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Terence Rattigan Author

Sir Terence Rattigan (1911-77) was a British playwright, whose well-structured plays enjoyed enormous success in the years before and after World War II. At one time three of his works were running simultaneously in the West End. Rattigan was knighted in 1971, the first dramatist to be so honoured since the war. When Rattigan was a young man his father, a wealthy diplomat, agreed to finance his writing for a maximum of two years. After 23 months, Rattigan produced his first comedy, French Without Tears (1936), about a group of young Englishmen learning French in a crammer. It ran for 1049 performances at the Criterion Theatre, providing Rattigan with perhaps the greatest success ever enjoyed by a West End newcomer. His second success, After the Dance, dealt with the danger of stifled passion; it was revived by the BBC in 1993. His great wartime successes included a drama inspired by his days in the RAF, Flare Path (1942), and While The Sun Shines (1943), which ran for 1154 performances. The Winslow Boy (1946), which won many awards, told the true story of a father's campaign to prove his son innocent of an act of petty theft. Later outstanding works included The Browning Version (1948), The Deep Blue Sea (1952), a moving story about adultery and suicide (written after the suicide of his lover Kenneth Morgan), Separate Tables (1955), and Ross (1960) in which Sir Alec Guinness starred as T. E. Lawrence. Rattigan lived an extravagant life, driving a Rolls-Royce with a personalized number plate and gambling away the £25,000 he made from French Without Tears in three weeks. His lifestyle and attitudes were diametrically opposed to those of the Angry Young Men of the mid 1950s, who tended to regard his work as the epitome of everything they disliked in contemporary drama. Rattigan stated publicly that he hated Osborne's Look Back in Anger (1956) and as the new kitchen sink realism became popular his reputation waned, along with that of Noël Coward and others of his generation. "We were told we were oldfashioned, effete, and corrupt," he said. More recently, however, there has been a resurgence of interest in Rattigan's work. This trend began with a revival of The Deep Blue Sea at the Almeida Theatre in 1993, the first major production since its premiere over 40 years earlier. Successful revivals of The Winslow Boy, Separate Tables, and other lesser known works have followed.