- Born
- Died
- Birth nameWillis Edward Hall
- Willis Hall was born on April 6, 1929 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK. He was a writer, known for Billy Liar (1963), A Kind of Loving (1962) and Whistle Down the Wind (1961). He was married to Valerie Shute, Dorothy Kingsmill, Jill Bennett and Kathleen May Cortens. He died on March 7, 2005 in Ilkley, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, UK.
- SpousesValerie Shute(November 2, 1973 - March 7, 2005) (his death)Dorothy Kingsmill(1966 - ?) (divorced)Jill Bennett(1962 - 1965) (divorced)Kathleen May Cortens(1954 - 1961) (divorced)
- He rarely spoke of his tempestuous and short-lasting marriage to Jill Bennett, but, after her suicide and near the end of his own life, he revealed that she had been in the frequent habit of telephoning him from home to say she had just taken an overdose of sleeping pills. This, of course, would cause him to abandon whatever he was doing and rush back to her - whereupon he would find her laughing mockingly at his naivete and drinking champagne. He claimed that she was so neurotic and self-centered that he could never be sure of her, and had left her rather than put up with her behavior. By a terrible irony, she actually did commit suicide by an overdose some twenty-five years after their divorce.
- Had a keen interest in performing magic, member of several magic circles. He also served as president of St Albans football club in the 1960s and 1970s.
- Prolific British playwright and screenwriter, often in collaboration with his childhood friend Keith Waterhouse. He was the son of a fitter in an engineering plant. His first job was in journalism after dropping out of school at the age of fourteen. He then joined the trawler crews sailing from Hull, and became a professional soldier. He took up writing plays while stationed in Malaya. He returned to Britain seven years later, working for BBC radio as a playwright.
- In his later years, he was very friendly with playwright John Osborne, the second husband of his ex-wife Jill Bennett. Both men claimed that they would, whenever they heard a rumor that Bennett was thinking of re-marrying, band together to dissuade her new intended husband from taking this rash step.
- He and his partner Keith Waterhouse contributed, uncredited, to the script of Torn Curtain.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content