Books
Journals, papers, online...
Spiked columnist Andrew Doyle marks what wold have been Dennis Potter's 85th birthday by reflecting on his work and it's impact. 'In the tradition of George Orwell, his left-wing politics were infused with a cultural conservatism and a recognition of the importance of structure and tradition to society'. access it here
"There is a nostalgic, rightwing impulse in England"
Reproduced in The Guardian, Michael Billington's 1979 interview with Dennis Potter about Brimstone and Treacle arguably speaks volumes about recent political events...
access it here
Dennis Potter's Message to Today's TV Execs - risk everything
Writer, presenter and critic Mark Lawson reflecting on the BFI season
'To take up the implications of the season’s title: what are Potter’s messages to the television of today? The first is the extent to which he was driven by innovation and risk.'
New Statesman, June 12th, 2014
access here
Writer, presenter and critic Mark Lawson reflecting on the BFI season
'To take up the implications of the season’s title: what are Potter’s messages to the television of today? The first is the extent to which he was driven by innovation and risk.'
New Statesman, June 12th, 2014
access here
The Singing Detective, 25yrs On: Journal of Screenwriting
This edition of the journal is dedicated to Potter's Singing Detective and features the following papers:
Editorial by Adam Ganz
Blue Remembered Hills by Jonathan Powell
Nudging Into Shape: the producer looks back by Kenith Trodd
Interview with Jon Amiel, Director of The Singing Detective by Adam Ganz
Back to the Future in The Sining Detective: Amphibians, puzzles, and adaptations by Tmothy Corrigan
And the Beat Goes On: The continuing influence of The Singing Detective by Glen Creeber
'Message for Posterity': The Singing Detective (1986) 25 years on by John R. Cook
Bridges and gaps: The Singing Detective's serial afterlife by Sean O'Sullivan
Chaos, culture and fantasy: The television plays of Howard Schuman by Leah Panos
Revisiting The Singing Detective decades later by Vernon Gras
The pleasure of immersion: Some thoughts on how The Singing Detective sustains narrative by Anne Karpf
Television writer Peter Bowker in conversation with Professor John Cook by John R. Cook
The Singing Detective goes to Hollywood: An interview with director Keith Gordon by Faisal A. Qureshi
Report on The Singing Detective 25th Anniversary Symposium, University of London, 10 December 2011 by David Rolinson
Book Reviews by Carmen Sofia Brenes, Eddie McMillan, and Jamie Sherry
Journal of Screen Writing, Volume 4, No.3, 1August 2013
access here
This edition of the journal is dedicated to Potter's Singing Detective and features the following papers:
Editorial by Adam Ganz
Blue Remembered Hills by Jonathan Powell
Nudging Into Shape: the producer looks back by Kenith Trodd
Interview with Jon Amiel, Director of The Singing Detective by Adam Ganz
Back to the Future in The Sining Detective: Amphibians, puzzles, and adaptations by Tmothy Corrigan
And the Beat Goes On: The continuing influence of The Singing Detective by Glen Creeber
'Message for Posterity': The Singing Detective (1986) 25 years on by John R. Cook
Bridges and gaps: The Singing Detective's serial afterlife by Sean O'Sullivan
Chaos, culture and fantasy: The television plays of Howard Schuman by Leah Panos
Revisiting The Singing Detective decades later by Vernon Gras
The pleasure of immersion: Some thoughts on how The Singing Detective sustains narrative by Anne Karpf
Television writer Peter Bowker in conversation with Professor John Cook by John R. Cook
The Singing Detective goes to Hollywood: An interview with director Keith Gordon by Faisal A. Qureshi
Report on The Singing Detective 25th Anniversary Symposium, University of London, 10 December 2011 by David Rolinson
Book Reviews by Carmen Sofia Brenes, Eddie McMillan, and Jamie Sherry
Journal of Screen Writing, Volume 4, No.3, 1August 2013
access here
Beyond the Reach of the Cartographer: Dennis Potter the Reviewing Writer and the Writing Reviewer
Dr David Rolinson, lecturer in Film and Television, University of Stirling
Posted 31st July 2013
access the full article here
Dr David Rolinson, lecturer in Film and Television, University of Stirling
Posted 31st July 2013
access the full article here
The Dennis Potter Heritage Project: Auto/Ethnography as Process & Product
'The Dennis Potter Heritage Project provides a unique opportunity for complex empirical research. It offers the researcher a chance to study the organisational and cultural processes involved in the evolution of a heritage project...'
Hannah Grist for New Horizons, Issue 20
access full paper here
'The Dennis Potter Heritage Project provides a unique opportunity for complex empirical research. It offers the researcher a chance to study the organisational and cultural processes involved in the evolution of a heritage project...'
Hannah Grist for New Horizons, Issue 20
access full paper here
Face to Face with Dennis Potter
'It’s 1986 and Blitz Magazine has sent me to interview Dennis Potter in his Central London flat...'
Jon Wilde
access full article here
'It’s 1986 and Blitz Magazine has sent me to interview Dennis Potter in his Central London flat...'
Jon Wilde
access full article here
The Function of “The Bloody Songs” in Dennis Potter's The Singing Detective
C. Kenneth Pellow in The Journal of Popular Culture, Vol. 46, Issue 5, pages 1051-1069, October 2013
access to abstract here
C. Kenneth Pellow in The Journal of Popular Culture, Vol. 46, Issue 5, pages 1051-1069, October 2013
access to abstract here
Dossier: Dennis Potter In America
'Compiled by a veteran US television critic, this dossier examines Dennis Potter from an American perspective - how and when the United States slowly became aware of Potter and his works, how they were televised, and how, in 1992, Potter reacted when he visited New York for a retrospective of his work…'
David Bianculli for Critical Studies in Television, Volume 8, No.1, Spring 2013, pp.91-107
access abstract here
'Compiled by a veteran US television critic, this dossier examines Dennis Potter from an American perspective - how and when the United States slowly became aware of Potter and his works, how they were televised, and how, in 1992, Potter reacted when he visited New York for a retrospective of his work…'
David Bianculli for Critical Studies in Television, Volume 8, No.1, Spring 2013, pp.91-107
access abstract here