Diederick Santer

Diederick Santer (born 3 July 1969[1]) is a British television producer and is best known for his work on the popular BBC television soap opera EastEnders, a post which he assumed on 23 October 2006 and left on 1 March 2010. He is managing director of drama production company Lovely Day.

Diederick Santer
Born (1969-07-03) 3 July 1969
Cambridge, England
NationalityBritish
OccupationTV Producer
businessman
Years active1996–present
TelevisionEastEnders

He is the son of the retired Anglican Bishop Mark Santer.

Early life

Santer graduated from the University of Leeds with a degree in Psychology and the History and Philosophy of Science. He attended Burlington Danes School in Hammersmith where he played keyboards in "Crazy Luke" with Simon Stafford, whose band The Long Pigs made it into the UK Charts in the 90s - notable songs included The Circle Line Blues, Eltham.

Television career

His TV career began in 1996 as a freelance script reader for United Productions before becoming script editor on the first two series of Where the Heart Is, and assistant script editor on Paul Abbott's ITV series Touching Evil.

Santer moved to Granada Television where he script-edited the first two series of A&E and The Last Train before joining BBC Drama Series and Serials in 2000, where he produced the first three series of Debbie Horsfield's hairdressing drama Cutting It, starring Sarah Parish and Amanda Holden. He also produced The Taming of the Shrew, the Bafta-nominated Much Ado About Nothing for BBC One, and a lavish adaptation of Jane Eyre.

EastEnders

Santer became Executive Producer of EastEnders on 23 October 2006, his first episode airing on 5 January 2007, replacing Kate Harwood . He introduced several characters to the show, including ethnic minority and gay characters to make the show 'feel more 21st Century'. Characters he introduced include Zainab Masood, Shabnam Masood, Masood Ahmed, Tamwar Masood, Christian Clarke, Whitney Dean, Tiffany Dean, Ronnie Mitchell, Roxy Mitchell, Archie Mitchell, Jack Branning, Heather Trott, Lucas Johnson, Ryan Malloy and Syed Masood. He also reintroduced a number of previous characters to the programme including Janine Butcher, Bianca Jackson, Steven Beale and Louise Mitchell. He also axed a number of characters including Kevin Wicks, Deano Wicks, Carly Wicks, Mickey Miller, Keith Miller, Honey Mitchell, Yolande Trueman, Garry Hobbs and Dawn Swann. He was also responsible for recasting the role of Bobby Beale[2]

Santer presided over numerous highly successful storylines during his time as executive producer, such as the aftermath of the demise of Pauline Fowler, the Christmas 2007 episode which saw the reveal of Max Branning and Stacey Slater's affair attracted 14 million viewers[3] and who killed Archie of Christmas 2009 was also widely acclaimed.[4]

Following the show's 25th anniversary live episode, Santer stepped down on 1 March 2010 and Bryan Kirkwood took over.[5]

After EastEnders

After stepping down from EastEnders, Santer continued to work at the BBC, executive producing in a special position developing "new shows that can be internationally co-produced".[5] In May 2010, he left the BBC after ten years to set up his own production company called Lovely Day.[6]

In 2014 Lovely Day's crime series Grantchester was ITV's highest-rated new drama series of the year.

In 2015 Diederick become Joint CEO of Kudos,[7] with Lovely Day becoming absorbed into Kudos. In 2016 he became sole Chief Executive. Diederick executive produces a number of the Kudos shows, including Grantchester (now in its third series), Flowers, and Tin Star.

References

  1. "Palmer making EastEnders comeback". BBC News Online. 29 October 2007. Retrieved 29 October 2007.
  2. "EastEnders tops the Christmas Day TV ratings". What's on TV. 26 December 2007. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  3. "BBC shows dominate the festive ratings". The Guardian. 26 December 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  4. Green, Kris (2 November 2009). "Kirkwood replaces Santer as 'Enders exec". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2 November 2009.
  5. Sweney, Mark (6 May 2010). "Diederick Santer quits BBC to launch production company Lovely Day". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  6. Tartaglione, Nancy (26 February 2015). "UK's Kudos Appoints Diederick Santer, Dan Isaacs As Joint CEOs". Retrieved 6 September 2016.
Media offices
Preceded by
Kate Harwood
Executive Producer of EastEnders
2006–10
Succeeded by
Bryan Kirkwood
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.