HOWARD BRENTON

'Howard John Brenton' (born December 13, 1942) is an English playwright.
He gained notoriety for his play ''The Romans in Britain'', first staged at the National Theatre in 1980. This featured a scene of attempted buggery which resulted in Mary Whitehouse mounting a private prosecution against the play's director, Michael Bogdanov. Whitehouse's prosecution was withdrawn by her own legal team when it became obvious that it would not succeed.

Contents
Plays
Screenplays
Awards
Background
External links
Plays


★ ''Christie in Love''

★ ''Revenge''

★ ''Magnificence''

★ ''Brassneck'' (with David Hare)

★ ''The Churchill Play''

★ ''Epsom Downs'' (Joint Stock Theatre Company, 1977)

★ ''Sore Throats''

★ ''The Romans in Britain'' (1980)

★ ''Thirteenth Night'' (1981)

★ ''Weapons of Happiness''

★ ''Bloody Poetry'' (1984)

★ ''Pravda'' (1985, with David Hare)

★ ''Greenland''

★ ''Berlin Bertie''

★ ''H.I.D. (Hess is Dead)''

★ ''Ugly Rumours''

★ ''Snogging Ken''

★ ''Paul''

★ ''Gum and Goo''

★ ''Scott of the Antarctic''

★ ''Wesley''

★ ''In Extremis'' (2006)
Screenplays


★ ''The Saliva Milkshake''

★ ''Dead Head'' (1986)

★ ''Spooks'' (2002-2004)

Awards



Evening Standard Award for best play of 1985, for ''Pravda''

Background


He was born in Portsmouth, England and educated at St Catharine's College, Cambridge.

External links



Brenton, the Literary Encyclopedia

The Observer Profile: Howard Brenton

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