Sir Roger Leighton Hall KNZM QSO (born 17 January 1939) is one of New Zealand's most successful playwrights, arguably best known for comedies that carry a vein of social criticism and feelings of pathos.
[1] Hall was born in Woodford, Essex, England,[2] and educated at London's University College School from 1952 until 1955, when he embarked on a career in insurance.
He emigrated to New Zealand in 1957 and continued to work in insurance, also performing in amateur theatre in the city of Wellington.
He continued to act while attending Wellington Teachers’ College and Victoria University of Wellington; fellow actor John Clarke praised his impression of then Prime Minister Keith Holyoake as the template for all others.
Hall began writing plays for children while teaching, which included a spell at Berhampore School, Wellington.
Alongside his writing, he appeared on-screen with actor Grant Tilly on 60s sketch show In View of the Circumstances.
[3] Hall's best-known work in New Zealand is probably his breakthrough play Glide Time (1976), which depicts the frustrations and petty triumphs of a group of so-called 'public servants' working in a government office.
A sequel play and television series, both called Market Forces also followed, set in the "restructured" public service environment of New Zealand's post-Rogernomics era.
Hall's best-known works internationally are Middle-Age Spread (1978, revised 1980) and Conjugal Rites (1991).
Middle Age Spread revolves around a headmaster who has an affair with a young teacher.
The tragi-comedy had a 15-month run in the West End and won the Comedy of the Year Award (Society of London Theatre) and in 1979 became one of the first New Zealand plays to be transformed into a feature film.
Conjugal Rites was made into a situation comedy series in the UK starring Gwen Taylor and Michael Williams .
[4] The characters from Conjugal Rites reappear in Hall's final play to date, Winding Up, which premiered at the Auckland Theatre Company in 2020.
[5] He was co-writer with Philip Norman and A K Grant of Footrot Flats the Musical, which has had more than 120 productions in New Zealand and Australia.
Their follow-up collaboration, Love Off the Shelf, premiered at the Fortune Theatre, Dunedin, in 1986.
It had two pre-West End try-out productions in the United Kingdom, the second in 1993 directed by Sir Alan Ayckbourn at his Scarborough Theatre, and the libretto was published by Samuel French Limited.
(Anyone Who's 99) (2008), Four Flat Whites in Italy (2009), and A Shortcut to Happiness (2011) had hugely successful runs throughout New Zealand.
His show about grandparenting, You Can Always Hand Them Back (2012), has songs by British performer/songwriter Peter Skellern, and has been performed throughout New Zealand and had a season in the UK.
Hall has had many plays, series, and talks on radio, including The Dream Factory for the BBC.
In 2005, he arranged for a scene set on Takapuna Beach on Christmas Day in the 1930s from Bruce Mason's one-man play The End of the Golden Weather to be performed on Takapuna Beach on Christmas Day.
Actor Stephen Lovatt does the one-man show that is presented every year.
OXFAM benefits from a collection and Lovatt donates his fee to the same charity.
In the 1980s, Hall set up a society to improve children's television (Monitor) and has also served on many arts boards and organisations including the NZ Literary Fund Advisory Committee, the Dunedin Public Art Gallery, chairman of Fortune Theatre Board, Frank Sargeson Trust, Janet Frame Eden Street Trust, and Governor of the Arts Foundation of New Zealand.
Hall's autobiography, Bums on seats, was published by Penguin Books in 1998.
He has also written for children and family audiences (with a series of pantomimes, staged annually at Circa Theatre from 2005 to 2012 and 2014–2015).
He was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2003 Queen's Birthday Honours, for services as a playwright.
[10] In 2014 he was presented a Scroll of Honour from the Variety Artists Club of New Zealand Inc for a lifetime of excellence in the performing arts.
[12] In the 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours, Hall was promoted to Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to theatre.
The Quiz in On Stage Book 1: 4 Plays for Secondary Schools ed.
"Roger Hall's knighthood writes a new chapter for NZ theatre".