Tom Stoppard won many awards over his long career, including a 1999 Oscar for his screenplay for the movie 'Shakespeare in Love' / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP

British playwright Tom Stoppard, who won an Oscar for the screenplay of the 1998 film "Shakespeare In Love", has died at the age of 88, United Agents announced on Saturday.

Stoppard, who first made his name with "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead" -- an absurdist tragicomedy about two minor characters from Shakespeare's "Hamlet" -- developed a distinctive style combining serious ideas with comedy.

"We are deeply saddened to announce that our beloved client and friend, Tom Stoppard, has died peacefully at home in Dorset, surrounded by his family," the talent agency said.

"He will be remembered for his works, for their brilliance and humanity, and for his wit, his irreverence, his generosity of spirit and his profound love of the English language." 

King Charles III and rock royalty Mick Jagger led the tributes on social media. 

"Tom Stoppard was my favourite playwright," the Rolling Stones frontman posted on X.

"He leaves us with a majestic body of intellectual and amusing work. I will always miss him."

In a statement released by Buckingham Palace, Charles said he and the queen were "deeply saddened" at news of the death of "one of our greatest writers".

He added: "A dear friend who wore his genius lightly, he could, and did, turn his pen to any subject, challenging, moving and inspiring his audiences, borne from his own personal history."

- A string of awards -

In London, the Olivier Awards announced that West End theatres would dim their lights for two minutes at 7:00 pm on Tuesday in his memory.

As well as his Oscar, Stoppard won three Oliviers and five Tonys, among the top awards in the theatre world.

Britain's National Theatre, which worked closely with Stoppard, staging many of his plays, paid tribute to "his sharp intellect, inventive narrative structures, and a blend of highbrow humour with profound philosophical enquiries".

London's Royal Court theatre said his work "probed the deepest human mysteries of truth, time, mortality and frailty while dazzling with wit, laughter and the buoyancy of the human spirit".

His publisher, Faber Books, paid tribute to "one of the most brilliant and feted playwrights of the last 60 years and one of the great intellects of our time".

For Stoppard, Shakespeare proved to be a rich seam for him to mine.

"Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead", the play that first brought him success in theatres on both sides of the Atlantic, won a string of theatre awards.

Then when he adapted it for cinema in 1990, in a version starring Tim Roth, Gary Oldman and Richard Dreyfuss, it picked up the Golden Lion -- the top prize -- at the Venice Film Festival.

To non-theatre-goers, Stoppard is best remembered for cinema work that included the "Indiana Jones" and "Star Wars" franchises and an Oscar in 1999 for "Shakespeare in Love".

Born in Czechoslovakia in 1937, he fled his home during the Nazi occupation and found refuge in Britain. After leaving school, Stoppard became a journalist before launching his career as a playwright.

Over a six-decade career, he wrote for the theatre, TV and radio, as well as film, winning multiple awards.

In 1997 he was knighted for his services to literature.

Stoppard was married three times and had four sons, one of whom, Ed Stoppard, is an actor.

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