Stephen Gallagher
Stephen Gallagher (born 13 October 1954) is an English novelist, screenwriter, and director renowned for his contributions to genres including science fiction, horror, crime, and historical mystery, as well as his work on acclaimed television series and miniseries.[1] Born in Salford, Lancashire, he began his writing career in the late 1970s with science fiction novels published under pseudonyms such as Stephen Couper, before transitioning to horror and suspense in the 1980s.[2] His multifaceted career spans over four decades, encompassing more than a dozen novels, short fiction collections, and high-profile television projects that blend psychological tension with speculative elements.[3][4] Gallagher's literary output includes the Sebastian Becker trilogy, a series of historical mysteries set in early 20th-century England featuring the Special Investigator to the Lord Chancellor's Visitor in Lunacy, comprising The Kingdom of Bones (2007), The Bedlam Detective (2012), and The Authentic William James (2016).[5] Earlier works established his reputation in horror and speculative fiction, such as Valley of Lights (1987), a supernatural thriller, Chimera (1982), which explores genetic experimentation, and Oktober (1988), a tale of psychological horror later adapted for television.[3] His standalone crime novels, including Down River (1989) and Rain (1990), demonstrate his versatility in contemporary suspense, while short story collections like Out of His Mind (2004) highlight his skill in concise, atmospheric narratives. More recent works include the novella The Next Thing You See When You Die (2024).[6] Gallagher's prose is noted for its meticulous plotting and exploration of human vulnerability amid the uncanny.[7] In television, Gallagher gained prominence as a scriptwriter starting with the BBC's Doctor Who in the early 1980s, contributing stories to seasons 18 and 19 under the name Steve Gallagher.[4] He created and wrote the miniseries Chimera (1991), a conspiracy thriller about genetic engineering, and Oktober (1998), which he also directed.[8] Other key credits include developing the series Eleventh Hour (2006–2008), a British adaptation of a CSI-style science drama later remade for American audiences; serving as lead writer and co-executive producer on Crusoe (2008–2009) for NBC; and writing episodes for Silent Witness, Rosemary & Thyme, and Stan Lee's Lucky Man (2016–2018).[9][10] His screenwriting often incorporates scientific and ethical dilemmas, reflecting themes from his novels.[11] Gallagher has received recognition for both his prose and scripts, including the British Fantasy Award and the International Horror Guild Award for short fiction, as well as nominations for the Bram Stoker and World Fantasy Awards.[7] For television, his two-part Silent Witness story "Legacy" (2013) won the European Science TV and New Media Award for Best Drama.[4] A former Northern Chair of the Writers' Guild of Great Britain and a member of the Writers' Guild of America, he continues to influence suspense storytelling across media.[2]Early life and education
Early years
Stephen Gallagher was born on 13 October 1954 in Salford, Lancashire, England (now part of Greater Manchester).[11] He grew up in a working-class environment in the Salford area during the post-war years, a setting characterized by industrial urban life that later influenced the gritty, locale-specific themes in his writing.[12] Gallagher attended Eccles Grammar School, where he developed early creative interests through extracurricular activities such as a photography club initiated by one of his art teachers in 1966. At age 12, he captured his first images with a Regula 35mm camera during a rare White Christmas, experimenting with visual storytelling like photographing a cat on the steps of the local Princes Cinema in nearby Monton—an experience he later described as a foundational part of his education alongside formal schooling.[13] His childhood exposure to Salford's cultural resources, including a junior library and comic book stands at the local market, sparked a passion for literature and media.[14] From a young age, Gallagher showed keen interests in drama, literature, and storytelling, influenced by 1960s television programs like Armchair Theatre and the Wednesday Play anthology series, as well as films such as Whistle Down the Wind, which he viewed with his grandmother at Salford's Carlton Cinema. These early encounters with narrative forms—ranging from science fiction anthologies by H.G. Wells and Edgar Allan Poe to horror comics in Famous Monsters of Filmland—fostered his affinity for blending genres like crime, horror, and science fiction in everyday, urban contexts.[15][14] Local cinemas and family outings further nurtured this imaginative foundation, embedding themes of ordinary menace in familiar surroundings that would echo in his later creative style.[13]Academic background
Gallagher attended Eccles Grammar School in Salford before pursuing higher education.[16] He enrolled at the University of Hull in 1973, where he pursued a Joint Honours degree in Drama and English, graduating in 1975.[17] The program's structure emphasized practical and analytical engagement with theatre and literature, fostering skills in narrative construction and dramatic expression. The English component provided a grounding in literary analysis and structure. The joint honours curriculum bridged literary fiction and dramatic arts by integrating textual study with performative techniques, equipping Gallagher with a versatile foundation for crafting narratives across media.[17]Career
Early writing career
Gallagher's early writing career emerged in the late 1970s through radio drama, where he honed his skills in science fiction and thriller scripting. His initial forays included a series of radio serials broadcast on Piccadilly Radio, beginning with the six-part dystopian science fiction narrative The Last Rose of Summer in 1977, which explored themes of societal collapse and human resilience in a near-future Britain.[18] This work marked his transition into professional broadcasting and was later adapted into a novel of the same title in 1978, revised and republished under the pseudonym Stephen Couper as Dying of Paradise in 1982, blending speculative elements with psychological tension.[11][19] A pivotal milestone came with his debut BBC radio play, An Alternative to Suicide, a 90-minute science fiction drama produced by John Tydeman for BBC Radio 4's Saturday Night Theatre and first broadcast on 17 November 1979.[20][18] The story depicted a computerized human operative in the 22nd century rediscovering his suppressed personality after a catastrophic accident, starring Michael Jayston and Catherine Kessler, and showcased Gallagher's innovative use of sound design in the Hi-Fi Theatre series.[21] This production, long considered lost due to wiped masters but restored from collector recordings, was rebroadcast on BBC Radio 4 Extra on 23 June 2025 as part of the Hidden Treasures strand, highlighting its enduring appeal.[20][21] Gallagher continued with pseudonymous short fiction and further radio contributions in the early 1980s, including sequels like Hunters' Moon (1978) and The Babylon Run (1979) under his own name for Piccadilly Radio, which expanded his science fiction universe.[18] These efforts culminated in his first full-length novel under his own name, Follower, published in 1984 by Sphere Books, a horror-thriller involving a Norse-inspired demonic entity stalking an oil rig crew, which solidified his reputation in genre fiction.[1] His background in drama and English at the University of Hull provided foundational preparation for these narrative-driven outputs.[11]Television and screenwriting
Stephen Gallagher began his television career in the early 1980s with scripts for the BBC's long-running science fiction series Doctor Who. He wrote the four-part serial "Warriors' Gate" in 1981, the final story in the E-Space trilogy, which explored themes of entrapment and freedom in a surreal void between universes; the production faced challenges, including script revisions by director Graeme Harper to streamline the narrative and enhance pacing amid location filming difficulties at the disused Smithfield Market in London.[22] Two years later, in 1983, Gallagher penned "Terminus," the penultimate installment of the Black Guardian trilogy, depicting a dystopian space station at the universe's center where the Doctor confronts moral dilemmas involving a cure for a deadly disease; script editor Eric Saward requested additions to extend runtime, leading Gallagher to incorporate new scenes that deepened the story's ethical layers.[22] These contributions showcased Gallagher's ability to blend speculative concepts with character-driven drama, establishing his versatility in genre television.[14] In 1991, Gallagher adapted his own 1982 novel Chimera into a four-part ITV miniseries, serving as screenwriter for the genetic engineering thriller that follows a journalist uncovering a fertility clinic's sinister experiments to breed superhumans; directed by Lawrence Gordon Clark, the production emphasized suspenseful horror elements and received praise for its atmospheric tension despite budget constraints on creature effects.[23] Later in the decade, he contributed as a writer and consultant to ten episodes of the BBC techno-thriller Bugs (1995–1997), a series centered on high-tech crime-fighting, where his scripts often incorporated near-future gadgets and ethical quandaries in cyber threats, helping to define the show's action-oriented style.[24] Gallagher expanded into directing with the 1998 ITV miniseries Oktober, adapting his 1988 novel into a three-part psychological thriller about a banker ensnared in a pharmaceutical conspiracy; as writer-director, he crafted a taut narrative that blended corporate intrigue with hallucinatory sequences, earning acclaim for its visual pacing and Stephen Tompkinson's lead performance.[10] Gallagher's work in the 2000s extended to crime dramas, including feature-length episodes for ITV's Rosemary & Thyme (2003–2006), such as the season two opener "The Memory of Water" (2004), which integrated gardening mysteries with personal backstories for the detective duo, and "The Cup of Silence" (2005), focusing on vineyard sabotage and family secrets.[25] He also wrote the two-part "Legacy" storyline for BBC's Silent Witness in 2013, probing government cover-ups and forensic intrigue in a narrative that highlighted institutional corruption and its human cost, aligning with the series' procedural depth.[26] A pivotal creation was Eleventh Hour (ITV, 2006), a four-part science thriller Gallagher developed and fully scripted, starring Patrick Stewart as government consultant Professor Ian Hood investigating ethical breaches in biotechnology, from cloning to pandemics; the format's success led to a U.S. adaptation by Jerry Bruckheimer for CBS (2008–2009), where Gallagher contributed two episodes ("Resurrection" and "Containment") amid 18 total, preserving the core premise of a scientist tackling scientific crises with an FBI handler.[10][27] Building on this, Gallagher served as series developer and lead writer for NBC's Crusoe (2008–2009), reimagining Daniel Defoe's novel as a 13-episode action-adventure with flashbacks to the protagonist's island survival, writing the pilot and key arcs that emphasized survival themes and moral ambiguity.[28] He followed as co-executive producer and writer for ABC's The Forgotten (2009–2010), contributing episodes to the procedural about amateur sleuths identifying unnamed victims, including explorations of urban anonymity and justice in stories like "Mama Jane."[29] In more recent years, Gallagher wrote episodes for Sky One's Stan Lee's Lucky Man (2016–2018), including "The Charm Offensive" (2016), which delved into supernatural luck manipulation within a police procedural framework, adding layers of psychological tension to the superhero-infused narrative.[10] His television oeuvre demonstrates a consistent shift from speculative fiction to grounded thrillers, often prioritizing ethical dilemmas in science and society across collaborative formats.[14]Radio, audio, and theatre
Stephen Gallagher began his work in radio drama during the late 1970s with serials broadcast on Independent Local Radio stations, including the six-part The Last Rose of Summer on Piccadilly Radio in 1977, which explored themes of isolation and psychological tension through a cast featuring John Munday and Charles Foster.[30][18] This was followed by Hunters' Moon, an eight-part serial in 1978 that delved into survival horror elements, and The Babylon Run, a four-part thriller in 1979, marking his early experimentation with serialized suspense narratives adapted from his short fiction style.[30][18] These productions, produced by Tony Hawkins, showcased Gallagher's ability to craft auditory tension without visual cues, drawing on the confined soundscapes of radio to heighten dread.[18] Transitioning to the BBC in the same era, Gallagher contributed numerous productions to Radio 4 across the 1980s and 1990s, often in the Saturday Night Theatre and Fear on Four slots, blending psychological thriller motifs with speculative fiction.[30][18] Notable examples include The Humane Solution (1979), a 90-minute thriller directed by John Tydeman starring Patrick Mower as a morally conflicted scientist; An Alternative to Suicide (1979), a science fiction piece directed by Martin Jenkins with Michael Jayston portraying a dehumanized "meat machine" rebelling against corporate control; and A Resistance to Pressure (1980), another thriller produced by Gerry Jones featuring Gareth Armstrong.[31][21][18] His 1985 adaptation of Chimera for Saturday Night Theatre, directed by Martin Jenkins and starring Sarah Badel and Christian Rodska, directly overlapped with his later television work on the same novel, emphasizing auditory buildup of paranoia and conspiracy.[32][18] Later BBC efforts like The Kingston File (1987), By the River, Fontainebleau (1988) for Fear on Four, The Wonderful Visit (1988, an H.G. Wells adaptation), and The Horn (1989) further demonstrated his versatility in horror and suspense, often using sound design to evoke isolation and the uncanny.[30][18][33] In the 1990s and beyond, Gallagher expanded into commercial audio dramas, contributing to anthologies and adaptations that echoed the introspective dread of his novels.[30] Productions such as Lifeline (1993) for Fear on Four, The Box for Hammer Chillers, Nightmare Country for Big Finish, and BBC audio releases like Warriors’ Gate, The Kairos Ring, and Terminus highlighted his skill in full-cast performances, where voice acting and effects conveyed complex emotional layers.[30][18] A 2025 rebroadcast of An Alternative to Suicide on BBC Radio 4 Extra, part of the Hidden Treasures strand, revived this early work, underscoring its enduring appeal in exploring dystopian themes of autonomy and technology.[21][20] Gallagher's radio and audio output evolved to prioritize narrative-driven suspense, integrating psychological depth from his prose into dialogue-heavy formats that relied on implication and atmosphere, influencing later auditory adaptations while maintaining a focus on human vulnerability amid escalating threats.[30][18] Though his theatre contributions remain limited, elements of his radio style—such as taut ensemble dynamics and implied visuals—suggest crossovers to stage influences in his broader dramatic technique.[30]Bibliography
Original novels
Stephen Gallagher's original novels span the genres of horror, thriller, and crime fiction, often exploring themes of pursuit, the supernatural, and psychological tension. His works are characterized by atmospheric settings and complex character motivations, drawing on his background in screenwriting to create taut narratives. Below is a list of his original novels, including standalone titles and those in series, with brief synopses. Follower (1984)This horror novel follows a scientific team in Norway stalked by an ancient demonic entity known as a fylgja, blending Norse mythology with modern suspense as the survivors grapple with paranoia and isolation. Valley of Lights (1987)
A supernatural thriller in which U.S. Secret Service agent Alex Lockman pursues a body-possessing psychic killer across the American Southwest, confronting moral dilemmas in a cat-and-mouse chase marked by gritty realism and otherworldly horror. Chimera (1982)
In this science fiction horror tale, a genetic experiment gone wrong unleashes a monstrous hybrid on a remote island community, forcing a doctor and locals to confront the ethical horrors of biotechnology and survival instincts.[1] Oktober (1988)
A conspiracy thriller where a pharmacologist uncovers a deadly corporate plot involving hallucinogenic drugs and assassinations, leading to a high-stakes escape across Europe; the novel was later adapted for television.[1] Down River (1989)
A suspense novel about a man returning to his northern English hometown, where old tensions and buried secrets resurface amid a community on the brink of violence.[3] Red, Red Robin (1995)
This psychological crime novel centers on a former police officer investigating a series of murders linked to his past, delving into themes of redemption and obsession in a rain-soaked English setting.[1] The Boat House (1991)
A suspenseful tale of a young woman inheriting a remote splash lakeside property, only to uncover dark family secrets and a lurking threat, combining elements of gothic horror and domestic thriller. Rain (1990)
Set during a devastating flood in a small town, this thriller follows a detective racing to solve a murder amid rising waters and community breakdown, emphasizing human resilience and moral ambiguity.[1] Nightmare, With Angel (1992)
A horror story about a man haunted by vivid nightmares that bleed into reality, involving a cursed artifact and a battle against inner demons, noted for its exploration of mental fragility.[1] White Bizango (2002)
A thriller involving a Louisiana detective hunting a ruthless killer who uses voodoo to control victims, blending crime with supernatural elements in a tale of cult crime and survival.[3] The Spirit Box (2005)
In this supernatural mystery, an antique dealer's discovery of a mysterious box unleashes vengeful spirits, leading to a web of hauntings and historical revelations in contemporary Britain.[1] The Kingdom of Bones (2007)
The first in the Sebastian Becker series, a Victorian-era supernatural detective story where retired boxer Tom Sayers aids investigator Sebastian Becker in probing a demonic possession case tied to music hall intrigue. The Bedlam Detective (2012)
Continuing the Sebastian Becker series, the ex-policeman investigates a mad industrialist's claims of jungle monsters killing his family, intertwining Edwardian high society with psychological horror.[5] Out of Bedlam (2013)
In this series installment, Becker navigates institutional corruption and pursuit in a historical crime tale blending occult elements with early 20th-century London society.[5] The Authentic William James (2016)
The final Sebastian Becker novel, exploring deception and identity in a mystery involving psychic phenomena and historical intrigue.[5] Gallagher's most recent original work is the novella The Next Thing You See When You Die (2024), a limited edition suspense story about an undercover cop whose blown cover leads to revenge from a gang member's lover, exploring guilt and deception in post-betrayal life.[34]
Novelizations and adaptations
Stephen Gallagher's novelizations primarily consist of adaptations of his own television scripts for the BBC series Doctor Who, published through Target Books as part of their official tie-in line. These works transformed the episodic television narratives into expanded prose formats, allowing for deeper exploration of character motivations, atmospheric details, and philosophical undertones that were constrained by the medium's runtime. His contributions to this series connected directly to his screenwriting role, where he penned the original stories for these serials.[1] Saturn Three (1980)Film novelization of the science fiction thriller directed by Stanley Donen, expanding on the themes of isolation and artificial intelligence aboard a space station.[1] Silver Dream Racer (1980, as John Lydecker)
Novelization of the 1980 film about a motorcycle racer's rise and fall, focusing on ambition and tragedy in the world of speed sports.[1] The first of these was Warriors' Gate, a novelization of the 1981 Fourth Doctor serial, released in April 1982 under the pseudonym John Lydecker by Target Books. This adaptation delves into the interdimensional void and themes of freedom and entrapment, enhancing the TV version's surreal elements with additional internal monologues and backstory for the Tharils, a enslaved alien species. An expanded edition, Doctor Who: Warriors' Gate and Beyond, was published by BBC Books in July 2023, incorporating previously cut material from Gallagher's original manuscript alongside three related short stories, providing a more comprehensive narrative arc.[35] Following this, Terminus appeared in 1983, again under the John Lydecker pseudonym and published by Target Books, adapting Gallagher's 1983 Fifth Doctor serial. The novelization amplifies the story's exploration of a derelict space station serving as a terminal for a degenerative disease, adding layers to the psychological toll on the characters and the moral dilemmas of euthanasia through extended descriptive passages. This work, like its predecessor, was part of the broader Target Books initiative to novelize Doctor Who episodes for young readers, emphasizing adventure while subtly addressing mature themes.[36] Beyond Doctor Who, Gallagher adapted his 1977 radio serial The Last Rose of Summer into prose under the pseudonym Stephen Couper. The initial novelization, titled The Last Rose of Summer, was published by Corgi Books in 1978, converting the audio drama's speculative fiction elements—centered on a dystopian future and human survival—into a self-contained narrative with enriched world-building. A revised and expanded version, retitled Dying of Paradise, followed in 1982 from Sphere Books, refining the plot and character arcs for greater thematic depth on isolation and societal collapse. This adaptation later formed the foundation of a trilogy omnibus, Dying of Paradise: The Trilogy, released by The Brooligan Press in 2022, which includes the revised novel alongside sequels The Ice Belt (1983) and The Babylon Run (2022), presenting a unified edition of the expanded radio-originated saga.[11][37]
Short fiction collections
Stephen Gallagher has produced a substantial body of short fiction, with dozens of stories published since the early 1980s in outlets such as Interzone, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Weird Tales, and various anthologies.[1] His early works often leaned toward science fiction, as seen in pieces like "Dying of Paradise" (1982) and "The Ice Belt" (1983), while his later output evolved to emphasize psychological horror, supernatural suspense, and crime narratives that probe the boundaries of reality and human behavior.[1] These stories frequently feature concise, twist-driven plots influenced by his novelistic style of building tension through ordinary settings disrupted by the uncanny.[38] Gallagher's first major collection, Out of His Mind (2004, PS Publishing), compiles 22 stories and longer works spanning his career up to that point, blending horror with suspenseful elements like psychic phenomena and ghostly encounters.[39] Notable inclusions are "The Visitors' Book" (1991), a chilling tale of a haunted guest register, and "By the River, Fontainebleau" (1986), which explores isolation and the supernatural.[40] The collection won the 2004 British Fantasy Award for Best Collection, praised for its imaginative range and atmospheric depth.[41] Stories such as "Little Angels" and "The Drain" exemplify Gallagher's skill in crafting psychological unease from everyday scenarios.[40] In Plots and Misadventures (2007, Subterranean Press), Gallagher's second anthology, he gathers 11 speculative tales plus a nonfiction piece, drawing from prior magazine and anthology appearances to delve into the weird and criminal undercurrents of modern life.[38] Themes of moral ambiguity and the supernatural intersect in works that shift seamlessly between fantasy and crime, reflecting his growing interest in hybrid genres.[42] The collection highlights his versatility, with stories originally published in venues like Night Visions, underscoring a progression from pure horror to more layered, character-driven suspense.[43] Comparative Anatomy: The Best of Stephen Gallagher (2022, Subterranean Press) serves as a comprehensive retrospective, featuring 30 stories selected from his oeuvre, including three previously unpublished pieces: the novelette "The Backtrack," the short story "Live from the Morgue," and "Shepherds' Business," which follows a doctor unraveling mysteries on a remote island.[44] Key reprints include the title story "Comparative Anatomy" (1991), a psychological horror piece about illusion and identity, and "The Governess" (2020), a sequel to Arthur Conan Doyle's Professor Challenger tales infused with gothic crime elements.[45] With an introduction by Stephen Volk, the volume traces the evolution of Gallagher's themes from early speculative fiction to mature explorations of dread and deception, solidifying his reputation in horror and thriller shorts.[46]Non-fiction
Gallagher's non-fiction output is modest, consisting mainly of essays and introductions that explore aspects of horror fiction, writing craft, and genre influences, often appearing in anthologies or as contributions to author-focused volumes. These works provide reflective commentary on the supernatural and thriller elements central to his own creative process, drawing from his extensive experience in the field. An early example is his introduction to the story "Baby's Blood" in the anthology Dark Voices: The Best from the Pan Book of Horror Stories (1990), edited by Stephen Jones and David Sutton, where he discusses the eerie atmosphere of classic horror tales.[47] In 1992, Gallagher contributed an essay to James Herbert: By Horror Haunted, edited by Stephen Jones, analyzing the career and impact of the prominent horror author James Herbert.[48] Later contributions include the essay "In There" (1997), published in Dancing with the Dark: True Encounters with the Paranormal, edited by Michael and Susan Dupler, which examines personal and psychological dimensions of paranormal experiences. He also wrote the introduction to Mark Morris's horror novel Nowhere Near an Angel (2004), highlighting themes of youthful rebellion and supernatural dread in contemporary settings. In a more recent endeavor, Gallagher provided the introduction to the 2025 limited edition of Ray Bradbury's seminal collection Dark Carnival, published by Subterranean Press, offering insights into Bradbury's foundational influence on modern horror prose.[49] Beyond literary contributions, he submitted written evidence to the UK Parliament's Culture, Media and Sport Committee in 2020, detailing the challenges faced by self-employed writers during the COVID-19 pandemic based on his four-decade career. These pieces underscore Gallagher's thoughtful engagement with the mechanics and cultural context of genre writing.Screenplays
Stephen Gallagher has written numerous screenplays for television series, miniseries, and short films, often blending science fiction, thriller, and crime elements. His early work includes contributions to the BBC's Doctor Who, while later credits encompass creator roles and episode writing for major British and American networks.Doctor Who (BBC)
- Warriors' Gate (1981, 4-part serial)
- Terminus (1983, 4-part serial)
Other Early Works
- Trick Shot (1980, short film)
- Rockliffe's Folly: Moving Targets (1988, TV episode)
Chimera (ITV, 5-part miniseries, 1991)
- Creator and writer for all episodes[8]
Chiller (ITV anthology series, 1995)
- Prophecy (Episode 1)[50]
- Here Comes the Mirror Man (Episode 3)[51]
Bugs (BBC techno-thriller series, 1995–1999)
Gallagher wrote 10 episodes and served as series consultant. Known episodes include:- Assassins Inc. (1995)[24]
- Down Among the Dead Men (1995)[52]
- Stealth (1995)[53]
- Pulse (1996)[24]
- Schrödinger's Bomb (1997)[24]
- The Bureau of Weapons of Mass Destruction (1998)[24]
- Blackout (1998)[24]
- The Fall of Eden (1998)[24]
- Dreamweb (1999)[24]
- The Enemy Within (1999)[24]
Oktober (ITV, 3-part miniseries, 1998)
- Writer and director for all episodes (adaptation of his novel)
Murder Rooms (BBC, 2001)
- The Kingdom of Bones (feature-length episode)[54]
Rosemary & Thyme (ITV, 2003–2006)
- The Memory of Water (2004, 2-hour episode)[55]
- The Cup of Silence (2005, 2-hour episode)[56]
Eleventh Hour (ITV, 4-part miniseries, 2006)
- Creator and writer for all episodes[57]
Crusoe (NBC, 2008–2009)
- Lead writer; episodes include the pilot and The Return (2008)[58]
The Forgotten (ABC, 2009–2010)
Gallagher served as co-executive producer and wrote multiple episodes, including:- Patient John (2010)[59]
Silent Witness (BBC, 2013)
- Legacy: Part 1 (Episode)[60]
- Legacy: Part 2 (Episode)[61]
Stan Lee's Lucky Man (Sky1, 2016–2018)
Gallagher contributed several episodes, including:- Charm Offensive (2016)[62]
Radio and audio dramas
Stephen Gallagher's contributions to radio and audio dramas span over four decades, beginning with serials for independent local radio in the late 1970s and extending to full-cast productions for the BBC and other outlets. His works often explore themes of science fiction, thriller, and horror, with a significant emphasis on BBC Radio 4's Saturday Night Theatre and Fear on Four anthology series. Gallagher's radio debut marked an early milestone in his career, leading to commissions for more ambitious projects.[30] Many of his plays feature intricate plots involving futuristic dilemmas, psychological tension, and supernatural elements, adapted or original to the audio format. Over 15 such works are documented, including adaptations of his own novels and contributions to Doctor Who audio ranges. Below is a selection of his key radio plays and audio dramas, presented chronologically where dates are available.| Title | Year | Broadcaster/Producer | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Last Rose of Summer | 1977 | Piccadilly Radio (ILR) | 6-part serial; dystopian sci-fi about a future society. Produced by Tony Hawkins.[18] |
| Hunters' Moon | 1978 | Piccadilly Radio (ILR) | 8-part serial; adventure in a post-apocalyptic world. Produced by Tony Hawkins.[18] |
| The Babylon Run | 1979 | Piccadilly Radio (ILR) | 4-part serial; space thriller involving interstellar travel. Produced by Tony Hawkins.[18] |
| The Humane Solution | 1979 | BBC Radio 4 | 90-minute thriller about a hijacked airliner; broadcast on Saturday Night Theatre, produced by John Tydeman.[18] |
| An Alternative to Suicide | 1979 | BBC Radio 4 | 90-minute sci-fi drama set in the 22nd century, exploring euthanasia in space travel; directed by Martin Jenkins, starring Michael Jayston; rebroadcast on BBC Radio 4 Extra in June 2025 as part of the Hidden Treasures series.[18][20][21] |
| A Resistance to Pressure | 1980 | BBC Radio 4 | 90-minute thriller; broadcast on Saturday Night Theatre, produced by Gerry Jones.[18] |
| Chimera | 1985 | BBC Radio 4 | 90-minute adaptation of his novel; gene-splicing thriller, directed by Martin Jenkins; rebroadcast on BBC Radio 4 Extra.[18][32] |
| The Kingston File | 1987 | BBC Radio 4 | 90-minute thriller; directed by Martin Jenkins, broadcast on Saturday Night Theatre.[18] |
| By the River, Fontainebleau | 1988 | BBC Radio 4 | 30-minute horror story in the Fear on Four series; produced by Martin Jenkins.[18] |
| The Wonderful Visit | 1988 | BBC Radio 4 | 45-minute adaptation of H.G. Wells' novel; produced by Martin Jenkins.[18] |
| The Horn | 1989 | BBC Radio 4 | 30-minute supernatural tale in the Fear on Four series; produced by Martin Jenkins.[18] |
| The Big O | 1989 | BBC Radio 4 | Sci-fi drama; part of his BBC contributions in the late 1980s.[30] |
| The Visitors' Book | 1992 | BBC Radio 4 | 15-minute short story reading.[18] |
| Lifeline | 1993 | BBC Radio 4 | 30-minute episode in the Fear on Four series; directed by Martin Jenkins.[18] |
| The Box | 1990s | Hammer Chillers | Horror audio drama.[30] |
| Nightmare Country | 2019 | Big Finish Productions | 4-part Doctor Who audio drama (The Lost Stories range), originally pitched for 1980s TV; stars Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor.[64] |
| The Kairos Ring | 2020 | BBC Audio | Doctor Who: Beyond the Doctor short trip; full-cast audio drama.[30] |
| Casting the Runes | 2021 | Bafflegab Productions | Adaptation of M.R. James' story; full-cast audio.[30][65] |
| Terminus | 2024 | BBC Audio | Audio dramatization of his Doctor Who novelization; narrated adaptation with cast elements.[30] |