Simon Bovey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Simon Bovey (born 1960), is a British scriptwriter and director[citation needed]. He has written several science fiction dramas for BBC Radio,[1] as well as episodes of the daytime drama Doctors.

Partial list of credits[edit]

Film and video[edit]

  • The Waiting (2000) - writer and director. A psychodrama set among a group of career criminals.
  • The Un-gone (2007) - writer and director. A science fiction short feature concerning teleportation.

Television[edit]

  • Doctors episodes For Love (2005) and Burdens (2011).

Radio[edit]

  • Slipstream - Extraterrestrial technology at the end of the Second World War.
  • The Voice of God - Acoustic experiments on Australian aboriginal sacred lands disturb the earth.
  • Cold Blood - A mysterious survivor of the cold arrives at an Antarctic research station.
  • Hive Mind - Bees are extinct and have been replaced by honeybots, with disturbing consequences.
  • The Iceman - Forensic science and a serial killer in 1880s London.
  • Franklin - Cartoonist Charles Schulz receives a letter in 1968 suggesting he add a black character to his "Peanuts" cartoon strip.
  • City of Spires - A Doctor Who audio drama for Big Finish Productions.
  • The Launch - Ex-Battle of Britain pilot Jack Avery is determined to avenge his brother's death.
  • Sargasso - Elver season on the River Severn - a time of mystery and danger. The wrong time and place for a young man to search for his place in the world.

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Interview with Simon Bovey, The Thunder Child Science Fiction and Fantasy Web Magazine and Sourcebooks, 2007.