Alan Wareing
Born: 16th August 1943
Episodes Broadcast: 1988-1989
Alan Wareing was born in Chorley, Lancashire. He became involved in
amateur theatre, which aroused an interest in directing. He joined the
BBC as an assistant floor manager in the mid-Seventies, working on
programmes like Blake's 7. Around the end of the decade, Wareing
was promoted to production assistant, in which capacity he worked on the
1981 Doctor Who serial The Keeper
Of Traken, Tom Baker's penultimate adventure as the Fourth
Doctor. He was soon elevated to production manager, which brought him
back to Doctor Who for 1985's Timelash, with Colin Baker as the
Sixth Doctor. Having established a good relationship with producer John
Nathan-Turner and script editor Eric Saward, Wareing solicited their
help when he enrolled in the BBC's internal directors' course. They
assisted with Wareing's final project, after which he directed episodes
of EastEnders and Casualty.
Having left the BBC to go freelance, Wareing was hired by Nathan-Turner
to direct three serials for Sylvester McCoy's Seventh Doctor. The first
was the surreal The Greatest Show In The
Galaxy in 1988. The following year, Wareing oversaw the end of
Doctor Who's original run, handling both the final story into
production -- the atmospheric Ghost
Light -- and the last to be broadcast, in the form of the
mould-breaking Survival. Other
directing credits during the late Eighties included Rockliffe's
Folly and The Bill. Amongst Wareing's Nineties work were
London's Burning, Wycliffe, and the first of more than
three hundred episodes of Emmerdale. After the turn of the
century, Wareing likewise became part of another soap opera juggernaut,
directing over a hundred installments of Coronation Street. He
would also earn credits on The Royal, Holby City and
Fair City.
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