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Phil Willmott

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Phil Willmott is a British director, playwright, arts journalist, teacher, and founder of London based theatre production company, The Steam Industry.

He was the Artistic Director of the Finborough Theatre in London's Earl's Court from 1994 to 1999.

He is also chief theatre reviewer for the British satirical radio series Mind The Gap.[1]

Career at a glance

Phil Willmott is 43. He is a multi-award winning director, artistic director, playwright, composer, librettist, teacher, dramaturg, arts journalist, and occasional actor.

He has worked in theatres across the world on everything from classical drama, musicals and family shows to cabaret and cutting edge new writing.

Positions

He is founding Artistic Director of his award winning theatre company THE STEAM INDUSTRY incorporating [2] (under the Artistic Directorship of Neil McPherson) and the London's annual Free Theatre Festival at the open-air "Scoop" amphitheatre on the South Bank

He was an Associate Artist of London's acclaimed Battersea Arts Centre for ten years and has also been Associate Director of the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre in Guildford and Co-Director of the U.K’s leading degree course in Musical Theatre at London’s Arts Educational School where he was also Head of Acting.

Awards

In 2009 He has awarded a prestigious TMA award for “Outstanding production of a musical” and nominated for the What’s On Stage “Best Regional Theatre” prize for his musical Once Upon A Time at the Adelphi (Liverpool Playhouse).

In London he received a Peter Brook Award for his annual classical productions and family shows at the Scoop and numerous London Fringe Awards. He has also been the recipient of a Brook Atkinson New Dramatists Award in New York.

London theatre directing

In the West End he directed the tenth anniversary cast of Fame (The Aldwych Theatre) and Treasure Island (The Mermaid Theatre) A Midsummer Nights Dream in Dubai, Blowing Whistles (Croydon Warehouse Theatre and Sound Theatre, Leicester Square) You Don't Kiss (Stratford Circus) The DVD recording of rock musical Poe at the Abbey Road Studios and Liberace’s Suit and I Love You You’re Perfect, Now Change (Jermyn Street)

For his own company, The Steam Industry, award winning productions of new writing have included The Fundraisers, Fucking Men, Watch Out for Mr Stork, Venetian Heat, Born Bad and The Oedipus Table, and classics such as Crime and Punishment, The Grapes of Wrath, Trelawny of the ‘Wells’and Loyalties (all at the Finborough Theatre) and Blood Wedding, Helen of Troy, Disney's Jungle Book, Petite Rouge, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, The Cyclops, Children of Hercules, Treasure Island, Oedipus, Agamemnon, Androcles and the Lion, and The London Nativity at the Scoop.

His other notable Steam Industry productions include Joe DiPietro’s play Fucking Men which transferred from the Finborough Theatre to a box office record breaking run Off West End at The Kings Head, Victor/Victoria, The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (The Bridewell), Measure for Measure (Riverside Studios). Ring Round the Moon (King’s Head), The Winter's Tale (The Courtyard Theatre) Titus Andronicus, Germaine Greer’s Lysistrata, Murdered Sleep, Inherit the Wind, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers , The Sound of Music, The King and I, Calamity Jane and Sweet Charity (all at BAC where he was an associate artist) South Pacific, Joe Orton's Funeral Games and his own musical Dick Daredevil and play Venom (The Drill Hall) Joe Orton's Crimes of Passion and his own plays Stealing the Scene, Succulence and Mermaid Sandwich and radical Shakespeare adaptations: The Wax King (from Henry VI parts 1, 2 & 3 ) Iago (from Othello) and Illyria (from Twelfth Night) at The Man in The Moon.

Regional theatre directing

For Liverpool's Everyman and Playhouse theatres he has directed Much Ado About Nothing, Billy Liar, Athol Fugard's Master Harold and the boys & his own musicals Once Upon a Time at the Adelphi (Commissioned as a centre piece to Liverpool’s year as European City of Culture) & Around the World in Eighty Days (Liverpool Playhouse, UK tour and German tour).

Elsewhere regionally he has directed Rent (Olympia, Dublin) Pal Joey (The New Wolsey Theatre, Ipswich & Nottingham Playhouse) Beautiful and Damned (The Yvonne Arnauld Theatre, Guildford) Angels in America and Kiss of the Spider Woman (Sheffield Crucible)

Family shows

Pantomime includes two productions of Leslie Joseph in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Richmond Theatre and Theatre Royal, Newcastle for Kudos) Sleeping Beauty (Greenwich Theatre) His own versions of Snow White starring Toyah Wilcox, Richard O'Brian, Warwick Davies and Suzanne Shaw (Milton Keynes Theatre for Ambassador's Theatre Group) Aladdin (The Corn Exchange, Newbury) and writing a new Pantomusical of Dick Whittington for Oxford Playhouse.

Cabaret, concert and event directing

He has directed cabaret and concert tours of Four Poofs and A Piano and Nonsense, Children’s Laureate, Michael Rosen’s collaboration with composer Colin Riley (The Royal Festival Hall). He devised and directed Ugly Bugs Ball with the BBC Big Band for the 2009 Olympic Launch Day.

His community play Don Juan in Kingstonlaunched the Rose Theatre in Kingston with a cast of nearly 200, he has directed on board entertainment for Swan Hellenic's Minerva Cruise Ships and staged The London International Film Awards,

Teaching and new writing development

He has led new writing development projects at Soho Theatre and The National Theatre Studio, lectured at Goldsmith's College, RADA and the Brit School and directed students in The Seven Ages of Sondheim, Nicholas Nickleby, Petite Rouge, Sherlock Holmes - The Early Years and Jesus Christ Superstar (Arts Ed) Romeo and Juliet (Central School of Speech and Drama) Dear Anyone (Guildford Conservatoire) Napoli Millionaria, Three Men on a Horse and Backstage (Rose Bruford) The Taming of the Shrew, Howard Barker’s The Possibilities and First Love (The Court Training Company)

Playwriting, composition and journalism

His work as a playwright and composer is widely published and performed internationally and as a journalist he regularly broadcasts, blogs and writes about theatre.

References

  1. ^ http://www.mindthegapradio.com
  2. ^ [1] The Finborough Theatre

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