Ben Travers

British playwright
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Quick Facts
Born:
November 12, 1886, London, England
Died:
December 18, 1980, London

Ben Travers (born November 12, 1886, London, England—died December 18, 1980, London) was a British dramatist who was one of Britain’s most successful comic playwrights of the 20th century.

As a young man working for his father’s wholesale grocery business in Malaya [now in Malaysia], he was deeply influenced by the plays of Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. After World War I he wrote light novels before making his theatrical debut with The Dipper (1922). After its success he became the house dramatist for the Aldwych Theatre and worked with farceurs such as Tom Walls, Ralph Lynn, and Robertson Hare. The first of his Aldwych plays was A Cuckoo in the Nest (1925), and Rookery Nook (1926), Thark (1927), Plunder (1928), Banana Ridge (1928), and A Night like This (1930) followed. Late in his life, Travers again received public and critical acclaim with his comedy The Bed Before Yesterday (1975), starring Joan Plowright and Helen Mirren among others. Travers wrote two volumes of autobiography, Vale of Laughter (1957) and A-Sitting on a Gate (1978).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.