A fter leaving Doctor Who, Barry Letts became producer of the BBC’s ‘Sunday Classics’ strand of literary adaptations for family audiences. He was soon joined by former colleague Terrance Dicks, and between them they produced, directed and adapted more than 30 serials. Often these would feature familiar names including Elisabeth Sladen (Gulliver in Lilliput, 1982), Tom Baker (The Hound of the Baskervilles, 1982) and director Douglas Camfield (Beau Geste, 1984). The demands of realising diverse and often fantastical texts also allowed Letts to explore his enthusiasm for new studio technology.
Broadcast in four parts in 1978, Pinocchio was an intentionally grotesque interpretation that ignored the familiar Disney stylings and went back to Carlo Collodi’s original novel.