Arthur Wyndham Playfair (20 October 1869 – 28 August 1918) was an English actor and singer. Beginning in Victorian burlesque and comic operas, Playfair became known for his roles in Edwardian musical comedy and, later, in musical revues.
Playfair was born in Ellichpur, India. He first appeared on the London stage in December 1887. He went on to create roles in the Victorian burlesque Cinder Ellen up too Late (1891); the comic opera The Mountebanks (1892) by Alfred Cellier and W. S. Gilbert; as Sir Reddan Tapeleigh, with Jessie Bond, in the musical comedy Go-Bang (1894) by Adrian Ross and F. Osmond Carr; and the comic opera His Excellency (1895) by Gilbert and Carr. He created the role of Butler in The Man from Blankley's (1903 at the Prince of Wales Theatre, reprising the role in the 1906 revival at the Haymarket Theatre) to much success.
In 1911, he starred in the title role in Preserving Mr. Panmure. He then starred as Baron Dauvray in The Girl in the Taxi (1912). He toured the United States in 1901 and 1903, in the latter year appearing in The Man from Blankley's at the Criterion Theatre in New York with Charles Hawtrey, and also appearing there as Bernard Mandeville in Letty in 1904.