Background
Kevin Elyot was born in the Birmingham subrub of Handsworth, West Midlands, England on July 18, 1951. He grew up as a member of the Anglo-Catholic church of Street Peter"s choir, in which he sang in the third performance of Britten"s War Requiem and studied the piano.
Education
He studied at King Edward"s school in Birmingham where he acted and played Desdemona. When he graduated in 1973, he graduated with a theatre studies degree at Bristol University.
Career
His most notable works include the play My Night with Regional and the film Clapham Junction. He wrote a play in 1982 by the title Coming Clean, directed by David Hayman, for his association as an actor with the tiny Bush. The play tackled sexual relationships when Aids was still a rumor in Britain.
After a deflating comment from his agent Peggy Ramsay about his second play, he came up with the radio play According to Plan in 1987 and an adaptation of Wilkie Collin"s The Moonstone for the Worcester Swan in 1990.
In 1992, he created another adaptation, this time of Alexander Ostrovsky"s Artists and Admirers for the Royal Shakespeare Company. Then came his breakthrough play, My Night With Regional, which was commissioned by Hampstead theatre and taken by artistic director at the Royal Court, Stephen Daldry.
lieutenant was a smash hit in the Theatre Upstairs Criterion in the West End, and Playhouse, which got the play to reproduce in many other countries. Elyot worked on two other plays in 2001 called The Day I Stood Still at the National Theatre and Mouth to Mouth in the West End, both directed by Ian Rickson.
Forty Winks was then created in 2004 as an autopsy on love and growing up and his last play was a new perspective on Christie"s And Then There Were None in 2005.