Chips Hardy

Screenwriter

Birthday January 23, 1950

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace London, England

Age 74 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#10639 Most Popular

1950

Edward John "Chips" Hardy (born 23 January 1950) is an English novelist, playwright and screenwriter.

2007

In 2007, Hardy’s novel Each Day A Small Victory was published in the form of frontline dispatches from amongst the embattled wildlife in an English country lay-by, illustrated by Oscar Grillo.

Blue on Blue, Hardy’s darkly comic play on self-harm, was first showcased at the Latchmere 503 in London in 2007.

2008

In 2008, Hardy’s one woman dysfunctional Cabaret, There’s Something In The Fridge that Wants To Kill Me!, ran notably at the Edinburgh Festival.

2009

In 2009, inspired by an idea from his son Tom, he and Tom created the story that was to become the 2017 eight-part series Taboo.

Hardy is the co-creator, a writer and a consulting producer.

2016

The play was revived in 2016 at the Tristan Bates in London in partnership with BLESMA, the British Limbless Ex-serviceman’s Association.

2017

He and his wife Elizabeth Ann are the parents of actor Tom Hardy, with whom Hardy worked on BBC One's 2017 drama series Taboo, as the co-creator, a writer and a consulting producer.

Alongside a career in advertising as a creative director, Hardy has written for television, film, theatre, novels and stand-up material.

Productions include a children’s television series with a talking chair called Helping Henry and About Face, a television drama with Maureen Lipman.

He also won a British Comedy Award for his work with Irish comedian Dave Allen.

2018

His work on the screenplay for Taboo earned him the Writer’s Guild of Great Britain award for Best Long Form TV Drama in 2018.

In March 2023, work on the second season of Taboo was announced.

In June 2021, it was announced that Hardy's next novel, Seaton's Orchid, would be published by Chiselbury Publishing.