Tom Stoppard
- Writer
- Script and Continuity Department
- Producer
Tom Stoppard was born on 3 July 1937 in Zlín, Czechoslovakia [now in Czech Republic]. He is a writer and producer, known for Shakespeare in Love (1998), Brazil (1985) and Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead (1990). He has been married to Sabrina Guinness since 2014. He was previously married to Miriam Stoppard and Jose Ingle.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 19 wins & 22 nominations total
Writer
- 2022
- 2020
- 2017
- 2015
- National Theatre Live: 50 Years on Stage8.7TV Movie
- written by (segment Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead"/"Arcadia)
- 2013
- 2012
- 2012
- 2005
- 2001
- 2001
- 2000
- 2000
- 1998
- 1998
Script and Continuity Department
Producer
- Alternative name
- Sir Tom Stoppard
- Height
- 6′ 1¼″ (1.86 m)
- Born
- SpousesSabrina Guinness2014 - present
- Children
- Other worksPlaywright: "Arcadia", 1995 (New York Drama Critics Circle Award, Best New Play)
- Publicity listings
- TriviaWhen Stoppard's family (then named "Straussler") fled Czechoslovakia to escape the Nazis, they stopped identifying as Jews. Stoppard was still a young child when this happened, and by the end of the war, his father had died and his mother had remarried to a British man named Kenneth Stoppard, who gave Tom his last name and insisted that the family's former Judaism be kept secret. Tom was only given very vague information concerning his family's Judaism until he was far into his adulthood, when he discovered that all four of his grandparents were Jewish and prisoners at Terezin (Theresienstadt) Concentration Camp, where they were murdered by the Nazis. When he became more interested in exploring his Jewish roots, his stepfather asked (in 1996) that he stop using the name "Stoppard" because he didn't want his name to be associated with a Jew. Tom responded that this was an impractical request, since by that time he was almost 60 years old and had been living, writing, and winning theater and literary awards under the name "Tom Stoppard" for a very long time.
- QuotesThe bad end unhappily, the good unluckily. That is what tragedy means.
FAQ10
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