“I
don't think writers are sacred, but words are. They deserve respect. If you get
the right ones in the right order, you might nudge the world a little or make a
poem that children will speak for you when you are dead.”
– Tom Stoppard
A Czech-born playwright (in 1937), Tomas
Straussler escaped the Nazis as a child, ending up in Great Britain. He changed his name and started writing
journalistically in 1954. Then in 1960
he decided to try writing plays and his first effort, A Walk on the Water, not only made it to the stage but was
televised by the BBC. His second play Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern Are Dead earned him
international acclaim from which he never looked back, earning 4 Tony Awards in
the process.
Also a writer for radio, television
and film, he co-wrote the Academy Award winning script for the 1998 film Shakespeare
in Love, which also won best actress for Gwyneth Paltrow in her first
starring role.
In July 2013 he was awarded the
prestigious PEN Pinter Prize for both his lifetime achievement as a writer and
for his ability to (as the award states): "to define the real truth of our lives
and our societies by putting the words in the right order," and so that they
effectively “nudge” our world.
“I cannot say that I write with any
social objective,” Stoppard said. “One
writes because one loves writing, really.”
Writer’s Moment with a friend at http://writersmoment.blogspot.com
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