After graduating in English Literature, Philip Hinchcliffe worked for a
travel company and as a teacher before becoming a script editor for the
television company Associated Television. After extensive experience of
working with writers and scripts for a number of shows, he began to set
his sights on moving into the production side and gained experience as
an associate producer.
In the spring of 1974 he joined the BBC to take his first full
production job after the corporation's head of serials,
William Slater, offered him the
role of producer of the popular science-fiction series
Doctor Who (1963). He teamed up
with script editor
Robert Holmes, an experienced
television drama writer, and produced three seasons of the programme
which were broadcast between January 1975 and April 1977. He led the
show into darker, more dramatic storylines, which resulted in
unprecedented levels of both popularity and controversy for the series.
Television watchdog
Mary Whitehouse became a
frequent critic of the series during this period, considering it too
violent and horrific to be shown at a time when children would be
watching. The frequency of her complaints caused growing concern
amongst Hinchcliffe's superiors at the BBC, although they publicly
backed the producer as he was delivering consistently high viewing
figures. After Whitehouse wrote a particularly strong letter to the BBC
in November 1976 about the serial The Deadly Assassin, in which she
accused the BBC of ignoring its own guidance on the portrayal of
violence on television, an apology from BBC Director-General Charles
Curran marked a change in the BBC's policy. Hinchcliffe and the BBC
agreed that he should be moved on to producing other programmes at the
end of that season and his successor,
Graham Williams, was ordered
to lighten the tone of
Doctor Who (1963).
Hinchcliffe's next series was
Target (1977), a police series that
was intended as the BBC's answer to ITV's popular
The Sweeney (1975), although it
failed to capture the same degree of popularity and only lasted for two
series. Nevertheless, Hinchcliffe would spend the next two decades as
one of British television drama's most successful producers, working on
series such as
Private Schulz (1981) and the
long-running
Taggart (1983).
Although he has worked on numerous productions, Hinchcliffe is still
most famous for his time on the legendary television series
Doctor Who (1963), which is still
considered the strongest period of the show by many fans. He also wrote
novelisations of The Keys of Marinus, The Seeds of Doom and The Masque
of Mandragora. Since retiring from television, Hinchcliffe has recorded
numerous interviews and commentaries on DVD releases remembering his
time on the show. With the death of
Derrick Sherwin in 2018, Hinchcliffe became the last surviving producer of the original series of
Doctor Who (1963).