After completing his military service, Darlow began work as a theatre actor. He appeared on television for the first time on New Year’s Day 1959, in a drama on
BBC1. His first line of dialogue on TV was improvised because the actress in the scene went up on her line. He went on to act in several TV programmes during the late 1950s and early 1960s. In 1959, he began acting in the West End production of the play
The World of Suzie Wong, ultimately appearing in more than 800 performances. As a side activity, Darlow helped found a small company of actors who put on new plays on Sunday nights. The group was partly subsidized by the author
C. P. Snow. It was there that he began to work as a professional theatre director. He wrote and directed a documentary film entitled
All These People (1960) about the history of the city of Reading and then another,
The Holloway Road, about that thoroughfare in London. Both were shown at
Edinburgh Film Festival. During the early 1960s, he acted for about a year in the West End production of
Bonne Suppe, a play starring
Coral Browne. His first work as a TV director was for the BBC in Bristol, where he answered to
John Boorman. He worked as a researcher on a documentary history of the trade-union movement. He went on to work at
Granada TV, where he was the associate producer of
Ten Days that Shook the World, a 1967 documentary marking the fiftieth anniversary of the
Russian Revolution. It was the first television collaboration between Britain and the Soviet Union. After several long visits to the
Soviet Union, he decided to do a TV documentary about the
Siege of Leningrad during World War II. It ended up being a three-part 1968 series about three cities under siege. In addition to Leningrad, it covered the
London Blitz and the destruction of Berlin at the end of World War II. Darlow served as director and producer on all three parts. He went on to direct
Johnny Cash at San Quentin, a 1969 documentary. He later recalled that a
Johnny Cash concert in San Diego “felt like a neo-Nazi racist rally.” After filming the Cash documentary, he parted ways with Granada Films owing to creative differences, although he would later work again with the company on individual projects. In the 1960s he also directed episodes of the TV series Coronation Street. During the early 1970s he directed
The Hero of My Life, a TV movie about
Charles Dickens, as well as TV documentaries about filmmakers
Denis Mitchell and
François Truffaut and the painter
J. M. W. Turner. Darlow also directed a stage production of
Look Back in Anger at the Derby Playhouse. He directed The Sun is God, a 1974 Thames Television production. He directed two episodes of the comprehensive 26-part documentary series
The World at War (1974), narrated by
Laurence Olivier and produced by Thames Television. Darlow’s episodes covered the occupation of the
Netherlands and the
Holocaust. For the latter episode he interviewed former Nazis as well as Holocaust victims. He shot over six hours of film, and since there was too much to include in a single episode of
The World at War, much of the extra footage was used for two other projects. One of them was Secretary to Hitler (1974), a 23-minute documentary short in which Darlow interviewed Hitler’s private secretary
Traudl Junge. The other project was aired in 1975 as the miniseries
The Final Solution. He went on to make the TV movie
Hazlitt in Love (1977). In 1979, he directed the TV miniseries
Crime and Punishment, starring
John Hurt, and the TV movie
Suez 1956, about British Prime Minister
Anthony Eden and the Suez crisis of 1956. Between 1979 and 1990 he directed a number of TV plays for the BBC, ITV, and Granada, including
Little Eyolf,
The Master Builder, and
The Winslow Boy, while also continuing to direct TV documentaries and music programmes. He also directed the six-part TV miniseries
Merlin of the Crystal Cave (1991), the TV movies
Bomber Harris (1989) and
A Bright New Hope for Mankind (1993), and programmes for the TV documentary series
The Works and Forty Minutes. ==Books==