 2015) starring Anne Marivin;[4] and Torn, starring Holly Aird and Nicola Walker, which was nominated for an RTS award.[5]

Lang began his career as a television writer with The Bill, for which he wrote many episodes, and for which he won a Writer's Guild award. He went on to write episodes for shows including Casualty, Soldier Soldier, The Knock, Reach for the Moon, The Palace, POW, Primeval, Hustle and most recently The Tunnel for Sky Atlantic. In 2001, he wrote and created his first original drama series The Glass, which starred John Thaw and Sarah Lancashire.[6] Since then his original dramas have included Sirens, Unconditional Love, Amnesia (which was nominated for an Edgar Award),[7] Lawless, and The Reckoning.

In 2007, he co-founded the production company TXTV, for whom he has acted as executive producer on The Little House and most of his original drama series.

Actor

He trained as an actor at RADA, graduating in 1983, and as an actor worked on such British television series as Shadow of the Noose, Drop the Dead Donkey, Outside Edge, A Dance to the Music of Time and All Along the Watchtower. In his youth, he formed a comedy revue called The Jockeys of Norfolk with Andy Taylor and Hugh Grant.[8] As a voice actor, he has contributed to films and TV programmes such as A Monkey's Tale and Kipper.

Selected work

Awards and nominations

Notes

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.