Out May 1, 2013.
The Daleks are one of the most iconic and fearsome creations in
television history. Since their first appearance in 1963, they have
simultaneously fascinated and terrified generations of children, their
instant success ensuring, and sometimes eclipsing, that of Doctor Who.
They sprang from the imagination of Terry Nation, a failed stand-up
comic who became one of the most prolific writers for television that
Britian ever produced. Survivors, his vision of a post-apocalyptic
England, so haunted audiences in the Seventies that the BBC revived it
over thirty years on, and Blake’s 7, constantly rumored for return,
endures as a cult sci-fi classic. But it is for his genocidal pepperpots
that Nation is most often remembered, and on the 50th anniversary of
their creation they continue to top the Saturday-night ratings. Yet
while the Daleks brought him notoriety and riches, Nation played a much
wider role in British broadcasting’s golden age. He wrote for Spike
Milligan, Frankie Howerd and an increasingly troubled Tony Hancock, and
as one of the key figures behind the adventure series of the Sixties –
including The Avengers, The Saint and The Persuaders! – he turned the
pulp classics of his boyhood into a major British export. In The Man Who
Invented the Daleks, acclaimed cultural historian Alwyn W. Turner,
explores the curious and contested origins of Doctor Who's greatest
villains, and sheds light on a strange world of ambitious young writers,
producers and performers without whom British culture today would look
very different.
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