Allan Scott (Scottish screenwriter)
Allan Scott | |
---|---|
Born |
Allan Shiach 16 September 1940 Elgin, Moray, Scotland |
Occupation | Screenwriter and producer |
Years active | 1970–present |
Allan Scott, the alias of Allan Shiach[1] (born 16 September 1940), is a Scottish screenwriter and producer, nominated for BAFTA's Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film and a Genie Award for his 1997 film Regeneration. He has won the Edgar Award (1976) and Writers' Guild Award (1978).
Biography
Early life
Allan Scott was born in Elgin, Moray, and educated at Gordonstoun School and McGill University, Montreal, where he obtained a BA in English Literature. After training in the Scotch whisky industry, he worked as a writer for television both in the US and the UK during the seventies while also serving as a non-executive director of Macallan-Glenlivet plc.
Career
He became chairman and chief executive of Macallan-Glenlivet in the late '70's, a role he held until 1996, during which period the company's market capitalization on the London Stock Exchange grew some two hundredfold, its reputation for innovative and focused marketing and management helping to establish a highly successful international brand of malt whisky.
He served for several years on the Broadcasting Council of BBC Scotland and in 1986 succeeded Sir Denis Forman as Chairman of the Scottish Film Production Fund. His subsequent Chairmanship of the Scottish Film Council lasted for six years and following upon the SFC's initiative to create a new, broadly-based body for the Scottish screen industries (the Film Archive, Media Education, Exhibition, Screen Locations and Production Fund), he was appointed the first Chairman of the new organisation named Scottish Screen. Having chaired the Interim Board which supervised the transition and consolidation, he remained as chairman for a further year before stepping down in 1998, after twelve years of involvement with Scotland's film making bodies.
While continuing his career as a screenwriter and producer, he was also a director of both Caledonian Newspapers and Scottish Television plc and when the companies merged, to form SMG plc, he remained on the board for thirteen years. He was appointed a Governor of The British Film Institute in 1992 and served that Board for some six years. He is also a former Chairman of The Writers' Guild of Great Britain, thus perhaps the only person ever to chair a trades union and a Stock Exchange company at the same time.
He was Executive Producer of the thriller Shallow Grave (1992.) He also wrote and produced the BAFTA-nominated film, Regeneration (1997) as well as The Fourth Angel (2001.) He has written or co-written more than a dozen films, including The Awakening (with Chris Bryant, 1980) and five films directed by Nicolas Roeg: Don't Look Now (with Chris Bryant, 1974), Castaway (1986), The Witches (1990), Cold Heaven (1991) and Two Deaths (1995.) He was also co-writer of The Preacher's Wife (1996) and In Love and War (1997). Scott was co-writer and script consultant on the Norwegian film Kon-Tiki (2012) which was nominated for an Oscar in 2013 in the foreign language category.
He is the co-producer the stage musical adaptation of the 1990s film The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert which opened in Sydney in October 2006 and has since become the most successful Australian stage musical of all time, seen by over a million people and grossing over $90m in Australia and New Zealand. The London production of the show ran for three years before it was revised by its creators in 2011 and launched in North America, beginning in Toronto prior to Broadway, where it was nominated for two Tony Awards. Other productions are presently running in Milan, Rome and São Paulo and there are touring productions in the USA and UK. Other productions are imminent in major centres on the world.
Awarded honorary doctorates by Napier University, Edinburgh (2007) and by Aberdeen University (2008).
Notes
- ↑ Rob Sharp and Allan Shiach (18 March 2008). "Heath Ledger–A Prophetic Tragedy". The Independent. independent.co.uk (Arts: Entertainment: Film and TV: Features). Retrieved 20 March 2008.