Big Finish confirm current full-cast Survivors audios will conclude with series nine

Survivors series one box sets just waiting to be snapped up

BIG FINISH HAVE confirmed (17 December) that the current run of full-cast Survivors audios will conclude with the ninth boxset, scheduled for release in June 2019.

Series nine will deliver the finale of the story arc set in motion by the events of series eight and provide what producer David Richardson pledges will be “the perfect bookend to that very first TV episode, The Fourth Horseman.”

The episode titles and scriptwriter credits for series nine have also been confirmed, with four existing Survivors writers returning for the final stories. Jane Slavin pens episode one (“The Farm”); Christopher Hatherall writes episode two (“Hearts and Mines”); Roland Moore authors the third episode (“Fade Out”); while the opportunity to write the final episode of the nine series run (“Conflict”) is snapped up by Survivors stalwart Andrew Smith.

Richardson confirms that working on the Survivors audio range has been “one of the personal highlights” of his eleven years at Big Finish, and add – enticingly – that this endpoint “isn’t the end of the stories from the world of Survivors.”

Survivors: series finale

The ongoing series of Survivors will be drawing to a close and what an epic finale we’ve in store for you. Happily this isn’t the end of the stories from the world of Survivors, but the current ongoing narrative will be wrapped up in series nine of the current audio adventures – coming out in June 2019.

The Death may have not taken everyone, but the end is in sight for the Survivors… Big Finish can confirm today that the ongoing audio story following on from the television serie of Survivors wraps up with series nine. With Abby possibly meeting Peter in series eight, who knows what will happen next?

Four struggles for the survivors of the Death will be released in June 2019:

  • 9.1 – The Farm by Jane Slavin
  • 9.2 – Hearts and Mines by Christopher Hatherall
  • 9.3 – Fade Out by Roland Moore
  • 9.4 – Conflict by Andrew Smith

Producer David Richardson told us about the mammoth achievement of continuing the epic television show for nine series on audio: “Working on Survivors has been one of the personal highlights of my 11 years of Big Finish. We’ve had the opportunity to make 36 brand new full-cast episodes that have been dark, richly dramatic and bold.

“But all good things must come to an end and this box set brings this Survivors story arc to a conclusion – and what a finale it is. I think we have the perfect bookend to that very first TV episode, The Fourth Horseman, broadcast back in 1975.”

Big Finish - Survivors - S9 - Ep 1 - recording

Survivors series 9, episode 1 recording

Survivors Series Nine will be released in June 2019.

You can pre-order Survivors Series Nine and Survivors Series Eight (released tomorrow) each at £25 on CD or £20 on download. Or order pre-order them both in a bundle at £50 on CD or £40 on download.

David also told us what’s coming up in Survivors Series Eight in October’s edition of Vortex magazine: “Listeners may have noticed that in the last box set our final episode edged past the end of the 1970s TV series, with Abby Grant and Jenny Richards reunited. Our eighth box set – and also the ninth – will continue that move forward, with eight linked episodes that see the return of Peter Grant, and the rise of a new threat to the community.” You can read the full article in Vortex, here.

Survivors: series finale. 17 December 2018.

Series eight of Survivors audios released

Big Finish - Survivors - series eight - cover art

THE EIGHTH SERIES of original Survivors audio adventures has been released by Big Finish today.

This latest boxset features original TV series characters Abby Grant (Carolyn Seymour), Jenny Richards (Lucy Fleming) and Ruth Anderson (Helen Goldwyn) alongside returning characters introduced by Big Finish’s team of writers. Series eight sees the introduction of the prominent new figure of former military man Robert Malcolm (Hywel Morgan), and heralds the long-anticipated meeting of Abby Grant and her son Peter (Joel James Davison).

The four episodes of series eight are available to buy as a CD boxset or as a digital download package.

Big Finish offer hefty discounts on Survivors audios this weekend

Big Finish - Survivors audios - December 14-16 2018 - offer

AHEAD OF THE upcoming release of the eighth series of Survivors audio adventures, Big Finish are offering discounts on previous releases in the series which should prove irresistable to anyone who’s not yet caught up with one of the company’s “most critically acclaimed” shows which regularly secures “top mark reviews.”

This weekend (14-16 December 2018) you can take advantage of a 50% discount on the download version of the first four series of Survivors audios, and – even more temptingly – a massive discount on Carolyn Seymour’s peerless audiobook reading of Terry Nation’s 1976 Survivors novel, which you can pick-up for just £2.99. Series four, five and six are also available at pre-release prices once again.

If for some inexplicable reason you’ve not yet done so, there’s still time to pre-order Survivors series eight (either on CD or as a digital download) from the Big Finish site too.

Survivors special offers

The eighth series of Survivors, based on the cult 1970s drama, will be released later this month – which just gives you enough time to catch up on the previous episodes using our special offers on the first seven series – prices start from just £2.99.

Survivors is based on an original concept and characters from the 1975 television series by Terry Nation (creator of the Daleks and Blake’s 7). The show ran for three seasons and was known to be as thought-provoking and character-driven as it was terrifying.

Survivors Series Eight sees actors Carolyn Seymour and Lucy Fleming reprising their TV roles as Abby Grant and Jenny Richards. Helen Goldwyn also returns as Ruth and George Watkins returns as Craig – both characters appeared in Survivors Series Six.

Actress Wendy Craig, who listeners will recognise from TV shows Nanny, Butterflies, …And Mother Makes Three and …And Mother Makes Five guest stars, and in a major twist, Joel James Davison (the son of Fifth Doctor Peter Davison) joins the ongoing series as Peter Grant, Abby’s long-lost son. Will Abby and Peter finally meet?

To celebrate the upcoming new series of Survivors, this weekend (until 23:59 UK time, Monday 17th December), the first four series of Survivors and the Survivors audiobook on CD are now priced at 50% off, and Series Five, Six and Seven are available at their pre-order prices.

Head to page https://www.bigfinish.com/offers/v/survive and use access code PETERGRANT to access these special offers.

And for a real bargain, why not listen to the audiobook of the Survivors novel, available on download at just £2.99.

Survivors remains one of Big Finish’s most critically acclaimed series, with regular top mark reviews. The powerful performances and strong scripts in these tales of survival and the continuation of hope and humanity in a ravaged world must be heard to be believed.

If you’re new to the world of Survivors you can listen to Survivors: Revelation by Matt Fitton, the first episode from Survivors Series One, as a free download from Big Finish.

Big Finish release free fifteen minute preview of Survivors series eight

Big Finish - Survivors - series eight - cover art

TODAY’S BIG FINISH podcast (2 December 2018) concludes with a fifteen minute preview of the first episode of series eight of Survivors audio adventures.

The ‘Drama Tease’ is a staple feature of Big Finish’s regular weekly podcast, and this instalment offers a quarter-of-an-hour sneak-peak of opening episode of upcoming eighth Survivors audio series ‘Bandit Train’. Written by Christopher Hatherall, this story features Abby Grant (Carolyn Seymour), Jenny Richards (Lucy Fleming), returning audio-first character Craig (George Watkins) and Derek Gibb (Gyuri Sarossy).

8.1 BANDIT TRAIN

Society is slowly rebuilding. Abby and Jenny are transporting supplies between settlements. Craig is learning how to run the steam engines on lines cleared by Greg Preston.

But there are still those who just want to take. And their train is about to come under attack…

The eighth series of Survivors audios is released later this month and is still available for pre-order; and all previously releases in the series are still available to buy in CD and download formats.

Big Finish release Survivors audios series eight trailer

BIG FINISH HAVE released the trailer for the upcoming eighth series of Survivors audio adventures.

It had previously been revealed that this latest series of audio dramas will feature the resolution of Abby Grant long search for her missing son Peter, although there’s no guarantee that this long-anticipated meeting will be a joyous one.

The new 1m 6s trailer focuses on the characters of Abby and Jenny (Greg does not appear to feature in series eight) and suggests that Abby’s and Peter’s reunion will occur in the context of an armed conflict between different groups over scarce resources.

Details of the episode titles, scriptwriters and key cast members were announced by Big Finishback in September.

Now scheduled for release in December 2018 (a month later than the previously rescheduled November date) series eight of Survivors is available to pre-order at £25 on CD or £20 on download. Also available is a bundle, which combines a pre-order of series eight and nine for £50 on CD or £40 on download.

If you’re new to the world of Survivors you can listen to Survivors: Revelation by Matt Fitton, the first episode from Survivors series one, on a free download from Big Finish.

Big Finish - Survivors - series eight - cover art

More details released of series eight of Big Finish Survivors audios

Big Finish - Survivors - series eight - cover art

MORE DETAILS OF the cast and storylines of the forthcoming eighth series of Survivors audio adventures have been released by Big Finish.

This next series of four adventures focuses on Abby Grant (Carolyn Seymour) and Jenny Richards (Lucy Fleming). As well as the returning characters of of Ruth (Helen Goldwyn) and Craig (George Watkins) and a guest spot by Wendy Craig, Big Finish have confirmed that Abby and her son Peter (Joel James Davison) will be reunited in this series – although there is no guarantee that their reunion will be a joyous one.

Returning scriptwriters Christopher Hatherall and Roland Moore are joined by first-time Survivors audio writers Jane Slavin (who also features in the cast) and Lisa McMullin.

Series eight of Surivors audios will be released in November 2018.

Survivors 8 – Cast and Story Details

More details have been released on the next volume of Survivors (Series Eight) due for release this November. Society is being rebuilt and reunions will take place, but people have changed since the ‘Death’…

Prepare to return to the powerful and sinister world of Survivors, in Series Eight of one of Big Finish’s most critically acclaimed releases.

Survivors

8.1 BANDIT TRAIN

Society is slowly rebuilding. Abby and Jenny are transporting supplies between settlements. Craig is learning how to run the steam engines on lines cleared by Greg Preston.

But there are still those who just want to take. And their train is about to come under attack…

8.2 ROBERT

Once, Robert Malcolm had a complicated life. His wife in an institution, his girlfriend running a struggling business, he was out of the army and without a place in the world.

When the Death came, it meant many things to many people. For Robert, it meant freedom.

8.3 THE LOST BOYS

Peter Grant is alive. He is with Robert Malcolm’s army of boy soldiers, learning to survive. Building a better future.

But medic Ruth has her suspicions when she visits the camp. And Craig is about to find out what it takes to become a recruit.

8.4 VILLAGE OF DUST

Abby, still desperate for the reunion she’s been seeking for years, now knows that Peter is part of an army.

Meanwhile, Jenny realises that someone is drawing plans against her budding Federation. A war is coming, and mother and son are on different sides.

Survivors Series Eight sees actors Carolyn Seymour and Lucy Fleming reprising their TV roles as Abby Grant and Jenny Richards. Helen Goldwyn also returns as Ruth and George Watkins returns as Craig – both characters previously appeared in Survivors Series Six. Plus actress Wendy Craig, who listeners will recognise from TV shows Nanny, Butterflies, …And Mother Makes Three and …And Mother Makes Five, guest stars, and Joel James Davison (the son of Fifth Doctor Peter Davison) joins the ongoing series as Peter Grant, Abby’s long-lost son in a major twist. They’ll finally be reunited, but will Peter be happy to see his mother again?

Other cast members, Hywel Morgan plays Robert Malcolm, Gyuri Sarossy plays Derek Gibb, Richard Popple plays Kilby, Homer Todiwala plays Scotty, Susie Emmett plays Twig, Jane Slavin (as well as writing an episode) plays Julia and Mrs Brock, Vikash Bhai plays Jesus, Isla Carter plays Cayla Kenny, Eddie Eyre plays Seth Pilkington, Katherine Rose Morley plays Sonia Meadows and Susan Hingley plays Jiao Li.

You can pre-order Survivors Series Eight today at £25 on CD or £20 on download. Or save money in a bundle and pre-order Series Eight and Nine together at £50 on CD or £40 on download.

If you’re new to the world of Survivors you can listen to Survivors: Revelation by Matt Fitton, the first episode from Survivors Series One, on a free download from Big Finish.

Britain by Bike with Larry & George Lamb visits Monsal Dale

TV CAMERAS WERE back in Monsal Dale again recently, this time to record part of a two-wheel tour of the Peak District by Larry and George Lamb.

Episode three of the second series of Britain by Bike with Larry & George Lamb (first shown on Channel 5 in the UK on 31 August 2018) showed the father and son cycling along the Monsal Trail out of Bakewell, through the Headstock Tunnel and out across the Monsal viaduct.

In 1977, the Monsal valley was one of the principal filming locations for the third series Survivors episode Mad Dog.

‘The Peak District’ episode of Britain by Bike is available to stream from the My5 web site (until 15 July 2019).

Britain by bike with Larry and George Lamb - Monsal Dale - Headstock Tunnel

Britain by bike with Larry and George Lamb - Monsal Dale - inside the Headstock tunnel

Britain by bike with Larry and George Lamb - Monsal Dale - top of the viaduct

Britain by bike with Larry and George Lamb - Monsal Dale - view of the viaduct

Britain by bike with Larry and George Lamb - Monsal Dale - the rocky outcrop

Big Finish reveal Survivors audios series eight cover

Big Finish - Survivors - series eight - cover art

BIG FINISH HAVE revealed the cover art for the forthcoming eighth series of Survivors audio adventures, scheduled for release in November.

Tom Newsom’s design for the series eight cover places Abby Grant (Carolyn Seymour) at its centre, flanked by Jenny Richards (Lucy Fleming) and Peter Grant (newcomer to the series Joel James Davison, the son of Fifth Doctor Peter Davison).

You can still pre-order Series Eight of Survivors at £25 on CD or £20 on download. Or save money in a bundle and pre-order Series Eight and Nine together at £50 on CD or £40 on download.

Series 1-7 can still be ordered from the Big Finish web site, along with the audio book version of Terry Nation’s 1976 Survivors novel, narrated by Carolyn Seymour.

If you’re new to the world of Survivors you can listen to Survivors: Revelation by Matt Fitton, the first episode from Survivors Series One on a free download from Big Finish.

Big Finish’s Nick Briggs confirms tough sales climate for Survivors audios

Big Finish - Survivors - logo

IN THE LATEST BIG FINISH podcast (19 August 2018), executive producer Nick Briggs speaks candidly about some of the commercial challenges the company faces in securing a viable financial return on some of the audio titles in its catalogue: including Survivors.

The issue was explored in response to a listener’s email enquiring about the possibility of Big Finish producing a series of Doomwatch audios (either as a contemporary reboot or by recreating some of the many ‘lost episodes’ from the original). Briggs explained that, while this was an enticing prospect, the company doubted that there would be sufficient listeners out there willing to buy the finished product – and revealed that other key titles (outside the Doctor Who universe) were facing the same challenge:

“Would we ever consider it? We would. But you know – rights. The trouble is with series like this is that they’re well remembered and people like me go crazy for them. But there aren’t enough of us, really, to make it viable. We’ve found this with diminishing sales for Survivors and The Omega Factor – some of the best things we do. But they have a very limited number of vociferous fans who love it, but they’re not the big hitters. And you have to pay for the rights, and then the productions are very expensive to make, even though we’ve got certain cost-cutting budgetary measures we can put into place. So that’s the problem with something like Doomwatch. I would, in an instant, in a heartbeat, if it were just down to personal preference, I would start work on it tomorrow.”

One financial factor that has been impacting on Big Finish’s physical sales more generally is the rising cost of CD production, caused by the relative weakness of Sterling in the run-up to Brexit: as most of the company’s CD materials and services are purchased from overseas.

The cost of our producing CDs has massively risen: none of which we have passed on to customers. We’re having to take that hit ourselves, which is quite a blow. Everything is fine… we are absorbing that. One way to help us is to cut down on the materials in the CD and packaging production.

Slimming down on packaging will also help Big Finish make good on its commitment to reduce the amount of plastic and other materials used in its production process. With more of Big Finish’s sales moving to digital downloads, the company has been reviewing the approach it will take to offering CDs for sale in the future. One option is to press a fixed single run of compact discs, or to guaranteed that a CD version will be available for a fixed period of time – with digital downloads available for as long as licensing arrangements permit.

The most obvious way for Survivors enthusiasts to encourage Big Finish to continue producing its superlative Survivors audios (in whichever digital format) is to commit to pre-ordering the upcoming series and to pick up copies of any of the previous series that they have yet to acquire.

You can pre-order Series Eight of Survivors at £25 on CD or £20 on download. Or save money in a bundle and pre-order Series Eight and Nine together at £50 on CD or £40 on download.

Series 1-7 can still be ordered from the Big Finish web site, along with the audio book version of Terry Nation’s 1976 Survivors novel, narrated by Carolyn Seymour.

If you’re new to the world of Survivors you can listen to Survivors: Revelation by Matt Fitton, the first episode from Survivors Series One on a free download from Big Finish.

“I passionately love Survivors,” Briggs confirmed to Survivors: A World Away. “And it’s been one of my most rewarding creative challenges working on the series, providing the incidental music.”

Briggs’ comments on the viability of Doomwatch audios, and on the sales of Survivors and The Omega Factor, can be heard at 46ms:05s into the podcast.

UPDATE, 4 SEPTEMBER 2018: In the Listeners’ Emails section of the 3 September 2018 Big Finish podcast, Nick Briggs again discusses (albeit briefly) the future of the company’s Survivors audio adventure range (around 36mins into the broadcast):

There is another series of Survivors coming, that I have to do the music for; Benji has done the sound design. So there is one more. There’s no more of The Omega Factor

As well as confirming the cancellation of The Omega Factor, Briggs’ comments clearly indicate that – unless sales improve decisively, and reach the levels achieved by earlier releases – series nine of Survivors audios (due for release in June 2019) will be the last in the current run.

Survivors scriptwriter Martin Worth dies aged 91

Martin Worth - scriptwriter - Survivors

MARTIN WORTH, who wrote a total of seven scripts for the second and third series of Survivors (1975-1977), has died at the age of 91.

Born in Balham in London in November 1926, Martin Wigglesworth (who later changed his name to Worth), became a scriptwriter after a short stint as an actor in repertory and one-off theatrical productions. He went on to write for the stage, radio and television, penning memorable early TV scripts for Public Eye (1965, 1968), The Borderers (1970) and Special Branch (1970), before being hired by Terence Dudley to work on the eco-cautionary Doomwatch (1970-72). His script for the 1974 BBC documentary series Microbes and Men won him that year’s prestigious Best British Documentary award by the Writers’ Guild. The year that the first series of Survivors was shown, Worth penned all six episodes of the BBC’s adaptation of The Master of Ballantrae, which starred Brian Cox.

Worth’s work on Survivors’ second series

Worth joined the writing team on Survivors for series two, as the show’s centre of operations relocated to the Whitecross settlement, following the departure of Abby Grant and the blaze at The Grange. Worth was fascinated by life within the real-life community at Callow Hill, which provided the setting for the fictional Whitecross, “The location was wonderful,” he later explained to David Richardson, in an interview for TV Zone. “I took detailed photographs of everything.” Worth incorporated many of his observations and insights into his scripts, and plotted his stories to take best advantage of the layout of the landscape and buildings on site.

Worth’s first story, By Bread Alone, is a thoughtful reflection on the place of religious observance and theistic faith in the post-Death world. The impact of Lewis’ emergence from his crisis of faith drew directly on the life story of Worth’s own father; a priest who experienced his own existential angst when he came to doubt his long-held Christian beliefs. It was the kind of introspective, philosophical story which frustrated those looking to up the action-and-adventure quota on the show, but for those who warmed to its insightful themes and immersive atmosphere it marked an impressive debut for an incoming scriptwriter.

It was a measure of producer Dudley’s confidence in Worth that he was assigned writing duties on the closing two episodes of the second series of Survivors. The clash of generation and gender, brilliantly depicted in Over the Hills, is centre stage in the best of Worth’s three scripts for series two (and arguably his strongest single contribution to the show overall). It’s a script that shows Worth’s ability to craft a passionate clash of principles and strongly-held beliefs into an utterly compelling fifty-minutes drama, delivering something that is morally complex and which is determined to present the views of all the protagonists as valid and worthy of attention.

Series two closer New World is a cleverly-crafted mystery-adventure which signals the expansion of the series’ field of vision far beyond the environs of Whitecross. Worth’s script cleverly reveals the wider post-Death vista that the third series will set out to explore, and sets in motion Whitecross’ relegation to the fringes (finding a way to separate the two sparring actors playing the male leads on the show at the same time). Dudley required Worth to compress too many developments into a single episode, but with top-notch plotting and dialogue, and excellent guest characters, there’s a good case to be made for New World being the strongest of Survivors‘ three series finales.

In later years, Worth remained keen to put forward his conviction that the presence of the BBC Outside Broadcast crew at Callow Hill had a detrimental effect on the community, which – he suggested – unravelled under the pressures that filming brought. “We destroyed the very survivors we were trying to write the series about,” he explained to Timescreen. It was a contentious view, which many others who worked in-front-of and behind the cameras did not recognise. In contrast, they remember the friendships and ‘personal entanglements’ between residents and BBC visitors which developed during the spring and summer of 1976. They also recall the warm and high-spirited ceilidh that was held as the on-site ‘wrap party’ for the shoot, and note that Denis Lill and John Abineri continued to be welcome guests at Callow Hill for many years after the production left. It may simply be one of those rare cases where Worth’s evident love for a good story got the better of him.

Worth’s work on the third series of Survivors

This view aside, Worth was still disappointed by Dudley’s decision to break-up the Whitecross settlement and push the series out on the road, believing that there was untapped dramatic potential in the world of Whitecross commune and small-holding. He felt that abandoning that framework in favour of the struggle to rebuild civilisation could only accelerate the series’ demise. Setting his own misgivings aside, Worth embraced Dudley’s changed brief to deliver three contributions to what became the final series of Survivors that fully embodied the new perspective.

The riveting drama of Law of the Jungle, lit up by a bombastic performance by Brian Blessed, offered a chilling realisation of the ‘red in tooth and claw’ realities of humankind’s relation to nature in the post-Death world. It was a story that stood in complete contrast to the pastoral, bucolic and settled life of Whitecross, and was exactly the kind of the script that would have enthused Dudley. Bridgehead and Long Live the King each saw Worth very effectively wrangling the different elements that were the series’ metaphors for the revival of civilisation and of society. The scripts for both episodes again showed Worth’s talent for melding abstract themes and ideas with convincing, and very human-centred, drama.

Worth’s script for Power, the series last ever episode, is a fantastical ‘procedural’ story, showcasing the effort to bring the first Scottish hydroelectric power plant back online – while a saboteur in the survivors ranks attempts to wreck their plans. Worth placed great store in ensuring that the technical elements of this story were accurate, visiting both a power plant and a sub-station as part of his preparation. “I was shown exactly how it worked,” he explained later. “Getting it all right, doing accurate research, is very satisfying. Do it responsibly and you can always get dramatic value out of the difficulties you encounter.” This attention to detail did not lead Worth to turn in a ‘dry’ plot. In Survivors‘ closing fifty minutes, he ensures that the drama remained centred on the social and personal aspects of the struggle to reconnect the country’s first power supplies avoiding the narrowly mechanical. Power remains something of a contentious endpoint amongst Survivors enthusiasts, but very few of the controversies that this last episode give rise to are reflections of any shortcomings in the script. Worth crafts an assured sign-off for Survivors‘ sometimes disjointed final series, and delivers a number of welcome pay-offs in the process.

After Survivors

The year that Survivors came to an end, Worth also provided scripts for The Onedin Line and the BBC’s adaptation of Poldark. He would go on to write for Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense (1984), Gems and C.A.T.S. Eyes (1985) and Drummonds (1987), and continued to pen scripts for both theatre and radio until his retirement.

Worth was rightly proud of his contributions to Survivors, and was a keen supporter of anyone researching the history of the series. In 1988, Worth was interviewed by Andrew Pixley and Anthony McKay for Timescreen magazine, and discussed the full breath of his work on genre television, including but not limited to Survivors.

In the mid-1990s, he was interviewed by Kevin Marshall during his research for his self-published tome The Making of Terry Nation’s Survivors, and appeared as one of the panelists for the Survivors session at the ‘Dreamwatch 94’ convention, chaired by Marshall, which was one of the first public reunions of cast-and-crew to discuss the series ever held. In December 2006, Worth appeared as one of the interviewees in BBC Four’s The Cult of…Survivors retrospective documentary on the series (also appearing in the Doomwatch, The Onedin Line and Poldark episodes).

When Andy Priester and myself were writing The End of the World?: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Survivors, we sadly did not have the opportunity to interview Martin Worth. It was not until 2010 that I was fortunate enough to arrange to meet with him for a fascinating afternoon of discussion about his work on both Doomwatch and Survivors. Worth had been unaware of the publication of our Survivors book, but was effusive and animated in his praise when I was able to provide a copy for him to read, and full of helpful comments and suggestions for a second, updated edition.

He remained convinced that uprooting the series at the close of series two had marked a premature death-knell for the show. Terence Dudley had, he charged:

made a mistake in allowing the survivors to succeed in getting the country organized again. Though it was fun to write, it effectively killed off the series. If we’d stayed with the community in Wales trying to get by through their own self-sufficiency, it could have gone on for many more seasons.

That is certainly an enticing and and intriguing prospect from one of the most accomplished and perceptive scriptwriters to have worked on the original Survivors.

* His ex-wife, Angela Wigglesworth wrote an obituary for Worth that was published in The Guardian (6 August 2018).