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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Louis_MarksLouis Marks - Wikipedia

    Louis Frank Marks (23 March 1928 – 17 September 2010) was an English screenwriter and producer, mainly for BBC Television. His career began in the late 1950s and continued into the next century.

  2. Louis Marx and Company was an American toy manufacturer in business from 1919 to 1980. They made many types of toys including tin toys, toy soldiers, toy guns, action figures, dolls, toy cars and model trains.

  3. Louis Marks. Producer: Theatre Night. The son of a London jeweller, Louis Marks took the unusual step of moving from the world of academia, as head of history at a boarding school, to writing and producing for television.

  4. www.imdb.com › name › nm0548903Louis Marks - IMDb

    Louis Marks (1928-2010) Script and Continuity Department. Writer. Producer. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. The son of a London jeweller, Louis Marks took the unusual step of moving from the world of academia, as head of history at a boarding school, to writing and producing for television.

  5. www.bafta.org › heritage › in-memory-ofLouis Marks | BAFTA

    23 March 1928 to 16 September 2010. An experienced screenwriter, Marks entered the industry in 1958 as a script editor. He came to prominence working on programmes such as Doctor Who (1962, 1970, 1976) though his talents later became associated with classic dramas such as Silas Marner (1986), Middlemarch (1994) and Daniel Deronda (2002) amongst ...

  6. Louis Marks is known as an Producer, Writer, Actor, Screenplay, and Script Editor. Some of his work includes Doctor Who, Danger Man, The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Man Who Finally Died, Doctor Who: Planet of Giants, Doctor Who: Day of the Daleks, Doctor Who: Planet of Evil, and Doctor Who: The Masque of Mandragora.

  7. Died: 17th September 2010 (aged 82 years) Episodes Broadcast: 1964, 1972, 1975-1976. Biography. Louis Marks was born in Golders Green, London. He completed an undergraduate degree in history at Oxford, and then earned a doctorate with an emphasis on Renaissance-era Florence.