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New Year honours for theatre producer Michael Codron and writer Anthony Horowitz

December 30, 2013 19:06
Anthony Horowitz

By

Sandy Rashty,

Sandy Rashty

2 min read

Veteran stage producer Michael Codron has been awarded a knighthood in the New Year honours for services to the theatre.

Eighty-two-year-old Sir Michael is the West End's longest-serving producer and a leading influence in post-war British drama. He is the owner of the Aldwych Theatre, and a former leading figure at the National Theatre and the Hampstead Theatre.

He is most famous for the risk he took, 52 years ago, on a then virtually unknown playwright called Harold Pinter, who had a play called The Birthday Party. Codron once told the JC that it was “our mutual Jewishness” that helped him recognise the play's and Pinter's worth.

Sir Michael, who received the Laurence Olivier lifetime achievement award, has put on more than 200 shows since he started producing in 1956. He is honourary vice-president of the Society of London Theatre.