Auriol Smith

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Auriol Smith is an English actress and theatre director. She is a founder member and associate director of the Orange Tree Theatre. She started her career as an actor, but now divides her time between acting and directing.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Whilst taking a degree in drama at Bristol University she became President of the Green Room Society at the newly-founded university Drama Department[1]. This was followed by a year in America as a Fulbright Scholar, before making her professional debut at the Hampstead Theatre Club in January 1960 in Harold Pinter's first play The Room (which she had originally played in a converted squash-court for the Bristol Drama Department in May 1957)[2].

[edit] Orange Tree Theatre

After extensive experience in repertory theatres and a year in Jamaica setting up a drama school and theatre, she and her husband Sam Walters co-founded the Orange Tree Theatre in Richmond upon Thames in 1971, where she has since played many classic and modern parts. "We enjoyed doing small-scale productions in Jamaica, and hoped that eventually we'd run that kind of theatre in England. Then, when we returned in 1971, we decided that now was the time and Richmond (where we lived) was the place." (Auriol Smith in conversation with Marsha Hanlon for the Orange Tree Appeal brochure, 1991).

[edit] Performances

In the old theatre:

Since the new theatre opened in February 1991 her Orange Tree performance credits have included:

[edit] Directing

Since 1991 she has also regularly directed at the Orange Tree. Her credits have included:

[edit] Other acting and directing work

During 1990, as part of a busy year, she played Lady Wishfort in The Way of the World at the Royal Exchange Manchester (deputising for Sylvia Sim who was indisposed), and toured North America for the ACTER company in The Winter's Tale playing opposite Paul Shelley as Leontes. She also appeared in Christine Edzard's film The Fool.

In the West End for producer Bill Kenwright, Smith has directed Dead Guilty by Richard Harris (Apollo 1995) starring Hayley Mills and Jenny Seagrove; and Michael Redgrave's The Aspern Papers (Wyndham's 1996) with Hannah Gordon. She also directed a Japanese version of Dead Guilty in Japan.

At the Theatre Royal Windsor she directed Shadow of a Doubt and Canaries Sometimes Sing. At the Northampton Theatre Royal she directed Arthur Miller's Broken Glass, David Mamet's Oleanna and James Robson's Mail Order Bride; while at the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough she first directed Love Me Slender.

[edit] Television and audio

She has worked extensively on radio including Pinter's 1960 radio version of his sixty-minute play The Room for the BBC Third Programme. For ten years she presented Listen With Mother on BBC Radio 4 and was a long-serving member of the Radio Drama Company. Her BBC radio credits include Alan Bennett's Forty Years On, the role of a tipsy summer partygoer in Ellen Dryden's romantic comedy Forgetting Rosalind (a FirstWrites production for the BBC), and East of the Sun by Carey Harrison.

For Naxos Smith has recorded the roles of Alice in Henry V with Samuel West, and the Duchess of York in Richard III with Kenneth Branagh. She has also acted on television in Kavanagh QC, One Foot in the Grave, Peak Practice and Doctors, among others.

[edit] Private Life

Auriol Smith is the wife of Orange Tree co-founder and Artistic Director Sam Walters. They have two daughters: Dorcas Walters, who is a soloist with the Birmingham Royal Ballet, and Octavia Walters who is a fellow actress.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Life and Work of Harold Pinter by Michael Billington, Faber 1996, page 66
  2. ^ British Library Theatre Archives Project: Interview with Auriol Smith (Pinter's The Room) [1]
  • Auriol Smith's Orange Tree Theatre programme CVs, 1991 and 2007
  • The Life and Work of Harold Pinter by Michael Billington, Faber 1996 ISBN 0571171036
  • Theatre Record and its annual Indexes

[edit] External links

  • Orange Tree Theatre website [4]