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English playwright From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tom Morton-Smith (born 1980) is an Olivier award-winning English playwright.
Morton-Smith studied drama at the University of East Anglia before training as an actor at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.
In 2006, he was selected to be part of Future Perfect, a writer's group attached to the Paines Plough theatre company. In 2007, he joined the company as their playwright-in-residence.[1]
His debut stage play, Salt Meets Wound, premiered at Theatre503 in May 2007.[2]
His play Oppenheimer, about the physicist J Robert Oppenheimer and the building of the atomic bomb, was performed by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2015 in the Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, until it transferred to London's West End in April 2015. The play was nominated for Best New Play at the 2016 WhatsOnStage Awards.[3]
In April 2022, it was announced that he would adapt Studio Ghibli's 1988 animated film My Neighbour Totoro for the stage. Produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company and the film's original composer Joe Hisaishi, the play ran for a fifteen-week limited season at the Barbican Theatre in London from October 2022.[4] The play won five categories at the 2023 WhatsOnStage Awards, having been nominated in nine.[5] It also won six categories (out of nine nominations) at the 2023 Laurence Olivier Awards, including Best Entertainment or Comedy Play.[6][7] Morton-Smith dedicated his Olivier award to the memory of his stillborn daughter.[8]
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