Henric Hirsch
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Henric Hirsch | |
|---|---|
| Born | Henrich Hirsch 13 November 1923 |
| Died | March 1999 (aged 75) |
| Occupations | Director, actor, translator |
| Years active | 19??–1974 |
| Spouse | Sandra Ruth Geissler (m. 1977) |
Henric Hirsch (13 November 1923 – March 1999) was a Hungarian-Romanian theatre and television director.
Born of Jewish descent, Hirsch initially worked as a jeweller when he applied for naturalisation to live in Palestine in 1947.[2] Sometime later, he became an experienced theatre director in Hungary but fled to England to seek refuge following the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. There, he continued to direct for theatre but sought to move into television. After completing the BBC's directors' course, his first assignment was directing a 1964 edition of TV anthology series First Night.
TV work and Doctor Who
This was seen by producer Verity Lambert, who in turn offered Hirsch the opportunity to direct Doctor Who Season 1 finale The Reign of Terror[3] (after the intended director Gerald Blake was unable to commit). The experience was not a pleasant one for Hirsch. His background being in the theatre, he struggled, finding the production more gruelling than his previous TV work, not being particularly interested in the material he had to work with and having difficulties forging good working relationships with the cast members, in particular leading actor William Hartnell. This led to Hirsch falling ill and being found collapsed from nervous exhaustion outside the studio before episode 3 was due to be filmed.[4] Production assistant Timothy Combe was placed in charge until a replacement director could be found; documentation indicates that John Gorrie oversaw production of the third episode, though Gorrie has no memory of the event. It is even debated that Mervyn Pinfield may have in fact directed the third instalment.[5] Hirsch recovered to direct episodes 4–6, where he found the production smoother and tensions eased between him and Hartnell.[4][6]
Overall, as a result of this bad experience, Hirsch left the BBC and returned to work in the theatre. However, he would direct TV plays for anthology series such as The Wednesday Play and Theatre 625 as well as ITV shows including episodes of soap operas Crossroads and Emmerdale Farm in 1973 (the former also in 1974[7]). In addition, he tried his hand at acting, appearing in a 1966 instalment of The Spies.