Peter Hall (director)

For other people named Peter Hall, see Peter Hall (disambiguation).
Sir Peter Hall

Detail from a portrait of Sir Peter Hall by his daughter Jennifer Caron Hall.
Born Peter Reginald Frederick Hall
(1930-11-22) 22 November 1930
Bury St Edmunds, West Suffolk, England
Occupation Director
Years active 1953–2011
Spouse(s)
  • Leslie Caron
    (1956–1965; divorced)
  • Jacqueline Taylor
    (1965–1981; divorced)
  • Maria Ewing
    (1982–1990; divorced)
  • Nicola (Nicki) Frei
    (1990–present)
Children

Sir Peter Hall CBE (born 22 November 1930) is the pre-eminent British theatre director of his generation. In 1955 he introduced London audiences to the work of Samuel Beckett with the UK premiere of Waiting for Godot. Hall founded the Royal Shakespeare Company (1960–68) and went on to build an international reputation in theatre, opera, film and television. He was Director of the National Theatre (1973–88) and Artistic Director of Glyndebourne Festival Opera (1984-1990). He formed The Peter Hall Company (1998-2011) and became founding director of The Rose Theatre, Kingston in 2003. Throughout his career, he has been a vociferous champion of public funding for the arts.[1]

Early years

Peter Reginald Frederick Hall was born in Suffolk at Bury St Edmunds, the only son of Grace Florence (née Pamment) and Reginald Edward Arthur Hall. His father was a stationmaster and the family lived for some time at Great Shelford Station.[2][3][4] He won a scholarship to The Perse School in Cambridge.[5] Before taking up a further scholarship to read English at St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, Hall did his National Service in Germany at The RAF Headquarters for Education in Bückerberg. Whilst studying at Cambridge he produced and acted in a number of plays, directing five in his final year and a further three for The Marlowe Society Summer Festival. [6] He served on the University Amateur Dramatic Club (ADC) committee before graduating in 1953. In the same year, Hall staged his first professional play, The Letter by W. Somerset Maugham, at The Theatre Royal Windsor.

Career

1954 to 1955 saw Hall as the Director of the Oxford Playhouse where he directed several notable young actors including Ronnie Barker and Billie Whitelaw. Eileen Atkins and Maggie Smith were also part of the company as acting Assistants Stage Managers.

From 1955-1957 Hall ran The Arts Theatre, London where he directed the English-language premiere of Waiting for Godot. The production's huge success transformed his career overnight and attracted the attention, among others, of Tennessee Williams for whom he would direct the London premieres of Camino Real (1957) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), and Harold Pinter. Other notable productions at The Arts included the English language premiere of The Waltz of the Toreadors by Jean Anouilh.

Hall made his debut at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1956 with Love's Labours Lost: his productions there in the 1957-1959 seasons included Cymbeline with Peggy Ashcroft, Coriolanus with Laurence Olivier and A Midsummer Night's Dream with Charles Laughton. In 1960, aged 29, Hall created the Royal Shakespeare Company to realise his vision of a resident ensemble of actors, directors and designers producing both modern and classic texts, with a distinctive house style. The company not only played in Stratford but expanded into the Aldwych Theatre, its first London home. Hall's many productions for the RSC included Hamlet (1965, with David Warner), The Government Inspector (1966, with Paul Scofield), the world premiere of Harold Pinter's The Homecoming (1965) and The Wars of the Roses (1963) adapted with John Barton from Shakespeare's history plays. The latter was described as "the greatest Shakespearian event in living memory which also laid down the doctrine of Shakespearian relevance to the modern world." [7] Peter Hall left the RSC in 1968 after almost ten years as its Director.

Hall was appointed Director of The National Theatre in 1973 and led the organisation for fifteen years until 1988. He supervised the move from the Old Vic to the new purpose-built complex on The South Bank "in the face of wide-spread scepticism and violent union unrest, turning a potential catastrophe into the great success story it remains today." [8] Frustrated by construction delays, Hall decided to move the company into the still-unfinished building and to open it theatre by theatre as each neared completion. Extracts from his production of Tamburlaine the Great with Albert Finney were performed out on the terraces, free to passers-by.[9] Hall directed thirty-three productions for the NT including the world premieres of Harold Pinter's No Man's Land (1975, with Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud) and Betrayal (1978), Peter Shaffer's Amadeus (1979, with Paul Scofield and Simon Callow), and the London and Broadway premieres of Alan Ayckbourn's Bedroom Farce. Other landmark productions included The Oresteia (1981, in a version by Tony Harrison with music by Harrison Birtwistle) which became the first Greek play to be performed by a foreign company at the ancient theatre of Epidaurus; his own adaptation of Animal Farm (1984); and Antony and Cleopatra (1987, with Judi Dench and Anthony Hopkins). Hall returned to the NT for the last time in 2011 with a production of Twelfth Night mounted by the company to celebrate his eightieth birthday. His daughter, Rebecca Hall, played Viola.

On leaving the NT in 1988, Hall launched his own commercial company with productions in the West End and on Broadway of Orpheus Descending (with Vanessa Redgrave) and The Merchant of Venice (with Dustin Hoffman). The Peter Hall Company went on to stage more than sixty plays in association with a number of well-known producing partners including Bill Kenwright and Thelma Holt. In addition to an ensemble repertory season at The Old Vic (1997), the company enjoyed a long collaboration with the Theatre Royal Bath where a series of summer festivals were staged from 2003-2011: many productions were subsequently seen on UK and international tours and in the West End. Notable productions include Wilde's An Ideal Husband (1992), Pam Gems's Piaf (1993, with Elaine Paige), Hamlet (1994, with Stephen Dillane), The Master Builder (1995, with Alan Bates), A Streetcar Named Desire (1997, with Jessica Lange), Julian Barry's Lenny (1999, with Eddie Izzard), As You Like It (2003, with Rebecca Hall and Dan Stevens), Brian Clark's Whose Life is it Anyway? (2005, with Kim Cattrall), the fiftieth anniversary production of Waiting for Godot, Coward's Hay Fever (2006, with Judi Dench) and Shaw's Pygmalion (2007, with Tim Pigott-Smith and Michelle Dockery). Hall's final acclaimed [10] productions for his company were Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 (2011), staged at the Theatre Royal Bath.

Hall has directed extensively in the US including the world premiere of John Guare's Four Baboons Adoring the Sun (1992, Lincoln Center), three Shakespeare plays with Center Theater Group, Los Angeles (1999 and 2001) and John Barton's nine-hour epic Tantalus (2000, an RSC co-production with The Denver Center for Performing Arts.

In 2003, Peter Hall became the Founding Director of The Rose Theatre - a new venue to be constructed in Kingston upon Thames whose design was inspired by the Elizabethan original. He directed a number of productions there including Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, which opened the building in 2008, and A Midsummer Night's Dream (2010, with Judi Dench as Titania). Hall is now Director Emeritus of The Rose Kingston.

Opera

Peter Hall is also an internationally celebrated opera director, having worked at many of the world's leading houses including The Royal Opera House, Metropolitan Opera in New York, Houston Grand Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago and Bayreuth Festival Opera where, with conductor Georg Solti, he directed Wagner's Ring Cycle (Der Ring Des Niebelungen) in 1983 to honour the 100th anniversary of the composer's death.[11] Hall staged the world premieres of Michael Tippett's The Knot Garden (1970) and New Year (1989). He has a close relationship with Glyndebourne Festival opera where he was Artistic Director (1984-1990) and for whom he directed more than twenty productions including the Mozart/Da Ponte operas. His production of Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream (1981) was revived nine times, most recently 35 years after its premiere, in August 2016.[12] Hall also directed Albert Herring by Benjamin Britten, Cavalli's La Calisto, Monteverdi's Il Ritorno D'Ulisse and Gluck's Orfeo et Eurydice (all with Janet Baker); L'Incoronazione di Poppea and Carmen - both with his then wife, Maria Ewing, with whom he also staged a celebrated Salome (The Royal Opera London and L.A. Opera) in 1986.[13]

Film and TV

Hall's films for cinema and TV include Akenfield (1974), based on Ronald Blythe's novel and filmed in Blythe's native Suffolk with a cast of local people. It was restored and relaunched in 2016 by the BFI. Hall's film She's Been Away was written by Stephen Poliakoff and starred Peggy Ashcroft and Geraldine James who both won awards for their performances at the Venice Film Festival. Hall also directed The Camomile Lawn and The Final Passage for Channel 4 television, as well as a number of his opera and stage productions. For several years during the 1970s he presented the arts programme Aquarius for London Weekend Television. In 2005 he was the subject of a two-hour documentary for The South Bank Show: Peter Hall, Fifty Years in Theatre.

Books

His books on theatre include The Necessary Theatre (1999), Exposed by the Mask (2000) and Shakespeare's Advice to the Players (2003). The Peter Hall Diaries - the Story of a Dramatic Battle, edited by John Goodwin, were first published in 1983 and documented his struggle to establish the National Theatre on the South Bank. His autobiography, Making an Exhibition of Myself, was published in 1993.

Awards

Peter Hall was awarded the CBE in 1963 and knighted in 1977 for his services to the theatre. He was awarded the Chevalier de L'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (1965), received the Hamburg University Shakespeare Prize (1967) and was elected Member of the Athens Academy for Services to Greek Drama (2004). His many professional awards and nominations include two TONYs (The Homecoming and Amadeus) and four Awards for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts. In 2005 Hall was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame.[14] He was Chancellor of Kingston University 2000-2013, held the Wortham Chair in Performing Arts at the University of Houston (1999-2002) and was awarded honorary doctorates from a number of universities including Cambridge, York, Liverpool, Bath and London.

Personal life

Hall has been married four times. He has six children and nine grandchildren. His first wife was French actress Leslie Caron, with whom he has a son, Christopher, and a daughter, Jennifer. With his second wife, Jacqueline Taylor, he has a son, Edward, and a daughter, Lucy. Hall married American opera singer Maria Ewing in 1982 with whom he has one daughter, Rebecca. He is now married to Nicki Frei and they have one daughter, Emma.

Hall has worked with all his children:[15] for the National Theatre, Jennifer played Miranda in The Tempest 1988; Rebecca, aged nine, played young Sophie in the Channel 4 adaptation of The Camomile Lawn, for The Peter Hall Company she played Vivie in Mrs Warren's Profession (2002), Rosalind in As You Like It (2003), Maria in Gallileo's Daughter (2004) and, for the NT, Viola in Twelfth Night (2011); Emma, aged two, played Joseph in Jacob (2004, TV Movie); for the Peter Hall Company, Lucy designed Hamlet (1994), Cuckoos (2003) and Whose Life is it Anyway? (2005); Christopher produced the Channel 4 television drama The Final Passage (1996); Edward co-directed the stage epic Tantalus (2000).

Hall was diagnosed with dementia in 2011 and retired from public life.

Stage productions

  • The Letter (W. Somerset Maugham, Theatre Royal Windsor) 1953
  • Blood Wedding (Lorca, London debut, Arts Theatre) 1954
  • The Impresario from Smyrna (Goldoni, Arts Theatre) 1954
  • The Immoralist (Gide, Arts Theatre) 1954
  • Listen to the Wind (Angela Jeans, music by Vivian Ellis, Arts Theatre) 1954
  • The Lesson (Ionesco, Arts Theatre) 1955
  • South (Julian Green, Arts Theatre) 1955
  • Mourning Becomes Electra (O'Neill, Arts Theatre) 1955
  • Waiting for Godot (Beckett, English-language world premiere, Arts Theatre) 1955
  • The Burnt Flower-Bed (Ugo Betti, Arts Theatre) 1955
  • Summertime (Ugo Betti, Arts Theatre) 1955
  • The Waltz of the Toreadors (Jean Anouilh, English-language premiere, Arts Theatre) 1956
  • Gigi (Colette, New Theatre) 1956
  • Love's Labours Lost (Shakespeare, Stratford-on-Avon) 1956
  • The Gates of Summer (John Whiting, New Theatre Oxford) 1956
  • Camino Real (Tennessee Williams, Phoenix Theatre, London) 1957
  • The Moon and Sixpence (John Gardner, opera debut, Sadlers Wells) 1957
  • Cymbeline (Shakespeare, Stratford-on-Avon) 1957
  • The Rope Dancers (Morton Wishengard, New York debut, Cort Theatre) 1957
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Tennessee Williams, Comedy Theatre) 1958
  • Twelfth Night (Shakespeare, Stratford-on-Avon) 1958
  • Brouhaha (George Tabori, Aldwych) 1958
  • 'Shadow of Heroes (Robert Ardrey, Piccadilly Theatre) 1958
  • Madame de… (Anouilh, Arts Theatre) 1959
  • Traveller Without Luggage (Anouilh, Arts Theatre) 1959
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (Shakespeare, Stratford-on-Avon) 1959
  • Coriolanus (Shakespeare, Stratford-on-Avon) 1959
  • The Wrong Side of the Park (John Mortimer, Cambridge Theatre) 1959
  • The Two Gentlemen of Verona (Shakespeare, Royal Shakespeare Company) 1960
  • Twelfth Night (Shakespeare, RSC) 1960
  • Troilus and Cressida (Shakespeare, RSC) 1960
  • Ondine (Giradoux, RSC, Aldwych) 1961
  • Becket (Anouilh, RSC, Aldwych) 1961
  • Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare, RSC) 1961
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (Shakespeare, RSC) 1962
  • The Collection (Pinter, RSC) 1962
  • Troilus and Cressida (Shakespeare, RSC) 1962
  • The Wars of the Roses (adapted with John Barton from Shakespeare's Henry VI Parts 1, 2 and 3 and Richard III, RSC) 1963
  • Richard 11 (Shakespeare, RSC) 1964
  • Henry 1V Parts 1 and 2 (Shakespeare, RSC) 1964
  • Henry V (Shakespeare, RSC) 1964
  • Eh? (Henry Livings, RSC, Aldwych) 1964
  • The Homecoming (Pinter, world premiere, RSC) 1965
  • Moses and Aaron (Schoenberg, UK premiere, Royal Opera House) 1965
  • Hamlet (Shakespeare, RSC) 1965
  • The Government Inspector (Gogol, RSC, Aldwych) 1966
  • The Magic Flute (Mozart, Royal Opera House) 1966
  • Staircase (Charles Wood, RSC, Aldwych) 1966
  • Macbeth (Shakespeare, RSC) 1967
  • A Delicate Balance (Edward Albee, RSC, Aldwych) 1969
  • Dutch Uncle (Simon Gray, RSC, Aldwych) 1969
  • Landscape and Silence (Pinter, world premieres, RSC, Aldwych) 1969
  • The Knot Garden (Tippett, world premiere, Royal Opera House) 1970
  • La Calisto (Cavalli, Glyndebourne debut, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1970
  • The Battle of the Shrivings (Shaffer, Lyric Theatre) 1970
  • Eugene Onegin (Tchaikovsky, Royal Opera House) 1971
  • Old Times (Harold Pinter, world premiere, RSC Aldwych) 1971
  • Tristan und Isolde (Wagner, Royal Opera House) 1971
  • All Over (Edward Albee, RSC, Aldwych) 1972
  • Il Ritorno d'Ulisse (Monteverdi, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1972
  • Via Galactica (lyrics by Christopher Gore, music by Galt McDermot, New York) 1972
  • Le Nozze di Figaro (Mozart, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1973
  • The Tempest (Shakespeare, National Theatre) 1973
  • John Gabriel Borkman (Ibsen, NT) 1974
  • Happy Days (Beckett, NT) 1974
  • No Man's Land (Pinter, world premiere, NT) 1975
  • Hamlet (Shakespeare, official opening of the Lyttelton, NT) 1975
  • Judgement (Barry Collins, NT) 1975
  • Tamburlaine the Great (Christopher Marlowe, official opening of the Olivier, NT) 1976
  • Bedroom Farce (Ayckbourn, also co-director, London and US premieres, NT and Broadway) 1977
  • Don Giovanni (Mozart, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1977
  • Volpone (Ben Jonson, NT) 1977
  • The Country Wife (Wycherley, NT) 1977
  • Cosi fan Tutte (Mozart, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1978
  • The Cherry Orchard (Chekhov, NT) 1978
  • Macbeth (Shakespeare, NT) 1978
  • Betrayal (Pinter, world premiere, NT) 1978
  • Fidelio (Beethoven, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1979
  • Amadeus (Peter Shaffer, world premiere, NT) 1979
  • Othello (Shakespeare, NT) 1980
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (Britten, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1981
  • The Oresteia (Aeschylus, trans. Harrison, NT and Epidaurus) 1981
  • Orfeo et Eurydice (Gluck, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1982
  • The Importance of Being Earnest (Wilde, NT) 1982
  • Macbeth (Verdi, Metropolitan Opera, New York) 1982
  • Other Places (Pinter, world premiere, NT) 1982
  • Der Ring des Niebelungen (Wagner, Bayreuth Festival Opera) 1983
  • Jean Seberg (lyrics by Christopher Adler, book by Julian Barry, music by Marvin Hamlisch, NT) 1983
  • Animal Farm (George Orwell, adapted by Hall, NT) 1984
  • Coriolanus (Shakespeare, NT and Athens) 1984
  • L'Incoronazione di Poppea (Monteverdi, Glyndebourne Festival Opera) 1984
  • Yonadab (Shaffer, world premiere, NT) 1985
  • Carmen (Bizet, Glyndebourne) 1985
  • Albert Herring (Britten, Glyndebourne) 1985
  • The Petition (Brian Clark, NT) 1986
  • Simon Boccanegra (Verdi, Glyndebourne) 1986
  • Salome (Strauss, LA Opera) 1986
  • Coming In To Land (Poliakoff, world premiere, NT) 1986
  • Antony and Cleopatra (Shakespeare, NT) 1987
  • La Traviata (Verdi, Glyndebourne) 1987
  • Entertaining Strangers (David Edgar, NT) 1987
  • Cymbeline (Shakespeare, NT, Moscow and Epidaurus) 1988
  • The Winter's Tale (Shakespeare, NT, Moscow and Epidaurus) 1988
  • The Tempest (Shakespeare, NT, Moscow and Epidaurus) 1988
  • Falstaff (Verdi, Glyndebourne) 1988
  • Orpheus Descending (Tennessee Williams, Peter Hall Company, Haymarket and Broadway) 1988/9
  • The Merchant of Venice (Shakespeare, PHCo, Phoenix Theatre and Broadway) 1989/90
  • New Year (Tippett, world premiere, Houston Opera) 1989
  • Le Nozze di Figaro (Mozart, Glyndebourne) 1989
  • The Wild Duck (Ibsen, trans. Hall/Ewbank, PHCo, Phoenix Theatre) 1990
  • Born Again (after Ionesco's Rhinoceros, lyrics by Julian Barry, music by Jason Carr, PHCo/Chichester Festival Theatre) 1990
  • The Homecoming (Pinter, PHCo Comedy Theatre) 1990
  • Twelfth Night (Shakespeare, PHCo, Playhouse Theatre) 1991
  • Tartuffe (Moliere, trans. Bolt, PHCo, Playhouse Theatre) 1991
  • The Rose Tattoo (Tennessee Williams, PHCo, Playhouse Theatre) 1991
  • Four Baboons Adoring the Sun (John Guare, world premiere, Lincoln Center) 1992
  • All's Well That Ends Well (Shakespeare, RSC, Swan) 1992
  • The Gift of the Gorgon (Shaffer, world premiere, RSC, Barbican and Wyndham's Theatre) 1992
  • An Ideal Husband (Wilde, PHCo/Bill Kenwright Ltd, Globe Theatre and Broadway) 1992
  • The Magic Flute (Mozart, LA Opera) 1993
  • Separate Tables (Rattigan, PHCo/BKL, Albery Theatre) 1993
  • Lysistrata (Aristophanes, trans. Bolt, PHCo/BKL, Old Vic, Wyndham's and Epidaurus) 1993
  • She Stoops to Conquer (Goldsmith, PHCo/BKL, Queen's Theatre) 1993
  • Piaf (Pam Gems, PHCo/BKL, Piccadilly Theatre) 1993
  • An Absolute Turkey (Feydeau, trans. Hall/Frei, PHCo/BKL, Globe Theatre) 1994
  • On Approval (Lonsdale, PHCo/BKL, Playhouse Theatre) 1994
  • Hamlet (Shakespeare, PHCo/BKL, Gielgud Theatre) 1994
  • The Master Builder (Ibsen, trans. Hall/Ewbank, PHCo/BKL, Haymarket) 1995
  • Julius Caesar (Shakespeare, RSC) 1995
  • Mind Millie for Me (Feydeau, trans. Hall/Frei, PHCo/BKL, Haymarket) 1996
  • The Oedipus Plays (Sophocles, trans. Bolt, NT, Athens and Epidaurus) 1996
  • A Streetcar Named Desire (Tennessee Williams, PHCo/BKL, Haymarket) 1997
  • Waste (Granville Barker, PHCo, Old Vic) 1997
  • The Seagull (Chekhov, trans. Stoppard, PHCo, Old Vic) 1997
  • Waiting for Godot (Beckett, PHCo, Old Vic) 1997
  • King Lear (Shakespeare, PHCo, Old Vic) 1997
  • The Misanthrope (Moliere, trans. Bolt, PHCo/BKL, Piccadilly Theatre) 1988
  • Major Barbara (George Bernard Shaw, PHCo/BKL, Piccadilly) 1988
  • Filumena (de Fillipo, PHCo/BKL, Piccadilly) 1998
  • Amadeus (Shaffer, PHCo, Old Vic and Broadway) 1998/9
  • Kafka's Dick (Alan Bennett, PHCo/BKL Piccadilly) 1998
  • Measure for Measure (Shakespeare, Center Theater Group, Los Angeles) 1999
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (Shakespeare, Center Theater Group, LA) 1999
  • Lenny (Julian Barry, PHCo, Queen's Theatre) 1999
  • Cuckoos (Manfredi, trans. Teevan, PHCo, Gate Theatre) 2000
  • Tantalus (John Barton, world premiere, RSC/Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Denver, UK tour and Barbican) 2000/1
  • Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare, Center Theater Group, LA) 2001
  • Japes (Simon Gray, world premiere, PHCo, Haymarket) 2001
  • Troilus and Cressida (Shakespeare, Theatre for a New Audience, off-Broadway) 2001
  • Otello (Verdi, Glyndebourne and Lyric Opera, Chicago) 2001
  • The Royal Family (Ferber, PHCo, Haymarket) 2001
  • Lady Windermere's Fan (Wilde, PHCo, Haymarket) 2002
  • The Bacchai (Euripides, trans. Teevan, NT and Epidaurus) 2002
  • Albert Herring (Britten, Glyndebourne) 2002
  • Mrs Warren's Profession (Shaw, PHCo, Strand Theatre) 2002
  • Where There's a Will (Feydeau, trans. Frei, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2003
  • Betrayal (Pinter, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath, UK tour and West End) 2003
  • Design for Living (Coward, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and UK tour) 2003
  • As You Like It (Shakespeare, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath, UK and US tour) 2003/4
  • Le Nozze di Figaro (Mozart, Lyric Opera Chicago) 2003
  • Happy Days (Beckett, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and Arts Theatre) 2003
  • Man and Superman (Shaw, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2004
  • Gallileo's Daughter (Timberlake Wertenbaker, world premiere, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2004
  • The Dresser (Harwood, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath, UK tour and West End) 2004
  • Whose Life is it Anyway? (Brian Clark, PHCo/Sonia Friedman Productions, Duke of York's) 2005
  • La Cenerentola' (Rossini, Glyndebourne) 2005
  • Much Ado About Nothing (Shakespeare, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2005
  • You Never Can Tell (Shaw, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and West End) 2005
  • Waiting for Godot (Beckett, 50th anniversary production, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath, UK tour and West End) 2005/6
  • A Midsummer Marriage (Tippett, Lyric Opera Chicago) 2005
  • The Importance of Being Earnest (Wilde, Los Angeles and New York) 2006
  • Hay Fever (Coward, PHCo/Bill Kenwright Ltd, Haymarket) 2006
  • Measure for Measure (Shakespeare, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2006
  • Habeas Corpus (Alan Bennett, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and UK tour) 2006
  • Amy's View (David Hare, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath, UK tour and West End) 2006
  • Old Times (Pinter, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and UK tour) 2007
  • Little Nell (Simon Gray, world premiere, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2007
  • Pygmalion (Shaw, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and Old Vic) 2007/8
  • The Vortex (Coward, PHCo/BKL, Windsor, UK tour and West End) 2007/8
  • Uncle Vanya (Chekhov, trans. Mulrine, English Touring Theatre, Rose Kingston and UK tour) 2008
  • The Portrait of a Lady (Henry James, adapted by Frei, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and Rose Kingston) 2008
  • A Doll's House (Ibsen, trans. Mulrine, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and Rose Kingston) 2008
  • Love's Labours Lost (Shakespeare, Rose Kingston) 2008
  • The Browning Version (Rattigan, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath and UK tour) 2009
  • The Apple Cart (Shaw, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2009
  • Bedroom Farce (Ayckbourn, PHCo/BKL, Rose Kingston and West End) 2010
  • The Rivals (Sheridan, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath, UK tour and West End) 2010
  • Twelfth Night (Shakespeare, NT) 2011
  • Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 (Shakespeare, PHCo/Theatre Royal Bath) 2011

Film and television

Hall has also filmed many of his stage productions and operas for television

Books

Acting

Peter Hall began acting as a student at Cambridge university, where Dadie Rylands taught him to speak Shakespearean verse. He was also influenced in his understanding of Shakespeare by the literary critic and teacher F. R. Leavis. He subsequently acted in three German films, directed by Maximilian Schell 1973–1975: Der Fußgänger (The Pedestrian) (1973), Als Mutter streikte (When Mother Went on Strike) (1974) and Der letzte Schrei (The Last Word) (1975).[16]

References

  1. Horatia Harrod (30 July 2011). "Interview: Sir Peter Hall". The Telegraph.
  2. Fay, Stephen (1995). Power Play:The Life and Times of Peter Hall. London: Hodder and Stoughton. p. 25.
  3. "Peter Hall Biography". filmreference. 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-22.
  4. Current biography yearbook: Volume 23. H. W. Wilson Co. 1963. p. 179.
  5. Hall, Peter (1993). Making an Exhibition of myself: The Autobiography of Peter Hall. London: Sinclair-Stevenson. p. 36.
  6. {cite book|last=Addenbroke|first=David|title=The Royal Shakespeare Company|pages=27|location=London|publisher=[[William Kimber & Co|]]year=1974}
  7. Irving Wardle (6 January 1991). "profile of Peter Hall". Independent on Sunday.
  8. Charles Spencer (20 November 2005). "A Titan who Transformed Theatre". The Daily Telegraph.
  9. Rosenthal, Daniel (2013). The National Theatre Story. London: Oberon Books. p. 251.
  10. Michael Billington (29 July 2011). "Peter Hall's astonishing company scale summit of Shakespeare's genius". The Guardian.
  11. Fay and Wood, Stephen and Roger (1984). The Ring:Anatomy of an Opera. London: Martin Secker&Warburg Ltd.
  12. Coghlan, Alexandra (12 August 2016). "A Midsummer Night's Dream, Glyndebourne". The Arts Desk.
  13. Christiansen, Rupert (25 July 2016). "Peter Hall: the Hallmark of operatic excellence". The Telegraph.
  14. "Theater Hall of Fame inducts Thompson, Lithgow, others". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  15. Ginny Dougary (4 April 2009). "The conversation:Peter Hall". The Times.
  16. Peter Hall at the Internet Movie Database

Further reading

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