It was one of the plays -Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead - that Tom wrote that broke ice with my better half …
To be alive during Tom’s lifetime has been one of the soulful bohemian blessings
“Well, we can do you blood and love without the rhetoric, and we can do you blood and rhetoric without the love, and we can do you all three concurrent or consecutive. But we can't give you love and rhetoric without the blood. Blood is compulsory. They're all blood, you see.” ~ Tom Stoppard
Tomáš Sträussler, 1937–2025) was a Czech-born British playwright and screenwriter
Born: 3 July 1937, Zlín, Czechia
- Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead(1966): His breakout play that places two minor characters from Shakespeare's Hamlet at the center of the action, exploring themes of chance and mortality.
- Jumpers (1972): A murder mystery that satirizes academic philosophy and moral values.
- Travesties (1974): An exploration of art and revolution, using a "Wildean" structure to imagine interactions between Vladimir Lenin, James Joyce, and Tristan Tzara in WWI Zürich.
- The Real Thing (1982): A meta-theatrical play about love, art, and adultery, which won a Tony Award for Best Play.
- Arcadia (1993): Juxtaposes 19th-century Romanticism with 20th-century science and chaos theory, widely considered one of his finest works.
- Leopoldstadt (2020): His final, deeply personal play chronicling a Viennese Jewish family across half a century, dealing with the Holocaust and his own rediscovered Jewish heritage.
- He co-wrote the screenplay for the Academy Award-winning film Shakespeare in Love(1998).
- He also contributed to scripts for films like Brazil (1985), Empire of the Sun (1987), and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade(1989), often as an uncredited script doctor.
A theatrical sensation since the 1960s, whose dramas included Arcadia, The Real Thing and Leopoldstadt, Stoppard also had huge success as a screenwriter
Words... They're innocent, neutral, precise, standing for this, describing that, meaning the other, so if you look after them you can build bridges across incomprehension and chaos. But when they get their corners knocked off, they're no good any more... I don't think writers are sacred, but words are. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones in the right order, you can nudge the world a little or make a poem which children will speak for you when you're dead.
Sir Tom Stoppard obituary: playful and prolific playwright
Drawing comparisons to the greatest of dramatists, he entwined erudition with imagination in stage works that won accolades on both sides of the Atlantic.




