Alun Owen (24 November 1925, Menai Bridge
, Wales
– 6 December 1994) was a
British
screenwriter, predominantly active in television, but best remembered by a wider
audience for writing the screenplay of The
Beatles' debut feature film A Hard Day's Night
(1964).
Owen was
raised in the English
city of
Liverpool
, where his family moved when he was eight years
old. After a short career with the
Merchant Navy, for two years Owen
worked down a
coal mine as a '
Bevin Boy', before moving into
repertory theatre as an assistant stage
manager. From there he moved into acting, first with the
Birmingham Repertory Company
and then various other companies, appearing in small roles in films
and to a greater degree in the newer medium of television during
the 1950s.
By the late 1950s, however, Owen was beginning to realise that his
real ambitions lay in writing rather than performing, and he began
to submit scripts to
BBC Radio.
His first
full-length play, Progress to
the Park, was produced by the Theatre Royal,
Stratford East
following its radio debut, and later in the
West
End
. A second play, titled
The Rough and Ready Lot, was
adapted for television by the BBC in September 1959.
His next play was his first to be written directly for television.
Titled
No Trams to Lime
Street (1959), the Liverpool-set piece was presented in
ABC Television's
Armchair Theatre anthology
strand, for which Owen continued to write plays into the 1960s. He
also made his feature film scriptwriting debut in 1960, penning
The Criminal from a storyline
originally by
Jimmy Sangster.
In 1964, when director
Richard Lester
was hired to direct
The Beatles' first
film, he remembered Owen from their previous work together on
Lester's
ITV television programme
The Dick Lester Show in 1955. The
Beatles were also keen on Owen, having been impressed with his
depiction of Liverpool in
No Trams to Lime Street, and
Owen spent some time associating with the four band members to gain
an ear for their characters and manners of speech. His resulting
script for
A Hard Day's Night earned him a nomination for
the 1965
Academy Award for
Writing Original Screenplay.
In the same year, Owen contributed the
libretto for a West End
musical,
composer Lionel Bart's Maggie May. The show ran for a
respectable 501 performances at London's Adelphi Theatre
.
Television continued to be his main medium, however, and he
concentrated mainly on single plays for the small screen, in
strands such as
BBC2's
Theatre 625. He carried on writing for
television into the 1970s and 80s, with his final produced work
being an adaptation of
R. F. Delderfield's novel
Come Home Charlie and Face
Them for ITV in 1990.
He died in
London
in 1994.
A festival was held in his honour from
19
October–
21 October 2006 in Liverpool, arranged by the
Merseyside Welsh Heritage
Society. A lecture in
English
on Owen and the Liverpool Welsh was delivered by Dr D.
Ben Rees, Chairman of
the Society, and in Welsh by Dr
Arthur Thomas of University of Liverpool
on his life and work. These lectures were
published in book form in 2007.
References
External links