The Common Reader

Hermione Lee: Tom Stoppard. “It’s Wanting to Know That Makes Us Matter”

Feb 4, 2026
Hermione Lee, Emeritus Professor of English Literature and leading biographer of Woolf, Fitzgerald and Stoppard, discusses Tom Stoppard’s influences and creative process. She explores his use of ideas, rehearsal vs desk-writing, poetic pastiche, his politics and moral thread, and what makes work feel truly Stoppardian. Short, lively reflections on revivals, film work, and Lee’s own biographical practice.
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ANECDOTE

Charm And Steel In Collaboration

  • Lee recounts Stoppard used personal charm often to achieve desired outcomes but could be irritable in rehearsal.
  • She recalls directors describing both his magnetism and occasional crossness when things weren't right.
INSIGHT

Films Secondary To Theatre And Radio

  • Stoppard's best film work is Empire of the Sun, but Lee feels his heart belonged to theatre and radio.
  • She notes his film contributions were often smaller, and his radio plays are underappreciated.
INSIGHT

Cleverness Backed By Serious Scholarship

  • The 'too clever by half' critique undervalues Stoppard's deep scholarship behind plays like The Invention of Love.
  • Lee documents his years of Latin study and immersion to convincingly dramatize A.E. Housman's divided life.
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