William Nicholson (writer)

William Nicholson (writer)

William Nicholson (born January 12, 1948) is a BAFTA-, Oscar- and Tony-nominated British screenwriter, playwright, and novelist.

Biography

Family

A native of Tunbridge Wells, Kent, William Nicholson was raised in a Catholic family in Gloucestershire. By the time he reached his tenth birthday, he had decided to become a writer. He was educated at Downside School, Somerset, and Christ's College, Cambridge. He and his wife, Virginia, whom he married in 1988, have three children, one of whom is named Teddy.

Virginia Nicholson is also a writer who comes from a long line of celebrated nonconformists, including her grandmother Vanessa Bell and great-aunt Virginia Woolf. Her father, art historian Quentin Bell, had written an acclaimed biography of his aunt, Virginia Woolf in 1972, and she has chronicled the family in "Among the Bohemians: Experiments in Living 1900-1939" (William Morrow and Company, 2002).

Career

For the first half of his career, Nicholson worked for the BBC as a director of documentary films, with over fifty titles to his credit, between the mid-1970s and mid-1980s. He gained renown as a novelist and playwright when the first book of his popular "Wind On Fire" trilogy won the Blue Peter best book award and the Smarties Gold Award for best children's book.

Literature

Fantasy novels

"Wind On Fire" trilogy
*"The Wind Singer"
*"Slaves of the Mastery"
*"Firesong"

"Noble Warriors Trilogy"
*"Seeker" (UK release 2005)
*"Jango" (UK release 2006)
*"Noman" (UK release 2007)

Novels

*"The Society of Others" (UK release 2004)
*"The Trial of True Love" (UK release 2005)

creenplays and Theatre

He has twice been nominated for Tony Awards for best play, for "Shadowlands" and "The Retreat from Moscow". He later turned "Shadowlands", based on the relationship between C. S. Lewis and Joy Gresham, into a BBC-TV play in 1985, and an acclaimed film in 1993. The latter starred Anthony Hopkins and Debra Winger and was directed by Richard Attenborough. His other screenplays include "First Knight" (1995) and "Grey Owl" (1999). He later worked as a writer on the Academy Award winning epic "Gladiator" (2000), and wrote and directed the 1997 film "Firelight".

Film and TV nominations and awards

William Nicholson's first nomination came in 1989 when BAFTA TV Awards included the 1987 teleplay "Sweet as You Are", which he co-wrote with Ruth Caleb and Angela Pope, on its list of candidates for "Best Single Drama". His next nominations were for 1994's "Shadowlands" when he was a contender for both a BAFTA and an Oscar for "Best Adapted Screenplay". 1997 was another successful year, with an "Outstanbding Writing for a Miniseries or a Special" Emmy nomination for the 1996 TV drama "Crime of the Century". He was also singled out at the San Sebastian International Film Festival for "Firelight", with a nomination for the "Golden Seashell" Award and a win of the "Special Prize of the Jury".

2000 turned out to be Nicholson's most impressive year to date, with acclaim for the "Best Picture" Oscar winner "Gladiator". He had nominations for the "Sierra Award" from the Las Vegas Film Critics Society Awards and the "Saturn Award" from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, followed by "Best Screenplay" nominations from both BAFTA and Oscar.

In 2007 Nicholson co-wrote the film "", from an earlier script by Michael Hirst.

External links

* [http://www.williamnicholson.co.uk/ Official Website]
*imdb name|id=0629933|name=William Nicholson
* [http://willnichforum.proboards61.com/index.cgi/ Fansite]


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