Tom Stoppard, the Academy and Tony Award-winning British playwright and screenwriter, has died at the age of 88.
Stoppard’s agents confirmed his death to the BBC, noting in a statement that he “died peacefully at home in Dorset, surrounded by his family.” No cause of death was provided.
“He will be remembered for his works, for their brilliance and humanity, and for his wit, his irreverence, his generosity of spirit and his profound love of the English language. It was an honor to work with Tom and to know him.”
A five-time Tony Award winner for Best Play, Stoppard first earned the honor at the age of 30 for 1968’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, which reimagined the events of Hamlet through the eyes of two minor characters from William Shakespeare’s drama. Stoppard also won Best Play for 1976’s Travesties, 1984’s The Real Thing, 2007’s The Coast of Utopia, and 2023’s Leopoldstadt, his final stage play and one that took inspiration from his youth as a Jewish Czechoslovakian child escaping Nazi occupation.
On the big screen, Stoppard penned the screenplays for Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s Despair, Steven Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun, an adaptation of John Le Carre’s The Russia House, and co-wrote Terry Gilliam’s dystopian epic Brazil, the latter earning Stoppard his first Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay. He would later win that Academy Award in 1998 for co-writing Shakespeare in Love.
Although uncredited, Stoppard also provided dialogue to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade — “Tom is pretty much responsible for every line of dialogue,” Spielberg once admitted — as well as Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith. Stoppard also directed the film version of his own Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead in 1990.
Mick Jagger, who once dated Stoppard’s fourth wife Sabrina Guinness, paid tribute on social media Saturday, Tom Stoppard was my favourite playwright. He leaves us with a majestic body of intellectual and amusing work. I will always miss him.”
Following Stoppard’s death, the Olivier Awards announced that they would honor the playwright by dimming the lights of London’s West End theaters for two minutes this Tuesday, December 2.
“Over a distinguished career spanning six decades, he won three Laurence Olivier Awards and five Tony Awards, and received an Academy Award for his screenplay for Shakespeare in Love,” the association wrote in a statement. “That recognition attests to the remarkable range and enduring impact of his work on both stage and screen. We extend our heartfelt condolences to his family, colleagues, and all whose lives he enriched.”
PEN America added in a statement, “From his early plays like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead that shocked audiences, to his most recent and most autobiographical play Leopoldstadt— inspired by the impact of the horrors of the Holocaust on his family— Stoppard’s plays have been suffused with wit and wordplay and asked essential questions about how we live, love, die, and explore the depth of the human condition… Stoppard used his platform to highlight the struggles of writers under repressive governments worldwide. The world of contemporary theater will forever bear his mark.”







