Hines Papers

This material is held atUniversity of Sheffield Library

  • Reference
    • GB 200 MS 389
  • Dates of Creation
    • 1957 - ongoing
  • Name of Creator
  • Language of Material
    • English
  • Physical Description
    • 33 boxes 145 volumes Television, film and play scripts, programmes, reviews and cuttings, photographs, posters, drafts, proofs, published books

Scope and Content

The papers of Barry Hines (1939-2016), author and screenwriter

Administrative / Biographical History

This collection comprises the papers of the author and screenwriter Barry Hines, and includes television, film and play scripts, programmes, reviews and cuttings, photographs, posters, drafts and proofs. There is also a collection of published books, both Barry Hines' own works and material collected for research purposes.

Barry Hines was born in the mining village of Hoyland Common near Barnsley on 30th June 1939, and attended Ecclesfield Grammar School. One of his proudest moments was playing for the England Secondary Schools football team in 1957. He worked for the National Coal Board as an apprentice mining engineer, but returned to education, eventually gaining a teaching qualification at Loughborough University. He worked as a Physical Education teacher for several years, first in London and then in Hoyland Common, eventually leaving to become a full-time writer.

His best known work is the novel A Kestrel for a Knave , which was made into the film Kes , directed by Ken Loach. It is the story of Billy Casper, a young boy from a mining village who cared for a kestrel. Other notable works include the film Looks and Smiles , also directed by Ken Loach, which won the Best Contemporary Screenplay award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1981, and the television film Threads , about Sheffield during and after a nuclear war, which won a special award at the Monte Carlo Television Festival in 1985 as well as the Broadcasting Press Guild Award and seven BAFTA nominations. The collection includes drafts for many other works, both published/produced such as The Gamekeeper , The Heart of It and The Price of Coal , and unpublished such as After the Strike , Slate and Tom Kite .

Barry Hines was Yorkshire Arts Fellow in Creative Writing in the University of Sheffield from 1972 to 1974, and became an Honorary Doctor of Letters in 2010.

Barry Hines died in March 2016.

Arrangement

By category

Access Information

Available to all researchers, by appointment
Certain documents are restricted

Acquisition Information

Donated, November 2008

Other Finding Aids

Listed

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright according to document