Roy Minton
Roy Minton | |
---|---|
Born | Robert Woodruff Anderson August 28, 1933 Nottingham, England |
Died | August 17, 2024 | (aged 90)
Occupation | playwright screenwriter |
Education | Guildhall School of Music and Drama |
Roy Minton (28 August 1933 – 17 August 2024[1]) was an English playwright and screenwriter best known for Scum and his other work with Alan Clarke. He is notable for having written over 30 one-off scripts for London Weekend Television, Rediffusion, BBC, ATV, Granada, Thames Television and Yorkshire Television, including Sling Your Hook, Horace, Funny Farm, Scum, Goodnight Albert, and The Hunting of Lionel Crane.
He has translated and performed several of his plays overseas and at festivals in the UK, including a reading of his play for Scum at the Royal Shakespeare Company, London; and Gradual Decline at the Riverside Studios London.
Minton also wrote the screenplay for Scrubbers, a film from which he disassociated himself. He felt the original screenplay had been "savaged" during his absence overseas, and described the final production as "arguably the worst film ever made."
Background
Born in Nottingham, England, Minton won a two-year scholarship at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London. He worked as an actor prior to writing full-time[1]. He was winner of a BBC playwriting competition, received the Art Council Award and was resident dramatist at the Nottingham Playhouse.
Works
Stage Plays
Feature films
Radio Plays
- Working Weekend BBC
- A Kiss on the Peke Radio Telefís Éireann, Dublin.
- The Gold Medallist BBC
Films and plays for television
- Stand By Your Screen
- Goodnight Albert
- Horace
- Horace 6 x 30-minute plays for Yorkshire Television based on the original BBC film.
- Funny Farm
- Scum
- Fast Hands
Further reading
- Bovver One-act play. Prompt Series, Hutchinson.
- Scum novel adapted from the film script. Hutchinson/Arrow Books
Personal life
Minton lived in north London. He was working on autobiography.
Awards
References
- ^ a b "Roy Minton, writer best known for Scum, the controversial 1979 film about Borstal – obituary". telegraph.co.uk. 21 August 2024. Retrieved 22 August 2024.