Vinay Patel

British-Indian screenwriter and playwright
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish-Indian screenwriter and playwright
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
isScreenwriter
Work fieldFilm, TV, Stage & Radio
Gender
Male
Birth1986
Age39 years
The details

Biography

Vinay Patel FRSL (born 1986) is a British-Indian screenwriter and playwright. He is best known for writing the BBC drama Murdered by My Father.

Career

Before writing, Patel worked as a corporate filmmaker and then a technician at the London-based Met Film School.

In 2011, Patel graduated from the Central School of Speech and Drama with an MA in writing. In 2014, he wrote True Brits, a play juxtaposing the news of the London 2012 Olympics, with the 7 July 2005 London bombings. This led to his selection for the Bush/Kudos TV writing scheme and an original short commission for BBC iPlayer. In 2018, he wrote An Adventure, inspired by his grandparents, for the Bush Theatre.

In June 2018, Patel was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in its "40 Under 40" initiative.

Television

In 2016, he wrote BBC One’s honour killing drama Murdered By My Father. It tells of an honour killing of a British Asian Muslim teenage girl, Salma (played by Kiran Sonia Sawar), by her father Shahzad (Adeel Akhtar). It was nominated for a BAFTA TV Award for best single drama, and won the RTS Award for Best Single Drama. He has also written for the first series of The Good Karma Hospital and, in 2018, contributed the sixth episode of the eleventh series of Doctor Who, Demons of the Punjab, set during the Partition of India.

The episode received high praise from fans and critics alike, and was announced as a finalist (nominee) in the category of Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form for the 2019 Hugo Awards. At the Eastern Eye Arts, Theater, and Culture Awards, Patel won "Best Scriptwriter" for Demons of the Punjab.

Patel would return to write for Series 12, set to broadcast in 2020.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 31 Dec 2019. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.