
Malcolm Hulke
Writing
Born 1924-11-21 · Died 1979-06-06
Malcolm Ainsworth Hulke (21 November 1924 – 6 July 1979) was a British television writer and author of the industry "bible" Writing for Television in the 70s. He is remembered chiefly for his work on the science fiction series Doctor Who although he contributed to many popular television series of the era. Known as "Mac" throughout his life, Hulke was born out of wedlock in 1924 and never knew his father. He later discussed the social stigma of illegitimacy and his personal experiences of it in a 1964 radio documentary and a 1973 op-ed piece in The Observer. He lived with his mother, Marian, until her death in 1943 in Cumberland. In 1945 he was conscripted into the Royal Navy. Impressed by the Russian prisoners of War whom he met in Norway and by the Red Army's defeat of the Nazis on the Eastern Front, Hulke joined the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1945 and worked briefly as a typist in the party's headquarters. He left the party in 1951, objecting to the Soviet Union's hostility to Yugoslavia and its line on the Korean War, but soon re-joined, and appears to have remained a member of the party until the early 1960s. His politics remained firmly on the left, and this was reflected in his writings, which often explored anti-authoritarian, environmental, and humanist themes.
Crew

Doctor Who: The War Games in Colour
Writer

Doctor Who: Invasion of the Dinosaurs
Writer

Doctor Who: Frontier in Space
Writer

Doctor Who: The Sea Devils
Writer

Doctor Who: Colony in Space
Writer

Doctor Who and the Silurians
Writer

Doctor Who: The War Games
Writer

Woobinda: Animal Doctor
Writer

Woobinda: Animal Doctor
Creator

Doctor Who: The Faceless Ones
Writer

Gideon's Way
Screenplay
The Protectors
Writer

Doctor Who
Writer

The Man in the Back Seat
Writer

Pathfinders to Venus
Creator

The Avengers
Writer

The Avengers
Teleplay

Pathfinders to Mars
Creator

Danger Man
Writer

Pathfinders in Space
Creator