Edward Henry Willis, Baron Willis (13 January 1914 – 22 December 1992) was an English playwright, novelist and screenwriter who was also politically active in support of the Labour Party.[1][2] He created several television series, including the long-running police drama Dixon of Dock Green.
Early life and War service
Ted Willis was born in Tottenham, Middlesex, third child and second son of Alfred John Henry Willis (1882-1957), a bus washer who later became a bus driver, and Maria Harriet, née Meek. He recalled that when leaving school aged fourteen: "I had a two-second 'career interview' with my Headmaster. He asked me what I wished to do for the future and I told him that I intended to become a writer. His response was a cackle followed by the remark: 'You will never make a writer in a hundred years. You haven't got the imagination for it or the intelligence. Go away and learn a good trade.'"[3]
Willis enlisted in the Royal Fusiliers in 1939, subsequently serving in the Army Kinematograph Service.[8][9] He often spoke at meetings during the Second World War in favour of opening a second front, in order to help the Red Army, which was bearing the brunt of the Nazi onslaught.
Along with Berkely Mather, Willis was responsible for a huge proportion of scriptwriting for British television drama in the 1950s.[10] He was listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the world's most prolific writer for television; he also wrote 34 stage plays and a number of feature films.[8] In the 1970s he turned to novels, including a spy story, The Left-Handed Sleeper, and a wartime thriller The Lions of Judah.[10]
Honours and awards
Announced on 23 December 1963 he was awarded a life peerage,[11] which was created on 21 January 1964 with the title Baron Willis, of Chislehurst in the County of Kent,[12] on a Labour Party nomination.[13]
Willis married the London-based actress Audrey Hale in 1944[15] and they had a son and a daughter.[9] He died of a heart attack at his home in Chislehurst, Kent in December 1992 aged 78,[8] and was buried at Tottenham Cemetery.
Credits
Selected plays
Buster (1943)
Doctor in the House (1957, from the novel by Richard Gordon)