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Bill Morrison – playwright, director, producer, actor, screenwriter and former Chair of the Writers’ Guild – died in Liverpool this morning after a sudden illness. He was 71. Many people in the Guild and the wider world of writing and the theatre will mourn his loss.

Bill was widely known for his work, much of which dealt with the troubles of his native Northern Ireland, and for his involvement with the Everyman in Liverpool, among other theatres. But the Guild also knew him as a strong leader, able to focus his experience and intellect on guiding his union through some troubles of its own.

bill-morrison

Guild President David Edgar writes:

Bill Morrison's death is a loss to the theatre (for which he not only wrote but also acted and directed), to television and radio, to the Writers' Guild and indeed to the principle of writers' unionisation.

I met him in the late 1970s when we were both founder members of the Theatre Writers' Union, which collaborated with the Guild in negotiating the first minimum-terms agreements for writers in the British theatre. Bill remained a stalwart TWU activist, and was a key figure - firm but wise - in the sometimes tortuous and occasionally tempestuous negotiations for the TWU to join the Guild. Following a successful merging in 1997, Bill went on to the Guild executive and was its chair from 2001 to 2003.

His career as a writer began in the late 1960s. Abandoning his university subject of law in order to go on the stage, Bill quickly refocussed his attention on to writing, undertaking writing residencies at the Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent and the Liverpool Everyman, for which he wrote his hugely successful black farce about the Northern Ireland troubles, Flying Blind, which was revived at the Royal Court in London, produced off-Broadway and then around the world.

Another comedy about the land of his birth (though in this case set in Liverpool), Scrap!, was one of the plays produced under a rare period of writer power in the theatre. Facing closure in 1981, the Liverpool Playhouse Board appointed Willy Russell, Alan Bleasdale, Chris Bond and Bill as joint artistic directors. A not always easy collaboration nonetheless saved the theatre, produced premiere productions of plays by Jimmy McGovern, Claire Luckham, Nell Dunn and Adrian Henri, and Willy Russell's legendarily successful Blood Brothers. After Russell and Bleasdale left, Bill carried on as joint artistic director until 1985, and as a board member till 1991. In 1993 he returned to the theme of the Irish troubles with his most considerable stage project, a three-play family drama beginning with partition in the 1920s and ending in the present, directed by Nick Kent at the Tricycle.

Bill also wrote widely for television, his best-known single plays being Shergar, Force of Duty and A Safe House, a play about the wrongful imprisonment of the Maguire family in the 1970s. His radio work, much of it produced by the formidable John Tydeman, includes an innovative two-part adaptation of Crime and Punishment and a series of five Raymond Chandler novels, as well as many original plays.

Bill will also be remembered as a staunch defender of the theatre (particularly in Liverpool), as a community writer (bringing victims of IRA bombings together on both sides of the Irish sea) and as a trade unionist. His period as chair of the Guild saw difficult negotiations with the BBC and conflict with the Guild's partners, as well as the appointment of Bernie Corbett as General Secretary. His role in the expansion of the Guild's remit to cover all theatre writers is also a lasting legacy.

Bill had been combatting illness for some years, but had been improving over the last two, before a sudden rupture of the oesophagus caused his death last Wednesday. His final public engagement was the launch of a book about the first 100 years of the Liverpool Playhouse, to which he made such an important contribution. His partner, Ann Bates, is a drama teacher with whom Bill worked in his latter years, and he also leaves a daughter (Tilly) and a son (Patrick). He will be missed by them, but also by us.

It was the BBC that inspired much of the imagery of George Orwell’s 1984, and true to type Delivering Quality First (DQF) is the Orwellian slogan given to the BBC’s current proposals for 20 per cent cuts over the next six years

The BBC Trust is conducting a public consultation on the plans that is open until Wednesday 21 December 2011. The Writers’ Guild will be submitting its own response, and we urge as many individual members as possible to do the same.

There are many points among the DQF proposals that will alarm both writers who work for the BBC and the general viewing and listening public. These include: 

  • BBC2 is promised more drama, but this is entirely at the expense of BBC4 – as BBC2 commissions are more expensive, does this mask a further decline in original TV drama? 
  • There will be significant cuts in radio commissioning – comedy on R2 and R5 Live, new material for R4 Extra – and although Radio 4 has its budget preserved, there is no guarantee that drama cuts are at an end – compare the recent slashing of short stories in favour of yet more news.
  • Another 2,000 job cuts – on top of 7,000 already gone since 2004 – will further weaken the BBC’s ability to produce top-quality in-house drama.
  • Despite many informal promises, there is no mention of drama repeats replacing the axed daytime shows on BBC2. 
  • After spending millions expanding to Salford and shifting productions to Bristol and Cardiff, the BBC is now planning to move a range of programming out of Birmingham. What kind of game is being played here?

The fundamental problem is the unnecessary freeze in the licence fee until 2017. It has gone up only £10 since 2007 and now costs just over £12 a month for the whole range of BBC services – compared to more than £60 for some subscription services.

In our motion at the TUC conference in September the Writers’ Guild called on the Government to unfreeze the licence fee – a call that is now being echoed loudly by many campaigners.

The entertainment unions – Equity, Musicians, BECTU and NUJ – have launched a postcard campaign, 'I Love Our BBC' aimed at deluging BBC Trust chairman Lord Patten with messages calling for a licence fee review. You can download the card (pdf) or contact the Guild office for supplies. A copy will be enclosed with your next copy of UK Writer, but we urge you to act now, as the mailing may not arrive until after the 21 December deadline.

You can access the full DQF document by clicking on this link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctrust/assets/files/pdf/review_report_research/dqf/dqf.pdf. The final 3 pages of the 55 page document allow for your response. You can also do this by writing to:BBC Trust, 180 Great Portland Street, London W1W 5QZ

Or emailing dqf.consultation@bbc.co.uk

You can make a detailed response to the consultation at http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctrust/consult/delivering_quality_first.shtml.

Please let the Guild office know how you have responded, so that we can incorporate your ideas in our union response. Send them to:corbett@writersguild.org.uk.

climate-weekEntries are now open for the prestigious Climate Week Awards, recognising the most inspirational and impressive actions taking place in every sector. In 2011 the judging panel contained figures such as the eminent economist Lord Stern, the former President of Ireland, Mary Robinson, and Booker Prize-winning author, Ian McEwan. One of the awards is for the best artistic response to climate change this could be visual arts, dramatic arts or a piece of creative writing.

The judges will premise works that are inspirational, innovative and impact on their audience’s understandings and perceptions of climate change. The subject matter of the written work in question must relate to climate change and has to have been published in the last two years.

Entries should be described in no more than 700 words and should address the following specific headlines. Please ensure your entry is accompanied by supporting material illustrating your work. 

  • Inspiration: briefly describe how the work came about 
  • Execution: describe how the work has been produced 
  • Response: where has the work been exhibited and how has it been received? 
  • Contribution: how does the work contribute to understanding or action on climate change?

Entries should be emailed to awards@climateweek.com before the deadline on the 30 January 2012. To find out more about the awards including last years winners please visit our website www.climateweek.com, or email awards@climateweek.com.

A statement from the Writers' Guild of Great Britain

The Writers’ Guild (which pioneered pension rights for TV and film writers) supports the public workers in their fight to protect their pensions.

Guild member John Donnelly took the Guild banner to the teachers’ picket line at Central School of Speech & Drama, north London.


Writers’ Guild Scottish rep Julie Ann Thomason set the cat among the pigeons at the Edinburgh AGM of the Authors’ Licensing and Collecting Society on 24 November 2011.

When questions were invited from the audience, Julie asked about the salaries at ALCS, which receives money for photocopying and overseas cable TV and distributes it to UK writers.

The information given was that Chief Executive Owen Atkinson earns £192,000 a year and the chair, Dr Penny Grubb, receives £45,000 to £50,000 in salary or expenses. The total staff employed number 37 with an annual salary bill of £1.7 million – an average of £46,000 per employee.

Other areas discussed included ALCS’s efforts to obtain payments from Brazil, Russia, India and China, and the activities of Google and dominant internet service providers.

The guest speaker was award-winning Scottish author Theresa Breslin, a former librarian who has been leading the campaign to save Scottish libraries – she described her experience from first visiting a library at the age of four to the trials of getting published and making a living as a writer.

The AGM also agreed constitutional changes relating to the appointment of directors and digital sources of funds, and ended with wine and canapés.

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