home forum
photo clips
sounds vids
• * Coming THIS FRIDAY 20th July! official website for Philip: www. philip-glenister.com - well done Phil!

links

the christmas card (click)
Previously
Macmillan
A Non-Stop sponsored Play-in Concert
to support the East Sheen Macmillan Cancer Support macmillan.html
at Sheen Lane Centre - East Sheen on 21st April.


Please click image for short video
BAFTA's 2006

Phil has been nominated in the Best Actor category for this year's Royal Television Society Programme Awards. Life On Mars is also up for best drama series.
The RTS awards are second only to the BAFTA's in terms of stature and importance.

RTS Awards 2006 nominations.
look out later for the Broadcasting Press Guild awards on Friday 23rd March http://www.broadcastingpressguild.org/awards/index.html

 
FANMAIL
AWARDS
pic showing the LOM team at the BAFTA's taking hte Pioneer award BAFTA 2007

Life On Mars
was voted the pioneer audience award at the BAFTA's
a good show from all who voted !

Please click image for short video

tvchoiceawards.co.uk

Best Actor
number
16

put your
mouse where
it counts


tvchoiceawards.co.uk

The 2007 TV Quick And TV Choice Awards are on, with Philip up in 'Best Actor'.
To vote for Phil select number 16.
LifeOnMars has also been nominated for Best Loved Drama Series, select 15 to pick that.
Voting
closes at midnight on July 15th, 2007 so get your nominations in at http://tvchoiceawards.co.uk.
We wish Phil all the very best of luck!

 

updated 27 July
Life on Mars: a one-day symposium
November 16, 2007
Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries,
University of Glamorgan.

Invited speakers include:
Jane Featherstone Joint Managing Director Kudos Film & Television
Julie Gardner BBC Head of Drama Wales & Head of Commissioning
Prof. Robin Nelson Manchester Metropolitan University

This one-day symposium seeks to explore the much - acclaimed TV drama, Life on Mars (Kudos for BBC Wales). In the context of debates surrounding quality and originality in British television, this series rapidly gained the attention of viewers and the press from its first series last year. With the ending of the second series, we invite scholars to assess this landmark drama and to explore the particular moment of its production and reception.
We invite papers that explore the drama from the widest range of angles. Possible topics include but are not limited to:
Re-invention of the police/crime drama genre
Locations of production and regional settings
Signatures of quality television
The contemporary cultural politics of the re-encounter with Britain in the 1970s
Feminism and 1970s nostalgia
The uncanny
Audiences for quality drama
Heroes and villains
Acting the past
Engendering irony

Afterlife of TV Drama in a multi-channel and DVD age collectables/back catalogues
Please e-mail abstracts of approximately 300 words for individual papers or panels by September 1st, 2007 to the conference organisers, Prof. Stephen Laceyswlacey@glam.ac.uk <mailto:swlacey@glam.ac.uk> & Dr Ruth McElroy (rmcelroy@glam.ac.uk.)