Gerald Chapman (director)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gerald Chapman, (8 November 1949 – 25 September 1987) was an English theatre director and educator who was best known for his work with the Royal Court Theatre, London, Gay Sweatshop, the New York City Young Playwrights Festival, the American Repertory Theatre, the Circle Repertory Company, and the Double Image Theatre.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Chapman was born in Torquay, England, the younger son of hotelier Peter Chapman, whose father had been manager of the Savoy Hotel, London in the early 1900s. He spent his early years at the Castle Hotel, Taunton, Somerset, where his father was manager, and which is now owned by his elder brother, Christopher (Kit) Chapman. His mother was of Greek origin, and his summers were spent with his mother’s family in Thessalonica.
[edit] Dramatic career
Gerald Chapman appeared in several school drama productions when he was a pupil at Taunton School, (along with his contemporary Ian McNeice), and began his involvement with play production as a student at Cambridge University.
In 1974, at a time when Gay Liberation was just beginning in the UK, Chapman joined other gay activists and playwrights to set up one of the first Gay Theatre seasons in the UK. The intention of the group was to counteract the prevailing conception in mainstream theatre of what homosexuals were like, therefore providing a more realistic image for the public. They realised that a great deal of hard work was required and came up with the name The Gay Sweatshop. This later became one of the best known gay theatre companies in the UK, with former members including Antony Sher, Simon Callow, Tom Robinson and Miriam Margolyes.
In the mid 1970s Chapman was appointed to the Royal Court Theatre, London in charge of the Young People’s Theatre Scheme. This had been set up in 1966 to develop and produce the best new writing by young people under 25, encouraging writers from all sections of society to find their voice. He taught school, ran workshops, and organized the highly successful Young Playwrights’ annual festival
Steven Sondheim had been attempting for several years, without success, to set up a young playwright’s competition in New York City. He heard about the program at the Royal Court and went to England to see for himself.
“It was my first opportunity to see what I had only read about for so many years, and it was an experience so moving and exhilarating that I returned to the council with renewed vigor. I wrote to Robert Cushman, the Observer's theatre critic, to find out exactly how the event was organized, and asked Ruth Goetz, a council-member who lived in London at the time, to do some detective work at the Court. She came up with the key to it all: a fellow named Gerald Chapman”.
In 1980 Sondheim invited Chapman to New York to start a similar project in the United States. Chapman founded and directed the acclaimed New York Young Playwrights Festival, which won a Drama Critics Circle Award in 1983. In 1984 he directed the world premiere of the play Holy Wars - Morroco and The Road to Jerusalem by Allan Havis, at the American Repertory Theatre. He also taught at New York University, worked in the New York City schools, and directed productions at the American Repertory Theatre, the Circle Repertory Company, and the Double Image Theatre.
In 1985 he was invited to be Guest Director at the International Young Playwright's Festival in Sydney, Australia.
[edit] Death
Gerald Chapman died of AIDS on 25 September 1987 at the Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, USA. His life partner, Ivan Chatman, was by his side. The New York Times published a substantial obituary and there were long eulogies in the deaths columns from his friends and colleagues at the Dramatists Guild. After his death The Gerald Chapman Trainee Director Award was set up at the Royal Court Theatre, London.
[edit] Published work
In 1990, his bookTeaching Young Playwrights, (edited and developed by Lisa A. Barnett) was published posthumously by Heinemann. It won The American Alliance for Theatre and Education (AATE) Distinguished Book Award in 1991 and has since been acknowledged as a seminal work.
[edit] References and external links
- An Innkeeper's Diary by Kit Chapman, published 1999 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson. (ISBN 0297824600)
- Gay Sweatshop Archives
- Introduction to the YPI by Steven Sondheim
- AATE Award winners