Tess Morris is a British screenwriter born and raised in Wandsworth, London. She was named one of BAFTA's Breakthrough Brits of 2015 after the success of her most recent script for the romantic comedy film, Man Up. Morris has been referred to as the "[...]key voice standing up for the romantic comedy genre."
Morris attended university in South London where she completed a TV and Film degree. In 1997, while she was still in university, Morris wrote a short film titled, Beer Goggles, (directed by David Mackenzie) as part of the Lloyds Bank/Channel Four Film Challenge. Her team's film won first place and was broadcast on the Channel 4 network.
After university, Morris became a journalist for teen news publishers where she regularly interviewed the cast of Hollyoaks, a British soap opera. After hearing of scriptwriting job opportunities, Morris became a writer for Hollyoaks at the age of twenty-three. She wrote eighteen episodes over the following two years, gaining a reputation on the show for her comedic scripts. Looking for work outside Hollyoaks, Morris wrote a pilot for a sitcom based on her relationship with her Jewish grandmother titled, Granny and Annie, but had no luck in getting it made. However, this pilot did get Morris noticed by the UK production company DLT Entertainment, who then hired her to write for their sitcom, My Family. After writing for one season of My Family, Morris spent a few years writing several spec scripts with different co-writers but never managed to sell any of them.
After struggling to sell her TV spec scripts, Morris got a job as a script reader for the BFI and Film4. During this time, she also co-produced a short film called Rise of the Appliances with producer, Richard Holmes. Morris claims she began to miss screenwriting and, based on some of the BFI script submissions she deemed were bad, she decided she would be able to write her own feature script. After a break-up, Morris moved back in with her parents and promised them that if her feature script did not get picked up, she would find a "proper job". In 2008, she was chosen for the BFI/Skillset Think Shoot Distribute Scheme for emerging talent in the British film industry.