Moira Armstrong
Moira Armstrong | |
---|---|
Born | 1930 |
Occupation | television director |
Awards | BAFTA Best Drama Series/Serial |
Moira Armstrong (born 1930) is a Scottish television director whose career has expanded over nearly fifty years.[1]
Born in Crieff[2] and raised in north-east Scotland, Armstrong initially worked in BBC Radio where she trained as a continuity announcer before switching to television.[1]
Her credits include episodes of Armchair Thriller (based on the novel Quiet as a Nun), The Onedin Line, Lark Rise to Candleford, Where the Heart Is, The Bill, Midsomer Murders, Something in Disguise, The Wednesday Play, and Adam Adamant Lives!, the biographical serial Freud (1984) as well as the television film The Countess Alice (1992).
She also directed Sunset Song, the 1971 adaptation for television of Lewis Grassic Gibbon's novel, notable not only for being the first drama to be recorded in colour by BBC Scotland but also featuring its first nude scene.[2]
Armstrong (with Jonathan Powell) won the 1980 BAFTA Best Drama Series/Serial award for Testament of Youth (1979).
Other credits
[edit]- Shoulder to Shoulder (and Waris Hussein, 1974)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Moira Armstrong - Watching Ourselves: Sixty Years of TV in Scotland", BBC website
- ^ a b "Sunset Song: Classic novel set in the Mearns became the first BBC drama series shot in colour". Press & Journal. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
External links
[edit]- Moira Armstrong at IMDb
- [1] interview British Entertainment History Project