Peter Spence

{{Short description|English journalist and writer}}

{{for multi|the Canadian actor|Peter Spence (actor)|the third wife of Bertrand Russell|Patricia Russell}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}}

{{Use British English|date=September 2019}}

{{infobox person

| name = Peter Spence

| birth_place = England

| birth_name = {{birth_date and age|df=yes|24 April 1944}}

| education = University of Nottingham

| occupation = {{hlist|Journalist|Radio writer|TV screenwriter}}

| known_for = Creator and writer of To the Manor Born

}}

Peter Spence (born 24 April 1944) is an English journalist and writer. He created and wrote the British sitcom To the Manor Born.

Early life

Born in 1944, Peter Spence was educated at Bromsgrove School, Worcestershire.{{cite web|url=http://homepages.which.net/~roger.still/MarlburyEcho.htm|title=One from the Archives - Birth of To the Manor Born|accessdate=2007-10-25|author=|last=|first=|year=2007|publisher=To the Manor Born International Appreciation Society}} At the age of 18, he became a reporter for the Birmingham Post and Mail. Around the same times, he joined the Territorial Army. He studied Politics and American Studies at the University of Nottingham and graduated in 1968, becoming a professional writer in the same year.

Career

Spence has written for many television shows including Not the Nine O'Clock News, Crackerjack and Rosemary & Thyme. In the early-1970s, Peter married into the Taylor family who owned and ran Cricket St Thomas Wildlife Park in Somerset. This provided him with a fund of anecdotes which he compiled into a book entitled "some of our best friends are animals".

A few years later in the mid 1970s he created To the Manor Born, and after a radio pilot was made, the series aired on television from 1979 to 1981.{{cite news|url=http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/23058/To-the-Manor-Reborn|title=To the Manor Reborn|first=Elisa|last=Roche|publisher=Daily Express|date=25 October 2007}} Out of 21 episodes, he wrote 20 of them. The manor shown in the opening credits is in fact Cricket House at Cricket St Thomas – the home of his in-laws.

Spence has also written for radio, including 'Weekending’; ‘The News Huddlines’; 'The Roy Castle Show and Windsor Davies Presents''.

References