Prior to becoming a full-time dramatist and then a speechwriter, Millar acted in a number of West End productions during and after World War II, in the company of luminaries as Ivor Novello, Alastair Sim and John Gielgud.
It was written by the playwright Sir Ronald Millar, who had been Thatcher's speech-writer since 1973, and was a pun on the 1948 play The Lady's Not for Burning by Christopher Fry, although Thatcher missed the reference herself.
Ronald Reagan | Ronald McDonald | Ronald Fisher | Mark Millar | Ronald Colman | Ronald McDonald House Charities | Ronald D. Moore | Ronald Hutton | Ronald Grigor Suny | Ronald Reagan Presidential Library | Ronald J. Clarke | Ronald | Ronald van Prooijen | Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport | Ronald Knox | Ronald Harwood | Ronald Graham | Ronald Corp | Ronald Wright | Ronald Ross | Ronald Nall-Cain, 2nd Baron Brocket | Presidency of Ronald Reagan | Ronald Searle | Ronald Numbers | Ronald Lauder | Ronald Coase | Ronald Binge | Robin Millar | David Millar | Ronald Singson |