Russell T Davies

Born: 27th April 1963 (as Stephen Russell Davies)
Episodes Broadcast: 2005-2011, 2023-2024

Biography

Stephen Russell Davies was born in Swansea, Wales; he was known by his middle name from an early age. He became a fan of Doctor Who while still a child, and was also an avid comic book reader and cartoonist. Davies began acting in middle school and joined the West Glamorgan Youth Theatre Company when he was fourteen. He later scripted several Welsh-language plays for the group. Davies planned to pursue further studies in graphic art, but was discouraged by his teachers due to his colour blindness. Instead, he went to Oxford University and completed a degree in English in 1984. Nonetheless, Davies' illustrative skills helped him get his first television job, as a graphic artist on the BBC Wales children's series Why Don't You? in 1985. He added the middle initial ‘T’ to his professional name in order to avoid confusion with journalist and radio presenter Russell Davies.

Davies briefly considered moving in front of the camera but, after serving as a presenter on a single episode of Play School in 1987, he concluded that this was not where his interests lay. Instead, his role on Why Don't You? gradually expanded to include writer, director and assistant producer. Around the same time, Davies submitted ideas to the Doctor Who production office, including a script called “Mind Of The Hodiac”. It was favourably received by script editor Andrew Cartmel, but there was no opportunity for its development prior to Doctor Who's cancellation in 1989. Meanwhile, Why Don't You? relocated to Manchester, and Davies went with it. He was soon the script editor of On The Waterfront, and then the producer of Breakfast Serials. Going freelance, Davies moved into family drama with the thrillers Dark Season and Century Falls. He also wrote, script edited and produced Children's Ward.

The success of Queer As Folk made Davies an important player in the television industry

Now keen to focus on adult-oriented television, Davies co-created the soap opera Revelations in 1994 before contributing to shows like Cluedo, Springhill and Touching Evil. In 1996, he wrote the Seventh Doctor novel Damaged Goods for Virgin Publishing's Doctor Who: The New Adventures range. Davies then became the lead writer for another soap opera, The Grand. Following its cancellation, however, he nearly succumbed to an accidental drug overdose. Not only did the ordeal inspire Davies to make lifestyle changes, but it also gave him the drive to develop the groundbreaking drama Queer As Folk, which reflected his own experiences as a gay man. The success of Queer As Folk in the late Nineties made Davies an important player in the television industry. He soon found himself engaged in preliminary discussions with the BBC about reviving Doctor Who, only for these efforts to be scuppered by separate plans for a feature film.

Instead, Davies developed a number of successful shows, including Bob & Rose, The Second Coming starring Christopher Eccleston, and Mine All Mine. With the movie version of Doctor Who going nowhere, the BBC again approached him about relaunching the series through BBC Wales. With Davies at the helm, Doctor Who became a national sensation following the 2005 debut of Rose. Although he brought modern sensibilities and production techniques to the programme, Davies managed to do so without losing sight of the essential magic which had won Doctor Who such a devoted following in the twentieth century. The unanticipated success was partly due to the strong partnership which was forged between Davies and his fellow executive producer, Julie Gardner. Nonetheless, he had to navigate substantial hurdles, not least being the early souring of his relationship with Eccleston, who decided to quit playing the Ninth Doctor after one season. Fortunately, Davies had simultaneously produced the serial Casanova; its star, a relative unknown named David Tennant, was an ideal choice to play the Tenth Doctor.

In a departure from the production structure of years past, Davies was both the executive producer of Doctor Who and its lead writer. He took a scripting credit on thirty-one episodes between 2005 and 2010, and had a hand in many others. Davies also developed two spin-off series -- Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures -- and pulled the plug on a third, Rose Tyler: Earth Defence. He bowed out of Doctor Who alongside Tennant and Gardner with The End Of Time. The all-consuming nature of his job was made plain by Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale, a compilation of exchanges with Doctor Who Magazine's Benjamin Cook which was published by BBC Books in 2008. An expanded edition -- Doctor Who: The Writer's Tale: The Final Chapter -- followed in 2010. Davies' achievements in not only reinvigorating a television classic, but also in helping to establish BBC Wales as a centre for drama production, were recognised in 2008 when he was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire.

Davies' first Hollywood project was the fourth and final season of Torchwood

After leaving Doctor Who, Davies relocated to Hollywood; his first project was the fourth and final season of Torchwood, now being co-produced by the BBC and the Starz network. He also wrote for the Eleventh Doctor, Matt Smith, in Death Of The Doctor, a 2010 episode of The Sarah Jane Adventures. However, Davies' Stateside ambitions were set aside when his longtime partner, Andrew Smith, became seriously ill with a brain tumour. They returned to the United Kingdom and were married in 2012. With The Sarah Jane Adventures having come to an abrupt end following the death of its star, Elisabeth Sladen, Davies co-created a replacement in the form of Wizards Vs Aliens. Subsequent projects included Cucumber, Banana, A Very English Scandal and Years And Years. Davies novelised Rose for BBC Books in 2018. Sadly, Smith passed away the same year.

During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Davies scripted a coda to The Sarah Jane Adventures called Farewell, Sarah Jane. At the same time, he was readying his next project, It's A Sin. The following year, it was revealed that Davies would be returning to Doctor Who as its showrunner. His first credits came on The Star Beast, the start of a trilogy of specials designed to celebrate the programme's sixtieth anniversary in 2023, with Tennant returning to play a new Fourteenth Doctor. Davies then oversaw the debut of Ncuti Gatwa as the Fifteenth Doctor, while also developing the spin-off series The War Between The Land And The Sea.

Credits
Writer
Rose
The End Of The World
Aliens Of London / World War Three
The Long Game
Boom Town
Bad Wolf / The Parting Of The Ways
Children In Need Special (2005)
The Christmas Invasion
New Earth
Tooth And Claw
Love & Monsters
Army Of Ghosts / Doomsday
Everything Changes
Army Of Ghosts / Doomsday
Everything Changes
Invasion Of The Bane
Smith And Jones
Gridlock
Utopia
The Sound Of Drums / Last Of The Time Lords
Voyage Of The Damned
Midnight
Turn Left
The Stolen Earth / Journey's End
The Next Doctor
Planet Of The Dead
Children Of Earth
The Waters Of Mars
The End Of Time
Death Of The Doctor
The New World
The Blood Line
Children In Need Special (2023)
The Star Beast
Wild Blue Yonder
The Giggle
The Church On Ruby Road
Space Babies
The Devil's Chord
73 Yards
Dot And Bubble
The Legend Of Ruby Sunday / Empire Of Death
Executive Producer
Rose
The End Of The World
The Unquiet Dead
Aliens Of London / World War Three
Dalek
The Long Game
Father's Day
The Empty Child / The Doctor Dances
Boom Town
Bad Wolf / The Parting Of The Ways
The Christmas Invasion
New Earth
Tooth And Claw
School Reunion
The Girl In The Fireplace
Rise Of The Cybermen / The Age Of Steel
The Idiot's Lantern
The Impossible Planet / The Satan Pit
Love & Monsters
Fear Her
Army Of Ghosts / Doomsday
Everything Changes
Day One
Ghost Machine
Cyberwoman
Small Worlds
Countrycide
Greeks Bearing Gifts
They Keep Killing Suzie
Random Shoes
Out Of Time
Combat
The Runaway Bride
Invasion Of The Bane
Captain Jack Harkness
End Of Days
Smith And Jones
The Shakespeare Code
Gridlock
Daleks In Manhattan / Evolution Of The Daleks
The Lazarus Experiment
42
Human Nature / The Family Of Blood
Blink
Utopia
The Sound Of Drums / Last Of The Time Lords
Revenge Of The Slitheen
Eye Of The Gorgon
Warriors Of Kudlak
Whatever Happened To Sarah Jane?
The Lost Boy
Time Crash
Voyage Of The Damned
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang
Sleeper
To The Last Man
Meat
Adam
Reset
Dead Man Walking
A Day In The Death
Something Borrowed
From Out Of The Rain
Adrift
Fragments
Exit Wounds
Partners In Crime
The Fires Of Pompeii
Planet Of The Ood
The Sontaran Stratagem / The Poison Sky
The Doctor's Daughter
The Unicorn And The Wasp
Silence In The Library / Forest Of The Dead
Midnight
Turn Left
The Stolen Earth / Journey's End
The Last Sontaran
The Day Of The Clown
Secrets Of The Stars
The Mark Of The Berserker
The Temptation Of Sarah Jane Smith
Enemy Of The Bane
The Next Doctor
Planet Of The Dead
Children Of Earth
Prisoner Of The Judoon
The Mad Woman In The Attic
The Wedding Of Sarah Jane Smith
The Eternity Trap
Mona Lisa's Revenge
The Waters Of Mars
The Gift
The End Of Time
The Nightmare Man
The Vault Of Secrets
Death Of The Doctor
The Empty Planet
Lost In Time
Goodbye, Sarah Jane Smith
The New World
Rendition
Dead Of Night
Escape To LA
The Categories Of Life
The Middle Men
Immortal Sins
End Of The Road
The Gathering
The Blood Line
Sky
The Curse Of Clyde Langer
The Man Who Never Was
The Star Beast
Wild Blue Yonder
The Giggle
The Church On Ruby Road
Space Babies
The Devil's Chord
Boom
73 Yards
Dot And Bubble
Rogue
The Legend Of Ruby Sunday / Empire Of Death
Story Idea
The Blood Line

Updated 26th July 2024