Neil R. Gaiman Net Worth

Neil R. Gaiman Net Worth is
$11 Million

Neil R. Gaiman Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Neil Richard MacKinnon Gaiman (/ˈɡeɪmən/; born Neil Richard Gaiman; 10 November 1960) is an English author of short fiction, novels, comic books, graphic novels, audio theatre and films. His notable works include the comic book series The Sandman and novels Stardust, American Gods, Coraline, and The Graveyard Book. He has won numerous awards, including the Hugo, Nebula, and Bram Stoker awards, as well as the Newbery and Carnegie medals. He is the first author to win both the Newbery and the Carnegie medals for the same work, The Graveyard Book (2008). In 2013, The Ocean at the End of the Lane was voted Book of the Year in the British National Book Awards.

Full NameNeil Gaiman
Net Wortharound $18 million
Date Of BirthNovember 10, 1960
Place Of BirthPortchester, Hampshire, England
Height5' 10" (1.78 m)
ProfessionWriter, Producer, Actor
EducationWhitgift School, Ardingly College
NationalityBritish
SpouseMary McGrath, Amanda Palmer
ChildrenHolly Gaiman, Maddy Gaiman, Michael Gaiman
ParentsSheila Gaiman, David Gaiman
SiblingsLizzy Calcioli, Claire Edwards
AwardsJohn Newbery Medal, Hugo Award for Best Novel, Carnegie Medal, Hugo Award for Best Short Story, Hugo Award for Best Novella, Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story, Nebula Award for Best Novel, Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form, Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form, Lo...
NominationsHugo Award for Best Related Work, Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, World Fantasy Award—Novel, Nebula Award for Best Script, Edgar Award for Best Short Story, Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award, Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children's Literature, World Fantasy Award—Long Fiction, Locus ...
MoviesA Short Film About John Bolton, MirrorMask, Stardust, Beowulf, Dreams with Sharp Teeth, Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown, Coraline, Jay & Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie, How to Talk to Girls at Parties, Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist, Statuesque, Nicholas Was, Death and Me
TV ShowsAmerican Gods, Neverwhere, HypaSpace
Star SignScorpio
#Trademark
1Writes about myths and science and horror and symbolism.
2Writes dark fantasy for adults and children or for adults from a child's perspective.
3Mirrors and twins.
4Immortality.
5Crossing thresholds to other worlds.
6Characters from his books will cross over into other stories he's written.
7Celestial imagery like the Moon and the stars.
8Elegant prose.
9Dresses only in black clothing
10Supernatural and Occult Themes
11Messy Black Hair
12Often titles his stories after song names, particularly ones by Lou Reed, Joy Division, and Broadway standards.
13Black T-shirt
#Quote
1I learned more about the words I'd written when reading aloud than I ever have learned about anything I've written.
2The good folk of Twitter were extremely helpful when I needed to double-check how much Blackjacks and fruit salad sweets cost in the 1960s.
3[acknowledgements in a book] You do not have to read it. It's mostly just names.
4[his novel] The Ocean at the End of the Lane is a novel of childhood and memory. It's a story of magic, about the power of stories and how we face the darkness inside of us. It's about fear, and love, and death and families. But, fundamentally, I hope, at its heart, it's a novel about survival.
5I have wonderful editors on both sides of the Atlantic.
6In Sarasota, Florida, Stephen King reminded me of the joy of just writing every day. Words save our lives, sometimes.
7[driving down a narrow country lane at night in fog] If you drive slowly, you can see far enough in front of you to drive safely and keep going, but you can't drive very fast, and you really don't know what's going to be around each corner.
8I owe thanks to so many people, the ones who were there in my life when I needed them, the ones who brought me tea, the ones who wrote the books that brought me up. To single any of them out is foolish.
9[photographs] Memory-jogging.
10I am really fascinated by the power of myths. You don't go to a myth for characterization - what you go to a really good myth for is a kind of glorious inevitability.
11I needed to change and fix and rebuild.
12[why he likes giving lectures] To try and understand what I was writing and who it was for.
13I think there's a bonding experience between children and pets whereas adults would be hard pushed to make that amount of emotional investment in pets. My pets were pretty much always cats.
14They don't teach you the facts of death, your Mum and Dad. They give you pets. And actually it's true. For many of us, pets are the way we initially discover death and the heartbreak of death. And we have to discover it. We encounter it, we learn how to live with it, learn how to survive it. And that, in some horrible way, is what pets are for.
15There are things I think some kids are really good at. I was really good at living inside books, the sort of relationship kids have with fiction, the relationship kids have with books.
16[surviving a near-death experience as a child] I just had a feeling that I'd known everything in that time, that I'd been somewhere you could know everything and now I had to go back to being human again, being one person with a strange small head. I wanted to reproduce that feeling.
17There is this weird, glorious magic of anything being done for the first time. And of course the joy of anything being done for the first time is that it should always be completely unpredictable and unexpected. I wouldn't just say I'd like to swim with dolphins, because truly what I'd like is to be astonished. And then to go, 'this is the first time I've ever done this - how cool!' So, not to be expecting it is a huge part of it.
18I remember my first ever experience with death - I must have been maybe three. I remember thinking my goldfish bowl looked dirty, and very proudly squirted some washing-up liquid in there just to help. And the next day I came down and both of my goldfish were just floating on their bodies, dead. And I was absolutely and utterly heartbroken.
19I think the joy of perfectly new experiences is that they should be a surprise - and the joy of writing about kids is that so much is absolutely new, you can give them first times for everything.
20I love marital squabbles. Not the kind where you're actually fighting about anything that means anything. Just ones where what you're actually hearing is this wonderful porridge that memory turns into. People take other people's memories, people remember things differently, and if there was an anything that at the exact moment it happened all you have to reconstruct it with is a subjective truth.
21The Mary Poppins books by PL Travers stayed with me. A lot of the ones that stayed with me are the ones I've actually discovered that as an adult I could go back and re-read, discovering they are still great books. PL Travers is such a fantastic writer. So smart and invested so much for kids. Another is CS Lewis.
22[writing chunks from 1930s and 40s girls-school stories] I loved writing them. I loved the fact that I got to make them up and could have just made them up forever.
23I think you can absolutely have absolute truths, just as I believe you can absolutely never have two people who were there agree on what that absolute truth is. It's the glory and the magic of the way memory works. Memories are being rewritten all the time and the view changes wherever you're standing. So while there probably are absolute truths, I would hesitate to pronounce on what they are. I think that there are definitely no personal absolute truths. Because I think personal absolute truths are colored by memory and feeling and point of view.
24Normally the audience for any of my books is me. Sometimes if I am writing a book - even my kids' books - I tend to be very, very aware, if I can be, of the fact that adults are going to be reading them too. You're very aware that some adult is going to have to read it as well as a kid, but you're also trying to put yourself back in the frame of mind of a kid for whom every turning of the page is an adventure.
25There were apparently limits to what you could take out of South Africa.
26The one thing that used to absolutely terrify me was the shadow of my dressing gown. There was something about the shadow of the dressing gown hanging on the door that looked like somebody just standing on the wall - even if the door was open and the light was on. That shadow would be cast on the wall and I'd think there would be somebody there, someone waiting on the other side of the door for me - and it was very, very terrifying.
27What makes children's fiction children's fiction? What makes fiction for adults? What do people respond to and what do I respond to. One of the keys to children's fiction for me is you owe it to the world, and you owe it to the kids, to give them hope.
28George R R Martin is not your bitch.
29I love writing stuff where I get to set the rules. Which is, I guess, a bit like fantasy in that I love being God when I write. Could I have written 'The Ocean at the End of the Lane' with absolutely no magic? Sure I could. But the magic in 'Ocean' for me is like adding a little salt. It brings out the tastes. It makes things that happen, happen more so.
30I could run down a list of my teachers for you when I was 9 or 10 by the physical punishments they liked inflicting on us. From the spotty young man, Mr. Cook, who made us - and we were wearing short trousers - stand in a desk while hitting the backs of our knees with a ruler, to the ones who would grab you [by the hair] and turn it , to the really kind of perverted ones who would go down for your nipple and squeeze. And the ones who would simply throw things..What the fuck was up with that? Did adults know? Did they care?
31I remember reading books as a child and promising myself I would never forget. Because you'd read books, and they'd obviously been written by someone who'd completely forgot. And I'd go, How can you forget?
32M is for magic. All the letters are, if you put them together properly. You can make magic with them, and dreams, and I hope, even a few surprises...
33The good thing about a book of short stories is you don't have to like them all.
34The hardest thing to do as a young writer is to finish something.
35Short stories are tiny windows into other worlds and other minds and dreams. They are journeys you can make to the far side of the universe and still be back in time for dinner.
36Science-fiction takes you across the stars, and into other times and minds.
37Fantasy gets into your bones.
38Stories you read when you're the right age never quite leave you. If a story touches you it will stay with you, haunting the places in your mind that you rarely ever visit. Horror stays with you hardest.
39Writing imaginative tales for the young is like sending coals to Newcastle. For coals.
40You know what you're writing ahead of time.
41The mechanics of writing fascinate me.
42Every Christmas I feel insignificant and embarrassed and talentless.
43Handmade Christmas cards are things of beauty; monuments to inspired creativity.
44I laughed in the face of danger and spat on the shoes of writers block.
45Sometimes the only way I would know that a story had finished was when there weren't any more words to be written down.
46There are people who don't read introductions.
47Mirrors are wonderful things. They appear to tell the truth, to reflect life back out at us; but set a mirror correctly and it will lie so convincingly you'll believe something has vanished into thin air, that a box filled with doves and flags and spiders is actually empty, that people hidden in the wings or the pit are floating ghosts upon the stage. Angle it right and a mirror becomes a magic casement; it can show you anything you can imagine and maybe a few things you can't. Stories are in one way or another mirrors. We use them to explain to ourselves how the world works or how it doesn't. Like mirrors, stories prepare us for the day to come. They distract us from the things in the darkness. Fantasy is a mirror, a distorting mirror, and a concealing mirror set at 45 degrees to reality, but a mirror nonetheless, which we use to tell ourselves things we might not otherwise see.
48I seem to have a career that I enjoy that doesn't involve getting up too early in the morning.
49Writing is flying in dreams.
50These days AIDS seems to have become, for good or evil, just another disease in Venus's armoury.
51I think a good short story is a magic trick. That's one reason why I love reading books on magic, because sometimes you realize that the trick is very small, but the effect is huge.
52I like writing things that will surprise me.
53One day the good and honest townsfolk of Northampton will burn Alan (Moore) as a warlock, and it will be a great loss to the world.
54In fiction, why do people never talk while making love?
55The biggest difference between England and America is that England has history, while America has geography.
56There is never enough time, and I wind up just wanting to do things that I don't have time for.
57Have you ever been in love? Horrible isn't it? It makes you so vulnerable. It opens your chest and it opens up your heart and it means that someone can get inside you and mess you up. You build up all these defenses, you build up a whole suit of armor, so that nothing can hurt you, then one stupid person, no different from any other stupid person, wanders into your stupid life...You give them a piece of you. They didn't ask for it. They did something dumb one day, like kiss you or smile at you, and then your life isn't your own anymore. Love takes hostages. It gets inside you. It eats you out and leaves you crying in the darkness, so simple a phrase like 'maybe we should be just friends' turns into a glass splinter working its way into your heart. It hurts. Not just in the imagination. Not just in the mind. It's a soul-hurt, a real gets-inside-you-and-rips-you-apart pain. I hate love.
58I was a "bookie" kid. I was one those kids who had books on them. Before weddings, Bar Mitzvahs, funerals and anything else where you're actually meant to not be reading, my family would frisk me and take the book away. If they didn't find it by this point in the procedure, I would be sitting over in that corner completely unnoticed just reading my book.
59Firstly, there is no such person as Death. Second, Death's this tall guy with a bone face, like a skeletal monk, with a scythe and an hourglass and a big white horse and a penchant for playing chess with Scandinavians. Third, he doesn't exist either.
60It is a fool's prerogative to utter truths that no one else will speak.
61We all not only could know everything. We do. We just tell ourselves we don't to make it all bearable.
62This is a work of fiction. All the characters in it, human and otherwise, are imaginary, excepting only certain of the fairy folk, whom it might be unwise to offend by casting doubt on their existence. Or lack thereof.
63It's not a bad thing for a writer not to feel at home. Writers - we're much more comfortable at parties standing in the corner watching everybody else having a good time than we are mingling.
#Fact
1Son Anthony, with wife Amanda Palmer, born at 8:37 a.m. on September 16, 2015.
2The works of the Brothers Grimm are an influence on Gaiman.
3As well as film and TV, his work has been adapted for radio and graphic novels.
4When he was a child, he used to read on the branch of a Beech tree by climbing a rope ladder.
5Authors William Gibson and Philip Pullman are big fans of Gaiman.
6A fan of Ringo Starr.
7Has often collaborated with fellow author Terry Pratchett.
8His novel The Ocean at the End of the Lane derived from his own childhood experiences.
9When he and Dave McKean collaborated on Mirrormask (2005), McKean did the designs but they worked on the illustrated film script together.
10A big fan of author C.S. Lewis. He read the entire Chronicles of Narnia after seeing The Lion, the Witch, & the Wardrobe (1988).
11Friends with Gary K. Wolf, Peter Straub, Henry Selick and Cornelia Funke.
12Likes to write on the Isle of Skye.
13In his novel The Ocean at the End of the Lane, Gaiman has one of the characters say "spit-spot" from Mary Poppins (1964). He's a big fan of the books written by P.L. Travers.
14Gaiman has won the Hugo, Nebula, Bram Stoker, SFX and Locus awards for his writing.
15He was nearly strangled as a 10-year old when a school bully pulled his tie so tight he had to have the other kids loosen it.
16His novel The Ocean at the End of the Lane won Book of the Year 2013 at the Specsavers National Book Awards.
17An acclaimed, award-winning author, he's won two national book awards and the Hugo, Nebula and Bram Stoker awards.
18The novel Alice in Wonderland is an influence on Gaiman, e.g. he likens a crescent moon to a grin, like the Cheshire Cat in Gaiman's novel The Ocean at the End of the Lane. His work also seems inspired by the Brothers Grimm.
19Did not attend college or University.
20His interest in comic books came after reading some of Alan Moore's work on 'Swamp Thing'.
21Ray Bradbury's short story Homecoming inspired Gaiman to become an author.
22Some of his work derives from his own nightmares.
23Supports the comic book legal defense fund, an organization that defends the 1st Amendment rights of comic book creators, publishers and retailers.
24Supports PETA.
25A huge fan and a close friend of Alan Moore.
26Interviewed celebrities for Penthouse and Knave, two English magazines in the 1980s. He thought they were tamer than they're US counterparts. He reflected that Penthouse had nothing to do with women and everything to do with pictures of women.
27A huge fan of writer, 17th century collector and historian John Aubrey.
28A huge fan of science-fiction, and is surprised he never became a SF author himself. He also covered a SF convention for a national newspaper in 1985.
29Parts of his graphic novel Mr Punch are based on true events.
30One of the most haunting tales he's ever read is Sweeney Todd.
31Some of his short stories take years to write and years to be published.
32A huge fan of author Gene Wolfe.
33Works frequently with artist Dave McKean.
34Is a huge fan of the TV series 'Supernatural'.
35Lived in the US since 1989.
36A huge fan of Harlan Ellison.
37Married fiancée Amanda Palmer in New Orleans on November 10, 2010.
38Friend of Lenny Henry.
39His last name is properly pronounced "gay-mun," not "guy-mun," as he says people often mispronounce it. Gaiman explains that it is an Anglicized version of a name that was originally Polish.
40[January 2010] Engaged to The Dresden Dolls singer/pianist Amanda Palmer.
41January 15, 2010: Announced his engagement to Amanda Palmer, lead singer of The Dresden Dolls.
42Is the son of David Bernard Gaiman, who was a Public Relations Director for the Church of Scientology in England (where it is not recognized as a religion) until his death in 2009.
43Babylon 5 (1994) producer J. Michael Straczynski was so impressed with Gaiman's writing, he named an alien race after him, the Gaim, who have a visual similarity to Gaiman's "Sandman" character.
44The World Fantasy Awards are given at the World Fantasy Convention and the winners are voted on by all attending members. Neil has won once (1991 in the short fiction category for his comic book arc from Sandman called "A Midsummer Night's Dream). He's been nominated for 6 additional works.
45The Hugo Awards are given at the World Science Fiction Convention and the winners are voted on by all attending members. Neil has won 3 Hugos (2004 for the short story "A Study in Emerald", 2003 for Coraline, and 2002 for American Gods).
46He has won 4 Stoker Awards from the Horror Fiction Writers of America (2003 for Sandman: Endless Nights, 2002 for Coraline, 2001 for American Gods, and 1999 for Sandman: The Dream Hunters). He's been nominated for the Stokers for 4 other works of fiction as well.
47Moved to Menomonie, Wisconsin, with his now ex-wife Mary, two daughters Holly and Maddy, and son Mike.
48His ex-wife Mary, an American, is four years older than Neil. He is engaged to Amanda Palmer (2010).
49Claims a new addiction to Calamansi Juice, a citrus fruit product of the Philippines, when he enjoyed many bottles of it while on a recent book tour of Asia, spending several days and nights in Manila.
50He sued "Spawn" creator Todd McFarlane for violation of copyright and non-payment of royalties in January, 2002. The case went to court in October 2002, when the seven-person federal jury in Wisconsin took three days to decide in favor of Gaiman, agreeing that McFarlane used Gaiman's created characters without permission or compensation. Gaiman was awarded $45,000 plus court costs.
51In 1992, he moved his family -- wife Mary, son Michael, and daughter Holly Gaiman -- to Minneapolis, Minnesota, from England.
52He is an honorary brother of the Phi Alpha Tau fraternity at Emerson College.
53Sandman #19 took the 1991 World Fantasy Award for best short story (making it the first comic ever to be awarded a literary award).
54The series also won the Harvey Award for best writer (1990, 1991) and best continuing series (1992)
55Sandman won him the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards for best writer (1991, 1992, 1993 and 1994), best continuing series (1991, 1992 and 1993), best graphic album-- reprint (1991), and the Best New Graphic Album (1993)
56Featured writer in "Born To Be Wild" comic book speaking out against animal cruelty.
57Is good friends with Tori Amos, who makes references to him on different songs of hers. He, in addition, has based the character "Foxglove", who appears in his comic books "Sandman" and "Death - the high cost of Living", on her.

Writer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
American GodsTV Series book - 6 episodes, 2017 based on the book by - 3 episodes, 2017 based on the novel by - 1 episode, 2017 filming
How to Talk to Girls at Parties2017short story post-production
The Graveyard Bookbook announced
The Sandmancomics announced
Lucifer2015-2017TV Series based on the characters created by: for Vertigo - 26 episodes
Neil Gaiman's Likely Stories2016TV Mini-Series short story - 4 episodes
Eternals2014TV Mini-Series 10 episodes
Marvel Knights: Eternals2014Video
A Dream of Flying2013Short
Doctor WhoTV Series 1 episode, 2013 written by - 2 episodes, 2011 - 2013
Neil Gaiman's We Can Get Them for You Wholesale2013Short story
A Calendar of Tales: February Tale2013Short written by
A Calendar of Tales: October Tale2013Short written by
The Lingerer2012Short based on a story by
Nicholas Was2010Short
Romance Rytirske Doby2010Short
The 82nd Annual Academy Awards2010TV Special segment "What the Oscars Would Mean to Me: Coraline"
10 Minute Tales2009TV Series written by - 1 episode
Coraline2009book
Coraline2009Video Game story
It Was a Dark and Silly Night2008Short story
We Can Get Them for You Wholesale2008Short short story
Beowulf2007screenplay
Stardust2007novel
Mirrormask2005story / teleplay
We Can Get Them for You Wholesale2004Short short story
A Short Film About John Bolton2003Short writer
Neil Gaiman Live at the Aladdin2001Video documentary poem / short stories Chivalry, Babycakes, Being An Experiment Upon Strictly Scientific Lines, Locks and Price
Babylon 51998TV Series writer - 1 episode
Princess Mononoke1997adapted by: English verison - uncredited
NeverwhereTV Mini-Series series deviser - 6 episodes, 1996 written by - 6 episodes, 1996

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
How to Talk to Girls at Parties2017executive producer post-production
Temple of Art2017Documentary executive producer post-production
The Graveyard Bookproducer announced
The Sandmanexecutive producer - 2014 announced
Neil Gaiman's Likely Stories2016TV Mini-Series executive producer - 4 episodes
Beowulf2007executive producer
Stardust2007producer

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Making of a Superhero Musical2015ShortMelvin Morel
Jay and Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie2013Albert the Manservant (voice)
The Simpsons2011TV SeriesNeil Gaiman
The Guild2011TV SeriesNeil Gaiman
Arthur2010TV SeriesNeil Gaiman
Nothing is True: Behind the Scenes of 'Stardust' with Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess2010Video short
Archangel Thunderbird1998TV MovieBaal (voice)
Nightbreed1990Extra in club scene (Director's Cut) (uncredited)

Miscellaneous

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real2004TV Movie creative consultant
Spawn: In the Demon's Hand2000Video Game co-creator: Cogliostro - uncredited
Princess Mononoke1997script adaptor: English version
Spawn1997co-creator: Cogliostro and Angela - uncredited

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Last Days of Cinerama2012Documentary short writer: "One Tiny Thing"
Beowulf2007writer: "Olaf Drinking Song"
Princess Mononoke1997"Princess Mononoke Theme Song Mononoke-Hime"

Director

TitleYearStatusCharacter
10 Minute Tales2009TV Series 1 episode
A Short Film About John Bolton2003Short

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
McCatherine2013thanks
We Are the Sum2009Video short special thanks
Welcome to Sunny Florida2004Video thanks
Dogma1999humble thanks

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Temple of Art2017Documentary post-productionHimself
Sixteen Legs2016Documentary completed
Here Is Something Beautiful (Etc.Documentary announcedHimself
IMDb at San Diego Comic-Con2016TV SeriesHimself
Neil Gaiman: Dream Dangerously2016DocumentaryHimself
Late Night with Seth Meyers2016TV SeriesHimself
Neil Gaiman's Likely Stories2016TV Mini-SeriesHimself
Frankenstein and the Vampyre: A Dark and Stormy Night2014TV MovieHimself
Bystander Revolution2014TV Series documentaryHimself
Future Shock! The Story of 2000AD2014DocumentaryHimself
The Real History of Science Fiction2014TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
The Graphic Novel Man: The Comics of Bryan Talbot2014Video documentaryHimself
The Kate Bush Story: Running Up That Hill2014TV Movie documentaryHimself
Fantastic Forum2013TV SeriesHimself
Doctor Who Explained2013TV MovieHimself - Writer, Nightmare in Silver
Doctor Who: The Doctors Revisited2013TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
Gahan Wilson: Born Dead, Still Weird2013DocumentaryHimself
Neil Gaiman's We Can Get Them for You Wholesale2013ShortHimself - Narrator (voice)
Last Call with Carson Daly2013TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Vlogbrothers2007-2013TV Series documentaryHimself
Better Things: The Life and Choices of Jeffrey Catherine Jones2012DocumentaryHimself
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson2011TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Doctor Who Confidential2011TV Series documentaryHimself - Writer
Secret Origin: The Story of DC Comics2010Video documentaryHimself
Strange Powers: Stephin Merritt and the Magnetic Fields2010DocumentaryHimself
The People vs. George Lucas2010DocumentaryHimself - Author
Coraline: The Making of 'Coraline'2009Video shortHimself
Coraline: U-Control Picture in Picture2009VideoHimself
Ànima2009TV SeriesHimself
Pizza with Mr. Harlan Ellison and Mr. Neil Gaiman2009Video documentary shortHimself
The Colbert Report2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Up Close with Carrie Keagan2009TV SeriesHimself
Thaco2008Himself
Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown2008DocumentaryHimself, author
Dreams with Sharp Teeth2008DocumentaryHimself
A Hero's Journey: The Making of Beowulf2008Video documentary shortHimself
Beasts of Burden Designing the Creatures of Beowulf2008Video documentary shortHimself
The Art of Beowulf2008Video documentary shortHimself
The Origins of Beowulf2008Video documentary shortHimself
HypaSpace2006-2008TV Series documentaryHimself
In Search of Steve Ditko2007TV Movie documentaryHimself
Comic-Con 2007 Live2007TV MovieHimself
Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist2007DocumentaryHimself
American Scary2006DocumentaryHimself - Author
Downtown Film Fest2006TV MovieHimself
The Making of 'MirrorMask'2006Video documentaryHimself
Shadows in the Dark: The Val Lewton Legacy2005Video documentaryHimself
Life, the Universe and Douglas Adams2005Video documentaryNarrated by (voice)
13 Nights of Fright with Neil Gaiman2004TV SeriesHimself
The Eldritch Influence: The Life, Vision, and Phenomenon of H.P. Lovecraft2003DocumentaryHimself
Comic Book Superheroes Unmasked2003TV Movie documentaryHimself
Sex, Lies & Superheroes2003DocumentaryHimself
Neil Gaiman Live at the Aladdin2001Video documentaryHimself
The Anti Gravity Room1995-1996TV SeriesHimself
South of Watford1987TV Series documentaryHimself - Interviewe

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2012HugoHugo AwardsBest Dramatic Presentation - Short FormDoctor Who (2005)
2012Bradbury AwardScience Fiction and Fantasy Writers of AmericaDoctor Who (2005)
2012Writer's AwardSFX Awards, UKDoctor Who (2005)
2008HugoHugo AwardsBest Dramatic Presentation - Long FormStardust (2007)
2006Black Tulip AwardAmsterdam Fantastic Film FestivalBest Feature DebutMirrormask (2005)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2011Writers' Guild of Great Britain AwardWriters' Guild of Great BritainBest Television Drama SeriesDoctor Who (2005)
2008Saturn AwardAcademy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USABest WritingBeowulf (2007)
2001Nebula AwardScience Fiction and Fantasy Writers of AmericaBest ScriptMononoke-hime (1997)

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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