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The Kneale Archives

Collection Issue Date: 18th April 2023

The extraordinary works of world-renowned screenwriter and author Nigel Kneale

We are pleased to present this landmark set of six stamps marking significant career highlights in the long and illustrious life of world-renowned Isle of Man author Nigel Kneale (1922-2006). His influence on generations of writers and filmmakers remains strong more than a century after his birth. The Isle of Man is very fortunate that his papers have been entrusted to the Manx National Heritage Library and Archives for the study and enjoyment of this, and generations to come.

Just like Kneale's stories, there is more to it than meets the eye.To make each stamp even more unique, each stamp (including those in the sheetlet) contains a secret that can only be revealed with a UV light. Discover the hidden secrets today!

Issue Information

We are pleased to honour and celebrate the work and legacy of truly one of the world's greatest screenwriter and author has ever seen. 

Thomas Nigel Kneale is one of the most celebrated authors of the modern TV and film age. He was a prolific writer and, in addition to his own works of psychological horror and science fiction, wrote numerous adaptations of contemporary stories for film and television in a career that spanned almost sixty years.

 Kneale was born in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria to Manx parents: journalist William Thomas (known to his family as Tom) Kneale and his wife Lilian, née Kewley. The family returned to the Island in 1928 when Nigel’s father became assistant editor on the Isle of Man Examiner. In 1930 a second son, Bryan was born, the renowned artist.  Soon after, Nigel’s father acquired the Mona’s Herald newspaper in partnership with his brother Robert G Kneale.

By the age of twenty-four Kneale had written a number of short stories in his spare time and, in 1946, made his first broadcast on BBC Radio, performing a live reading of Tomato Cain. In the same year he moved to London where he studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), followed by two years’ work at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. During this decade he made further broadcasts and published Tomato Cain and Other Stories in 1949, for which he won the Somerset Maugham Award the following year. Kneale’s first professional script was the radio drama The Long Stairs in 1950. The next year, he gained a job as a staff writer at the BBC where he remained until 1956. Thereafter he was able to focus on his writing and freelance work.

 In 1953 Kneale wrote the ground-breaking The Quatermass Experiment, the first popular science fiction television series. The lead character, Professor Bernard Quatermass, was reprised by Kneale in numerous televisions series, films and radio plays from 1953 until 2005, and it is for these that Kneale is most widely known.

Kneale was prolific and wrote many other works of horror and science-fiction for film and TV such as The Year of the Sex Olympics (1967) and The Stone Tape (1972). He also adapted novels for the screen: 1984 (1954) and The Woman in Black (1989) for example. He was unafraid to experiment with many other genres, as evidenced by Kinvig (1981), his sole situation comedy. After 1974 Kneale spent the rest of his television career mostly writing scripts for Independent Television (ITV), contributing to series such as Sharpe (1993-1997) and Kavanagh QC (1995-2001).

During the early 1950s, Kneale met talented writer Judith Kerr, daughter of a refugee German theatre critic, Alfred Kerr and composer Julia, née Weismann. Kneale and Kerr married in 1954 and had one daughter, Tacy (b.1958), an actress, painter and film prop artist and, in 1960, a son, Matthew, now a renowned writer. Kerr went on to become a hugely successful children’s author, publishing works such as The Tiger Who Came to Tea (1968) and the Mog series (1970-2015). In 1962 the couple settled in Barnes, London, remaining there for the rest of their lives.

The Kneale Archives at the Manx Museum

The content relates mainly to Nigel Kneale’s creative writing, providing a unique insight into how his works, both unproduced and produced, were developed. Many projects can be followed through from initial research, story outlines and treatments, to first and subsequent drafts with amendments, rehearsal and production scripts and finally to documents relating to production and reception. Business correspondence with the BBC and other employers, newspaper reviews, audience research reports and some contemporary advertisements of the productions are also included. 

Out of Kneale’s produced works the resources for Quatermass (1953-1996), The Year of the Sex Olympics (1968), Kinvig (1981), Stanley and the Women (1991), Sharpe’s Gold (1995) and Kavanagh QC III: Ancient History (1997) are particularly notable. Regarding his unproduced works The Big, Big Giggle (1965), Crow (1975-77), Non-Stop (1984-88), Gentry (1987-88) and Batavia (1990) content is also noteworthy. 

Accompanying the manuscripts are photographs belonging to Kneale spanning 1950s-1970s (PG 13645). Contents include portraits and stills from productions of Nineteen Eighty Four, Quatermass, Quatermass II and Mrs Wickens in the Fall; also props created for certain productions.

 Acknowledgements

We are grateful for the invaluable support of Tacy, Matthew and Bryan Kneale RA, Jane Asher, Judith Coke, Ra Page/Comma Press, Caitlin Shannon, Jane Wymark and the expert assistance of the dedicated Manx National Heritage staff at the Manx Museum Library.

 Tacy Kneale_Daughter of Nigel Kneale Jane Asher with The StoneTape Stampboard Caitlin Shannon_Daughter of Vickery Turner Wendy Thirkettle of Manx Museum Library

Technical Information

Design EJC Design
Text Manx National Heritage / IOM Post Office
Printer bpost
Process Offset Lithography
Colours 5
Paper Gummed FSC Securpost 110 GPW
Perforations 11.5 per 2cm
Stamp Size 50 x 40mm
Commemorative Sheetlet Stamp Size  52.50 x 39.97mm
Format Sheets of 9
Date of Issue 18th April 2023
Limited Editions Presentation Pack 1500; First Day Cover 2000

Collection Products

The Kneale Archives Collection
The Kneale Archives Collection

Product Code: ACG43
Product Issue Date: 18th April 2023

An absolute must-have for any Nigel Kneale fan! With issue text written by the talented and elegant Jane Asher, who has appeared in The Quatermass Xperiment (1955) and The Stone Tape (1972). The Kneale Archives Collection also comes with a complimentary UV torch keyring worth £2.50 to help you uncover the secrets held in the stamps.

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Price: £29.95

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The Kneale Archives Commemorative Sheetlet
The Kneale Archives Commemorative Sheetlet

Product Code: ACG64
Product Issue Date: 18th April 2023

A complete set of the 'The Kneale Archives' housed inside a folder with colourful and vibrant cover design.

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Price: £10.13

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The Kneale Archives Set and Sheet Set
The Kneale Archives Set and Sheet Set

Product Code: ACG31
Product Issue Date: 18th April 2023

A selection of legendary works by the brilliant Nigel Kneale, including the famous Quatermass films and TV series.

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The Kneale Archives Presentation Pack
The Kneale Archives Presentation Pack

Product Code: ACG41
Product Issue Date: 18th April 2023

The complete set of 'The Kneale Archives' stamps is displayed in this eye-catching, four page folder. The folder has been meticulously crafted to depict Nigel's classics in a modern way.

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Price: £10.88

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The Kneale Archives First Day Cover
The Kneale Archives First Day Cover

Product Code: ACG91
Product Issue Date: 18th April 2023

All six stamps are beautifully presented on this grey cover, allowing the stamps to strikingly stand out. The stamps are cancelled with a unique and black first day of issue postmark of Nigel's signature.

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Price: £10.83

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