Paddy Crean

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patrick "Paddy" Crean

Patrick (Paddy) Crean was a professional actor and theatrical fight director who was one of the most influential figures in the art of modern stage combat.

Crean, who had a background in competitive fencing, began choreographing fights in 1932 when he was working in his native England as an actor in The Legends of Don Juan. From that time he was frequently hired to stage fight scenes for theatrical productions as well as in motion pictures such as The Master of Ballantree and The Sword of Sherwood Forest.

He worked with actors including Paul Scofield, Laurence Olivier, Trevor Howard, Alec Guinness, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Errol Flynn, often performing as Flynn's stunt double in movies.

Crean travelled to the Canadian Stratford Theatre Festival in 1962 to serve as the fight arranger for Macbeth, directed by Peter Coe. After his second season in 1963, he decided to make Stratford his home and worked as the festival's fight director until 1983.

Among festival productions for which he arranged the swordplay, The Three Musketeers, directed by John Hirsch in 1968, received great acclaim for its stage action.

Crean returned from retirement in 1988 to assist fight director Jean-Pierre Fournier for The Three Musketeers as directed by Richard Ouzounian.

Crean's choreographic philosophy included tenets such as matching the combat to the character and included research into various different historical and cultural forms of swordplay. His system of stage combat safety protocols were highly influential around the world.

Those guidelines were codified through the Society of British Fight Directors, for which Crean was a fight master. He was also a certified fight master with Fight Directors Canada as well as being an honorary member of the Society of American Fight Directors.

Crean continued to work as an actor, sometimes taking small roles in shows for which he had done fight arranging and also performing his one-man show about Rudyard Kipling, The Sun Never Sets, at Stratford's Avon Theatre in 1970.

His autobiography, "More Champagne, Darling", was published in Toronto by McGraw-Hill Ryerson in 1981.

The annual Paddy Crean International Stage Combat Conferences, named in honour of Mr. Crean, present a wide range of seminars run by prominent stage combat and martial arts instructors.

Patrick Crean died on December 22nd, 2003, at the age of 93.

[edit] External links