Background
Although Ramsay was born to English parents in Molong, New South Wales, Australia, her family eventually settled in South Africa by the end of the Great War in which her father served in the South African Medical Corps.
Although Ramsay was born to English parents in Molong, New South Wales, Australia, her family eventually settled in South Africa by the end of the Great War in which her father served in the South African Medical Corps.
After touring with an opera company, and a spell as an actress, she began reading scripts for a number of managements including that of Peter Daubeny, later noted for organising annual "World Theatre" Seasons. As she was gaining no financial return from scripts she was finding, in 1953 her friends and acquaintances persuaded her to open her own agency, in which they invested. Foreign her entire career her business was based in Goodwin"s Court, an alley off Saint Martin"s Lane, London.
She represented many of the leading dramatists to emerge from the 1950s onwards, including Alan Ayckbourn, Eugène Ionesco, J. B. Priestley, Stephen Poliakoff and David Hare.
After discovering Joe Orton, then living on National Assistance, she persuaded producer Michael Codron to stage Orton"s Entertaining Mr Sloane. Ramsay represented the dramatist, and then his estate, for the rest of her life.
The 1978 biography of Orton by John Lahr, initiated by Ramsay in 1970, led to friction between the author and the playwright"s former agent. Ramsay, whose last years were affected by the onset of Alzheimer"s disease, died on 4 September 1991 in London.
The Peggy Ramsay Foundation has been established by her estate and makes grants and awards to help writers and writing for the stage.
Her archive has been donated to the British Library.