Geoffrey Lancashire (12 March 1933 – 3 October 2004) was a British television scriptwriter. He is best remembered for writing television comedy series such as The Lovers and The Cuckoo Waltz. He also wrote 171 episodes of ITV soap opera Coronation Street during the 1960s.
Geoffrey Lancashire was born in Oldham, Lancashire on 12 March 1933 and was educated at the local high school until the age of 15.
Lancashire began his career as a journalist with the Oldham Evening Chronicle newspaper and later worked in London for national Sunday newspapers. He and a journalist colleague, Roy Bottomley, who also eventually worked for Granada, had founded the Oldham Mirror newspaper prior to this.
Lancashire was a freelance journalist before joining Granada Television as a continuity scriptwriter days before the company began broadcasting in 1956. He went on to write 171 episodes of Coronation Street, working alongside Tony Warren and Jack Rosenthal. Lancashire also wrote other television series including Inheritance (1967), The Lovers (1970), Shabby Tiger (1973), The Cuckoo Waltz (1975) and Foxy Lady (1982). He had an aptitude for writing and devising television comedy, and with Rosenthal had won a Writers' Guild award for The Lovers.
Having become self-employed once again, Lancashire wrote for other television companies. His output as such included contributions to the BBC's 1965-67 United!, Man at the Top (Thames Television, 1970-72) and All Creatures Great and Small (BBC, 1978-90).