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Category : "The Norman Conquests"
Matthew Warchus
May 22, 2009 12:21 PM
©2009 Bruce Glikas/Broadway.com
Matthew Warchus
Matthew Warchus is the first director since A.J. Antoon 36 years ago to be nominated against himself for a Tony. The 42-year-old Englishman, cited three times previously (for Art, True West and last year's Boeing-Boeing), will go up against Bartlett Sher (Joe Turner's Come and Gone) and Phyllida Lloyd (Mary Stuart) as well as himself. Warchus was nominated for both God of Carnage, with its starry American quartet of actors (Jeff Daniels, Hope Davis, Marcia Gay Harden, James Gandolfini), and The Norman Conquests, whose ensemble cast of six Brits are all but unknown in the States. But far from lingering in New York to soak up compliments, the director was busy back home in London the very week of the nominations with a workshop of the forthcoming stage musical version of the Bruce Joel Rubin film, Ghost, due to open on the West End next year. The amiable director has been married for eight years to the American actress/singer Lauren Ward, with whom he has three children. Broadway.com caught up with the busy helmer at the end of a day's work to talk about delivering Alan Ayckbourn across the Atlantic, bringing God of Carnage to the boil, and what it means to move from directing Ayckbourn, Mamet and Chekhov to something like Ghost.

You've achieved a double Tony nomination in a single category for directing, not seen on Broadway since 1973.
That's ironic, since that's the year The Norman Conquests was written.

The success in New York of this Old Vic production of Alan Ayckbourn's trilogy must be especially pleasing.
It is, not least because I was the person pushing to get it to New York. I was the person who got Sonia [producer Sonia Friedman] in and said to her, ‘Surely there might be a way of doing this on Broadway; give me two weeks to make some phone calls and see if anyone bites.' I am often told when I bring things to New York that they probably won't work—that they're very French or very British or very dated. I'm always being warned. I was warned on Boeing-Boeing, Art and God of Carnage, as well....



©2009 Manuel Harlan
Jessica Hynes, Amelia Bullmore, Paul Ritter,
Amanda Root, Stephen Mangan & Ben Miles
in The Norman Conquests
The first Broadway revival of Alan Ayckbourn’s comic trilogy of plays, The Norman Conquests, will premiere on Broadway this spring. Directly following its sold-out run in London, the production—the latest success for The Old Vic Theatre Company under the artistic leadership of Kevin Spacey—starts previews on April 7 at Circle in the Square Theatre, with opening night set for April 23. The show will run for 16 weeks only, directed by Tony Award-nominee Matthew Warchus.

The Norman Conquests opened last year on September 11 and ran through December 20, 2008 at the Old Vic. The production converted the venerable 200-year-old theater for an in-the-round staging, and starred Amelia Bullmore, Jessica Hynes, Stephen Mangan, Ben Miles, Paul Ritter and Amanda Root—all of whom will reprise their performances at Circle in the Square, a venue that will also accommodate the original in-the-round staging. ...



The Most Unforgettable Performances of 2008
December 30, 2008 04:45 PM


David Calder, King Lear
One can theorize for longer than it takes to act Shakespeare’s mightiest tragedy about the ways and means of the Bard but sometimes you’re best off purely surrendering to the emotional minefield his plays possess. That was made easier than is usually the case by Calder’s unusually empathic, intelligently spoken Lear at Shakespeare’s Globe: a portrait of a man adrift in a psychic wilderness who on this evidence has clearly only begun to howl....



2008 Best Shows of the Year
December 30, 2008 03:56 PM


With New Year almost upon us, it’s time to reflect on a London theater year just gone, a period during which a near-unknown (Jonathan Slinger) gave a Shakespearean performance for the ages in the Royal Shakespeare Company Richard II and various ensembles—both American and British—eclipsed individual star turns. What follows are my five favorite productions of the year, followed by five singular performances tomorrow. Inevitably, there is a bit of overlap, though the London stage, thank heavens, continues to be sufficiently rich and varied that one could begin naming standout talents and be doing so well into 2009.
...



Casting has been announced for the Old Vic production of Alan Ayckbourn’s comic trilogy, The Norman Conquests. Directed by Matthew Warchus, the cast includes Amelia Bullmore, Jessica Hynes, Stephen Mangan, Ben Miles, Paul Ritter and Amanda Root. Bullmore will play Norman’s wife,...


The Norman Conquests, the Alan Ayckbourn trilogy of plays that stormed London and to a lesser extent Broadway in the mid-1970s, is being revived at the Old Vic in the fall. Performances will begin on September 11 in advance of an October 6 daylong opening of all three plays. Matthe...



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