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Tom Moran

Tom Moran (born 12 August 1987) is a screenwriter, , and known for creating and executive producing the television series for . Born in , , , Moran developed an early interest in storytelling, writing plays and television scripts as a teenager. He attended the , where he earned a degree in Scriptwriting and Performance, and founded the Laugh Out Loud comedy club while studying. Following graduation in 2009, he performed a 21-night run of his show at the Fringe Festival. Moran's screenwriting career gained momentum with early accolades, including the 2015 BAFTA Rocliffe New Comedy Writing Forum for his sitcom Printheads and the AMC-Channel 4 Drama Co-Development Award for his sci-fi pilot White Rabbit at the New York Television Festival. He wrote episodes for series such as Wild Bill (ITV, 2019) and The Feed (Amazon/Virgin Media, 2019), and was named one of Deadline’s Ten Rising TV Scribes to Watch in 2020. His breakthrough came with The Devil's Hour (2022–present), a critically acclaimed series renewed for three seasons, with the second season released in October 2024 and the third (final season, directed by Moran) premiering in 2025. Moran has also adapted the novel Before You Ask, I Don’t Have Wings for Warner Bros., starring Nicholas Hoult, and is developing projects with Netflix, Seven Stories, and 42. In addition to television, he directed and produced the short film Romanesco (2023).

Early life and education

Tom Moran was born on 12 August 1987 in , , . He grew up in rural and developed an early interest in storytelling, writing plays and television scripts as a teenager. Moran then attended the (UEA), where he pursued a (Hons) degree in Scriptwriting and Performance. He graduated in 2009 with first-class honors, having honed foundational skills in dramatic writing and live performance. The program emphasized tailored to key dramatic media, including , , , and radio, allowing students to develop scripts across diverse formats. integrated practical elements such as workshops, seminars, and performance-based assessments, fostering abilities in narrative structure, character development, dialogue crafting, and stage delivery. Participants also explored , directing, and collaborative techniques, building versatility for professional storytelling. UEA's School of Literature, Drama and provided a stimulating environment renowned for its emphasis on innovative practice and industry connections, which encouraged Moran's early experimentation with comedy and narrative forms. This academic setting directly influenced his trajectory by blending theoretical study with hands-on creative output, culminating in the founding of the Laugh Out Loud comedy club during his studies.

Comedy club founding and early performances

During his studies at the University of East Anglia, where he pursued a degree in Scriptwriting and Performance, Tom Moran founded the Laugh Out Loud Comedy Club in 2006. This initiative emerged as a platform for emerging comedians, including fellow students like John Kearns, Pat Cahill, Jon Brittain, and Joz Norris, who performed at the club's early events. Moran organized and hosted regular open mic nights in Norwich, fostering a supportive environment for student performers to hone their craft through short stand-up sets and experimental routines. As a , Moran took an active role in running these events, compèring sessions and curating lineups that featured both local talent and visiting acts, which helped build a vibrant scene on campus and in the surrounding area. His involvement extended beyond organization; he began performing stand-up himself during this period, delivering 15-minute sets that drew on observational humor and personal anecdotes developed through his scriptwriting training. These early appearances at Laugh Out Loud nights marked his transition from academic pursuits to practical experience, often in front of university audiences. Following his graduation in 2009, Moran's early performance career gained momentum with a 21-night run of his one-man stand-up show at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2011. This extended engagement showcased his evolving style, blending scripted narrative with live improvisation, and represented a significant step in establishing his presence in the UK circuit. The Fringe performances built on the foundational skills he acquired through the Laugh Out Loud events, allowing him to refine his material for larger, more diverse crowds.

Literary career

Key publications

Tom Moran's entry into began with his self-published debut , Dinosaurs and Prime Numbers, released in 2012 through Independent Publishing Platform ( 978-1-481-88942-1, 290 pages). The narrative centers on Walton Cumberfield, a quirky, socially awkward meter-reader in his thirties, whose mundane life unravels when his Matthews disappears, propelling him into a bizarre time-travel adventure involving a mysterious cow outside the space-time continuum, accidental , ghosts, and an unexpected romance in . The explores themes of personal relationships and the eccentricities of everyday existence through humorous, absurd scenarios, including Cumberfield's hobbies like updating "The " and staging performances. This work marked Moran's transition from comedy to via , allowing creative freedom in its unconventional structure and tone. The sequel, A Debt to the Universe, followed in 2016 (ISBN 978-1-537-27251-1, 316 pages), also self-published via , building on the Walton Cumberfield series with further time-travel escapades. In this installment, Cumberfield grapples with relentless phone calls, stalking by an older version of himself, and his lodger Roger's cosmic debt, which draws them into loops of temporal paradoxes and a . The plot advances character development by delving deeper into Cumberfield's persistent quirkiness and evolving interpersonal dynamics, blending with speculative elements to resolve lingering threads from the first book. Like its predecessor, the novel highlights self-publishing's role in sustaining the series' offbeat voice. Among Moran's other self-published works, The Trojan Hearse (2016, 73 pages) stands out as a in the Walton Cumberfield Mysteries, contributed to the Disrupted Worlds: Anthology of Original Short Stories. This shorter piece features Cumberfield as a semi-professional, time-travelling sleuth unraveling a comedic , emphasizing a unique narrative style that interweaves temporal twists with rapid-fire humor and tropes.

Literary awards and recognition

In 2014, Tom Moran won the inaugural Guardian and Legend Press prize for self-published fiction with his debut novel Dinosaurs and Prime Numbers. The prize, launched in April 2014 to celebrate high-quality self-published works amid growing submissions, received approximately 500 entries for its first round. Entries were shortlisted to 10 by a panel of 20 readers from Legend Press, with the final winner selected by judges including literary agent Andrew Lownie and editor Lauren Parsons. The Guardian's review of Dinosaurs and Prime Numbers, published in June 2014 as the self-published book of the month, praised its "terrific jokes" and "spot-on spelling and grammar," likening its comic fantasy style to that of . The review highlighted the novel's neatly structured story and Moran's valiant attempt at comedy, quoting lines such as “Spontaneous wit has always been my . That and my heel, interestingly enough, which has a .” This accolade elevated Moran's visibility within communities, showcasing his talent and providing credibility to independent authors through prominent media exposure. The win underscored the potential for self-published works to gain mainstream recognition, influencing Moran's broader literary profile.

Screenwriting career

Early television credits

Tom Moran's entry into professional screenwriting began with accolades that highlighted his comedic and dramatic potential. In 2015, he was selected as one of three winners of the BAFTA Rocliffe New Comedy Writing Forum for his pilot Printheads, which centers on disgraced tabloid editor Louise Sharpe retreating to a rural town to manage her father's local newspaper following a phone-hacking scandal. The award provided Moran with a live script extract performance at the Television Festival, industry feedback, and networking opportunities including mentoring and BAFTA event access. Building on this recognition, Moran developed the spec pilot White Rabbit, a sci-fi mystery drama that he created and wrote, which was acquired by TNT in partnership with Scott Free and Seven Stories. The project earned the AMC-Channel 4 Drama Co-Development Award at the 2015 New York Television Festival, underscoring Moran's emerging talent in genre storytelling. Moran's first produced television credits arrived in 2019 with contributions to two series. For ITV's Wild Bill, a starring as a U.S. chief in rural , Moran wrote episode 4, titled "Bad Blood in the Soil," directed by John Hardwick. In this installment, the narrative delves into a feud between rival farmers after a body is discovered on their shared land, advancing the series' exploration of community tensions and personal conflicts. Later that year, Moran contributed to the sci-fi thriller The Feed on and , writing episodes 5 and 8. These episodes, part of a series adapted from Nick Clark Windo's novel, involve plotlines centered on a neural implant technology enabling thought-sharing, with episode 5 focusing on family confrontations over implant-related discoveries and episode 8 depicting escalating chaos from the device's misuse, thematically addressing erosion and technological overreach. These early works positioned Moran as a promising voice in British television, leading to his inclusion in Deadline's list of Ten Rising TV Scribes to Watch in 2020.

The Devil's Hour and major projects

Tom Moran created, wrote, and serves as on the series , which premiered on in 2022 and explores a mother's recurring nightmares at 3:33 a.m., intertwined with time loops, supernatural visions, and a investigation. The series, produced by Hartswood Films, stars as the protagonist Lucy Chambers and as the enigmatic detective Gideon Shephard, blending elements of crime drama and sci-fi to examine themes of fate and repetition. Building on his earlier episodic writing for series like The Feed and Wild Bill, Moran envisioned The Devil's Hour as a multi-season arc from inception, leading to its renewal for a second season released on October 18, 2024, and a third season with production already completed. In addition to The Devil's Hour, Moran's post-2020 projects include a sitcom series in development with Hartswood Films, recently commissioned by Netflix. Furthermore, Moran adapted his short story Before You Ask, I Don’t Have Wings into a feature film for Warner Bros., produced by 42M&P, with Nicholas Hoult attached to star.

Works

Television filmography

Tom Moran has contributed to several television series as a writer and producer. His credited works are listed below in chronological order by initial release or production year.
YearTitleRoleEpisodes/DetailsSource
2019Wild BillWriterEpisode 1: "Bad Blood in the Soil"IMDb
2019The FeedWriterEpisodes 5 and 8Curtis Brown CV
2022–presentCreator, Executive Producer, WriterMultiple episodes across three seasons (Season 1: 6 episodes; Season 2: 5 episodes; Season 3: 5 episodes in , expected release in 2025)IMDb
TBAUntitled Hartswood Films ProjectCreator, WriterCommissioned sitcom for Curtis Brown CV

Film and other credits

Moran expanded his creative output beyond with the 2023 short film Romanesco, which he wrote, directed, and produced. The 11-minute sci-fi thriller explores themes of existential decision-making and infinite loops, following a woman trapped in a while struggling to eat a . Starring Lily Ballantyne and Harper-Rafferty, the film premiered at festivals and is available online via . In addition to Romanesco, Moran adapted his short story "Before You Ask, I Don’t Have Wings" into a feature film script for Warner Bros., currently in development with 42 producing and Nicholas Hoult attached to star; Jonathan Levine is set to direct. This project marks Moran's entry into major studio feature adaptation following the success of his television work. Other development credits include the spec pilot White Rabbit sold to TNT (produced by Scott Free and Seven Stories), and original projects with Seven Stories (co-written with Johnny Allan) and 42M&P. No additional produced film or non-television credits have been publicly documented for Moran as of November 2025.

Bibliography

Novels

Tom Moran's novels primarily feature the recurring character Walton Cumberfield, a comedic time-traveler and amateur sleuth, and were self-published through Independent Publishing Platform. Dinosaurs and Prime Numbers (2012, 290 pages, 978-1-481-88942-1) is Moran's , introducing the Walton Cumberfield series with its humorous take on time travel and everyday absurdity. The book received the inaugural and Legend Press Self-Published award in 2014. A to the (2016, 316 pages, 978-1-537-27251-1) serves as the to Dinosaurs and Prime Numbers, continuing Cumberfield's misadventures while exploring themes of cosmic obligation and temporal chaos.

Novellas and short works

Tom Moran's contributions to short include works in the Walton Cumberfield and standalone pieces, some of which bridge to his screenwriting career. Before You Ask, I Don’t Have Wings is a that adapted into a feature film script sold to , with production handled by 42 and attached to star. The narrative explores themes of identity and aspiration, drawing from 's background in rural . A Scandal in Spixworth (2013, 74 pages, ISBN 978-1-301-00409-6) is a self-published in the Walton Cumberfield series, featuring the time-traveling in a comedic . The Trojan Hearse (2013, approx. 73 pages) is a in the Walton Cumberfield universe, featuring time-traveling detective work infused with comedic absurdity; it was published in the Disrupted Worlds: Anthology of Original (ISBN 978-1492709770). From Hellesdon (2016, 85 pages) is a set between the events of Dinosaurs and Prime Numbers and A Debt to the Universe in the Walton Cumberfield series.

References

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