Eleanor Yule studied film at Glasgow and Bristol Universities making
her first network drama Impulse for BBC'S 10X10 series as a student.
Her second film for the Tartan Shorts scheme,
A Small Deposit (1993) was nominated for
a BAFTA award.
Eleanor's documentary work for the BBC included the award-winning
profile of Scots psychiatrist
R.D. Laing, a critically acclaimed Omnibus
on French Painter Pierre Bonnard, and a BAFTA nominated Bookmark on
writer Muriel Spark. Her last series for the BBC before leaving her
staff post were four thirty-minute dramas entitled
Ghost Stories for Christmas (2000) with veteran
actor
Christopher Lee. More recently, she has been collaborating with
ex-Python,
Michael Palin, to produce one-off documentaries about Scottish
painters. Their latest offering 'Michael Palin and the Mystery of
Hammershoi' was shown on BBC1 last year and nominated for a BAFTA and
in competition at the Montreal Arts Festival.
Eleanor's first 30-minute film drama she wrote and directed was for
Scottish Screen and SMG's Newfoundland scheme, Lost, a supernatural
thriller, was screened in New York, Finland, and Edinburgh and was
nominated for a BAFTA new talent award. Her first feature
Blinded (2004), a
haunting thriller starring Peter Mullen and
Jodhi May, won the
Newfoundfilms scheme against strong competition, went on to win the
Jury Award, on its first outing, at the Celtic Film Festival, the
Silver Screen Award in L.A. and was in competition in Taormina,
Istanbul, and Moscow film festivals.
She has just completed two drama documentaries for World wide Discovery
for their new series
Crimes That Shook the World (2006), The Green River Killer from Seattle and
British murderers Fred and Rosemary West, which launched the series and
secured the second highest ratings in Discovery's broadcasting
history.