Guests: Tom Stoppard RSS

2012:

  1. Tom Stoppard & Joe Wright on 
“Anna Karenina”
    Duration
    60 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2007:

  1. A conversation with playwright Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    35 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2004:

  1. A conversation with playwright Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    27 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2001:

  1. A rebroadcast of a conversation with playwright Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    60 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * * *
  2. An interview with Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    32 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2000:

  1. A rebroadcast of a conversation with Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    19 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * * *
  2. A rebroadcast of a conversation with Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    34 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *
  3. A conversation with Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    25 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * * *

1999:

  1. A rebroadcast of a conversation with playwright Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    32 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * * *

1998:

  1. A rebroadcast of an hour with British playwright Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    54 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *
  2. An hour with British playwright Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    54 min
    Comments
    1 comment
    Rating
    * * * * *

1995:

  1. An interview with Tom Stoppard
    Duration
    60 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

Sir Tom Stoppard is an Academy Award winning British playwright. Born in Czechoslovakia, he is famous for plays such as “The Real Thing” and “Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead”, and for the screenplays for “Brazil” and “Shakespeare in Love”. Stoppard’s plays are plays of ideas that deal with philosophical issues, yet he combines the philosophical ideas he presents with verbal wit and visual humor. His linguistic complexity, with its puns, jokes, innuendo, and other wordplay, is a chief characteristic of his work. Many also feature multiple timelines. Stoppard has written one novel, “Lord Malquist” and “Mr. Moon” (1966).

Source - Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Stoppard