| 167th | Top English people |
| 51st | Top works published posthumously |
| 36th | Top people from Santa Barbara |
| 59th | Top English writers |
| This article is written from the Real World point of view. |
Douglas Noel Adams (11th March 1952-11th May 2001) wrote The Pirate Planet and Shada, and co-wrote City of Death with producer Graham Williams under the pseudonym David Agnew. He was also script editor for Season 17. Having started his career as a contributor (and occasional bit player) in Monty Python's Flying Circus, he is most famous for creating The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which he wrote as a radio play and book while editing for Doctor Who.
His style of humor has left a lasting impression on other writers, and can still be seen even in the revived series which included a reference to his creation Arthur Dent in The Christmas Invasion. He also inserted a reference to one of his characters, Oolon Coluphid, in the Season 17 story Destiny of the Daleks.
Douglas Adams (1952-2001) is the author of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, originally commissioned as a BBC radio series and adapted into a book series. After his death, the story was later filmed, with characters adapted by Jim Henson's Creature Shop. Adams was also a close friend of the prolific Sesame Street songwriter Christopher Cerf.
Adams is known for his unique brand of science-fiction comedy, including the five-volume Hitchhiker's series and two books featuring the detective Dirk Gently. Adams also wrote passionately about natural science, evolution, endangered species, website design and new technology. He also worked as writer and script editor (for Season 17) of the BBC's popular science fiction series Doctor Who.
In 1986, Adams was involved as a consultant on a proposed one hour Muppet TV special about computer literacy, The Muppet Institute of Technology. Adams flew out to New York City to meet with Jim Henson and twenty other consultants for discussions. The project was never completed. [1] Cerf was also involved in the production. [2]
The same year, Adams served as one of the writers of Labyrinth: The Computer Game. [3]
Adams once threw a party which Jim Henson attended. As Henson was leaving, he gave Adams a smoked salmon, in order to prompt Adams to say "So long, and thanks for all the fish" (a phrase from the Hitchhiker's series). [4]
Douglas Adams' sequel to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is referenced in the title of the Muppet Babies episode "The Air Conditioner at the End of the Galaxy".
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