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Post by Phantom of London on Mar 27, 2019 22:44:11 GMT
Who are your favourite directors? I cannot name 1, so done a top 10 in no particular order.
Sam Mendes Marianne Elliot Michael Grandage Stephen Daltry Jack O’Brien Harold Prince Bartlett Sher Ivan Van Hove Matthew Warchus Susan Stroman
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Post by Deleted on Mar 27, 2019 23:29:10 GMT
Ten British directors
Peter Brook Marianne Elliot Stephen Daldry Emma Rice Katie Mitchell John Tiffany Robert Icke Rupert Goold Felix Barrett Simon McBurney
Plenty of up and coming directors like Rebecca Frecknall and Ned Bennett too.
Five Non British Directors Ivo van Hove (Belgium) Simon Stone (Australia) Yukio Ninagawa (RIP) (Japan) Thomas Ostermeier (Germany) Robert Lepage (Canada)
(Why do we get so few none English speaking fenale directors here?)
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5,066 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Mar 29, 2019 17:08:42 GMT
No one else has favourite directors?
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Post by Dawnstar on Mar 29, 2019 18:44:45 GMT
I can do you the opposite & provide a list of opera directors I avoid!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2019 13:49:04 GMT
I too have an increasing list of ones to avoid...local and otherwise
I don’t really seek out directors or have a list for me it usually goes “oh that sounds an interesting play” or “oh so-and-So is in it that might be interesting”
Followed by “oh so-and-so directing they were good with x”
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Apr 2, 2019 14:31:53 GMT
Really, @emicardiff? I thought you'd have a certain M Elliot on your list....
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Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2019 14:43:40 GMT
I don't think I take that much notice of who has directed something to be perfectly honest. I'm not sure that I'd book or ignore something based on the director really. I know it's all supposed to be about the art dahling but I'm far more superficial than that and usually go (or avoid) because of the cast more than anything.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2019 14:45:05 GMT
Really, @emicardiff? I thought you'd have a certain M Elliot on your list.... I mean yes she is but honestly, her work is the only time I’ve followed the work of a specific director. Honestly it’s never been something that motivates my theatre going...I’m much more writer-centric in that way.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2019 14:52:06 GMT
I used to follow particular directors in theatre quite closely, possibly as some kind of holdover from when I was a film student and you practically wouldn't be allowed into lectures if you didn't have a top ten list of favourite directors, but theatre is simultaneously so collaborative and so generally reverent of writers that I find it much harder to have favourite directors these days. That said, I do feel Jonathan Munby and I are pretty in-sync with what we like to see, Sally Cookson and Emma Rice are inspirational AF to me, and I think Iqbal Khan is INCREDIBLY underrated.
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Apr 2, 2019 15:04:01 GMT
I don't think I take that much notice of who has directed something to be perfectly honest. I'm not sure that I'd book or ignore something based on the director really. I know it's all supposed to be about the art dahling but I'm far more superficial than that and usually go (or avoid) because of the cast more than anything. I am similarly superficial! But I have picked up a few directors whose work I try to catch - obvs there are the the ‘sleb directors like Branagh and the ones that are big name film directors like Danny Boyle and Sam Mendes, but in that’s just as superficial as star casting, so don’t really count.. For directors whose actual past stage work is the draw, it is probably only Michael Grandage, Marianne Elliot, Jamie Lloyd and Ivo Van Hove. Other than that I am pretty rubbish at even remembering who directed what.
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Post by Phantom of London on Apr 3, 2019 0:47:23 GMT
I asked for a top 10 list of your favourite directors on this thread to be positive.
Didn’t do one on directors to avoid or directors you don’t like, as I think it would be very wrong to call out someone on social media and would be very unfair and disrespectful. But there is a reason why I instigated a top 10 list as it is fascinating who you like, but also as I said I didn’t want to call out any director out directly, but absence of information is also of interest.
Come on, you are all theatre fans and are above the average attendee, so would expect you to have a good working knowledge of who you think are great theatre creators? I am not asking whether you would buy a ticket for a particular director, just who you like the most. A top 10 list wouldn’t be too much to ask for?
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Post by Someone in a tree on Apr 3, 2019 6:29:49 GMT
No top ten for for me
I really dislike Richard Jones but I used to adore him, same goes for the Adlen brothers. I do really like Tim Alberry though. There you go a list of 1 ☺
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2019 6:55:13 GMT
I feel like if you're going to try imposing a very strict format on how people reply to a thread, you're going to find that people who might have got involved in a friendly discussion will decide they simply can't be bothered...
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2019 7:35:18 GMT
I asked for a top 10 list of your favourite directors on this thread to be positive. Didn’t do one on directors to avoid or directors you don’t like, as I think it would be very wrong to call out someone on social media and would be very unfair and disrespectful. But there is a reason why I instigated a top 10 list as it is fascinating who you like, but also as I said I didn’t want to call out any director out directly, but absence of information is also of interest. Come on, you are all theatre fans and are above the average attendee, so would expect you to have a good working knowledge of who you think are great theatre creators? I am not asking whether you would buy a ticket for a particular director, just who you like the most. A top 10 list wouldn’t be too much to ask for? Talk about condescending! 'I don't have favourite directors' or 'I don't seek out directors as a reason to see a production' isn't the same as 'I can't name you [more than] 10 working directors' (also by the way I could name you 20 regional directors I see often and whose work I might seek out, as could many others on this board whose theatrical attendance isn't hemmed by the M25). The comments on directors to avoid, are because as we all know a bad production sticks in the mind more than an ok-ish one. OR when previous favourites turn bad. Mentioning no names but looking at Belgium...
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Post by couldileaveyou on Apr 3, 2019 8:27:53 GMT
Speaking of bad directors, what is Yael Farber up to? I'm sure there must be women wailing and ceaselessly circling the stage in some play somewhere.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2019 8:50:19 GMT
Speaking of bad directors, what is Yael Farber up to? I'm sure there must be women wailing and ceaselessly circling the stage in some play somewhere. I’ve just chortled in my car at that (not driving) It’s been a hot second since we’ve had some circling and wailing
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2019 9:14:22 GMT
I feel like you see a lot more of the core of popular theatre directors than you would of a film director, and it's very easy for a previous belovèd (say, Rupert Goold) to one day rock up with a production that you really loathe (such as Richard III) that has a very profound effect on the way you feel about them. Is this one loathed production a single aberration, or is it an indicator of the direction they're now going in? Can you overlook this one loathed production and focus on remembering previous productions you've loved, or are you now thinking "oh, actually, he's also done some that were Just Okay, so maybe it was the *good* productions that were the blip rather than this bad one"?
Also, theatre just ain't a director's medium. Every now and then you'll get someone who pops his head up and decides he's going to give the auteur thing a go (hi, Robert Icke!), but the director doesn't control the overall picture in theatre in the way the director does in film. Audiences are going to look at different things, and the theatre designer has much more power than a film designer. Yeah, you're all working together towards the director's ultimate vision, but how many film set designers can you name compared with theatre designers? (It also helps that theatre tends to be a lot less naturalistic than film, so a Miriam Buether or a Jan Versweyveld stage design is going to stand out a helluva lot more than a lovingly realised suburban American house on film.)
But sure, if we're just making lists and not having a discussion on this discussion board, then y'all just go ahead and ignore everything anyone says that isn't a list of ten names. Whatever makes you happy.
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Post by theatrefan77 on Apr 3, 2019 10:32:43 GMT
Speaking of bad directors, what is Yael Farber up to? I'm sure there must be women wailing and ceaselessly circling the stage in some play somewhere. Unfortunately she's directing Blood Wedding in September at the Young Vic. Blood Wedding is one of my favourite Lorca plays and Farber is the reason I haven't booked tickets. I think her boring and pretentious style will totally spoil the play. However if word of mouth is good once it opens, I'll be willing to give it a shot. Not holding my breath though.
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Post by Someone in a tree on Apr 3, 2019 11:26:54 GMT
Speaking of bad directors, what is Yael Farber up to? I'm sure there must be women wailing and ceaselessly circling the stage in some play somewhere. Unfortunately she's directing Blood Wedding in September at the Young Vic. Blood Wedding is one of my favourite Lorca plays and Farber is the reason I haven't booked tickets. I think her boring and pretentious style will totally spoil the play. However if word of mouth is good once it opens, I'll be willing to give it a shot. Not holding my breath though. Ta for the tip off. BW was on my watch list. I'll know just circle around the Young Vic instead...
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Post by Dawnstar on Apr 3, 2019 18:33:57 GMT
I don't think I could produce a list of 10 "serious play" directors - which I imagine is what Phantom of London is after - let alone 10 favourites. I genuinely cannot think of anything I have ever been to because of who was directing it (though there have been plenty of opera performances I haven't been to because of the director). I book for things based on a combination of the piece itself & the cast. Most musicals I've seen I couldn't even tell you who the director was straight afterwards, let alone years later. I would have thought that for most people who the director is only really comes into the equation when you're seeing classic pieces - whether plays, operas or more rarely musicals - which are frequently produced so subject to many different directorial interpretations. If it's a piece that is either new or rarely performed then people are going to see it because they want to see the piece rather than how director X has interpreted it.
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Post by altamont on Apr 3, 2019 22:02:25 GMT
I’ve seen two Yael Farber productions - the Crucible at the Old Vic and Hamlet at the Gate in Dublin. Absolutely loved both of them. So puzzled by this negative feeling towards her
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Post by juicy_but_terribly_drab on Apr 3, 2019 23:58:57 GMT
Names that I immediately thought of were of course Marianne Elliott but also Simon Stone.
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Post by horton on Apr 4, 2019 6:16:31 GMT
For me, the Maestro has to be Hal Prince. Both Evita and The Phantom of the Opera were successful primarily due to him: Phantom was originally conceived and workshopped as a campy, juvenile Rocky Horror-style show until he intervened.
On a good day, it's hard to beat Nick Hytner. His stagecraft- and especially his control of pace- is masterly.
For comedy, Ian Judge is brilliant at characterisation, hilarious stage business and building pace.
Robin Herford's work on 'The Woman in Black' was very skilled and he is a thoroughly nice person.
Julia Mackenzie did a great job as a director and I am always intrigued by Julie Taymor's visuals. I am one of those people who don't mind her meandering story-telling style either.
However, as a stylist, very few people can be as distinctive as Berkoff. Like Fosse, he was one of the last great creatives to actually have a style named after him and to have become an adjective!
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Post by horton on Apr 4, 2019 7:02:03 GMT
PS I really wish Emma Thompson would direct more
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Post by horton on Apr 4, 2019 7:17:52 GMT
PPS In the hack dustbin of those currently working I have consigned Laurence Connor, Timothy Sheader, Nancy Meckler and Alex Timbers.
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