
David McGillivray
Writing
23
Movies
0
TV Shows
23
Credits
About
David McGillivray has contributed to radio, TV, films and theatre, began as a film journalist and bit player. His stints as a contributor to the magazine "Films and Filming" and assistant editor of the British Film Institute's "Monthly Film Bulletin" resulted first in him writing screenplays for director Pete Walker and later writing the book "Doing Rude Things". The films were not commercially successful and McGillivray's scripts attracted mostly hostile reviews. He moved to theatre, co-writing lowbrow farces for his own company. During this period he met Julian Clary, who was starting out as a stand-up comic. McGillivray has continued to this day to write for Clary.

David McGillivray
Writing
David McGillivray has contributed to radio, TV, films and theatre, began as a film journalist and bit player. His stints as a contributor to the magazine "Films and Filming" and assistant editor of the British Film Institute's "Monthly Film Bulletin" resulted first in him writing screenplays for director Pete Walker and later writing the book "Doing Rude Things". The films were not commercially successful and McGillivray's scripts attracted mostly hostile reviews. He moved to theatre, co-writing lowbrow farces for his own company. During this period he met Julian Clary, who was starting out as a stand-up comic. McGillivray has continued to this day to write for Clary.

Carry On Girls

House of Whipcord

Tales of the Uncanny

Frightmare

Scala!!!

Satan's Slave

The Estrogen Gospel

Children of the Wicker Man

The Perfect Scary Movie

I'm Not Feeling Myself Tonight

Damaged: The Very British Obscenity of David Hamilton-Grant

Worst Fears

From Romero to Rome: The Rise and Fall of the Italian Zombie Movie

The Emmanuelle Effect

Contact

Doing Rude Things

The Highgate Vampyre

Turn Off Your Bloody Phone: Norman J. Warren and the Ghost

Abracadaver!

Loops

VHS Forever? | Psychotronic People

Sex and Fame: The Mary Millington Story

Melting in the Streets the Legacy of Street Trash