Geoffrey Sax

Last updated 07 September 2016

Production Credits
Director: as Directed by: The TV Movie
1 credit in
1 entry
Geoffrey Sax
(this image appears for illustrative purposes only and no attempt is made to supersede any copyright attributed to it)

Geoffrey Sax


IMDB
Wikipedia


Geoffrey Sax is a British film and television director, who has worked on a variety of critically acclaimed and popular drama productions in both the UK and the United States.

He directed the BBC / Universal Studios / Fox Network TV movie version Doctor Who, screened in 1996. 

He began his directing career in the late 1970s, initially working in comedy, directing episodes of a number of sketch shows such as Cannon and Ball and End of Part One. He made the move into directing drama in the early 1980s, working on episodes of popular BBC dramas such as Bergerac and Lovejoy.

Later in the decade he worked on ITV programmes such as Spitting Image and The New Statesman. In the early 1990s he worked for a time in America, directing TV Movies and miniseries for various networks there.

In 1998 Sax returned to the UK. He helmed Lynda La Plante's adaptation of her own novel Killer Net that year, and later gained credits on Paul Abbott's acclaimed Clocking Off, a Red Production Company series for BBC One.

In 2001 he directed a modern-day adaptation of the story of Othello, produced by London Weekend Television for the ITV network and starring Eamonn WalkerChristopher Eccleston and Keeley Hawes. The adaptation was written byAndrew Davies, who Sax worked with again the following year when he directed Davies' adaptation of Sarah Waters' novel Tipping the Velvet for Sally Head Productions and BBC Two. This was not the only connection between the two productions: Keeley Hawes also co-starred in Tipping the Velvet, the lead in which was played by Rachael Stirling, who had a smaller role in Othello.

Sax's first theatrically released feature film, White Noise, was released in January 2005, entering the US Box Office top ten at No. 2. His second feature, Stormbreaker � based on Anthony Horowitz's Alex Rider novel of the same name � was released in the summer of 2006.

Biography from the Wikipedia article, licensed under CC-BY-SA