Mike Bradwell (theatre director) explained

Mike Bradwell
Birth Name:Mike Bradwell
Birth Place:Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, England
Occupation:Director, writer

Mike Bradwell is a British theatre director. He founded the Hull Truck Theatre[1] [2] in 1971 and directed all of their shows for ten years including his own devised plays The Knowledge, Oh What!, Bridget’s House, A Bed of Roses and Still Crazy After All These Years. Hull Truck was the first British Fringe Company to be invited to play the National Theatre and to create new drama for BBC Television.

He was Artistic Director of the Bush Theatre from 1996 until 2007. His book on alternative theatre, The Reluctant Escapologist, won the Society for Theatre Research's Theatre Book Prize for 2010.

He trained at East Fifteen Acting School. He played Norman in Mike Leigh's award winning film Bleak Moments and worked as an underwater escapologist and fire eater with Hirst's Charivari and as an Actor/Musician with the Ken Campbell Roadshow.

Career

Bradwell has directed over 40 shows for Bush Theatre[3] where he was Artistic Director from 1996 to 2007. These include Hard Feelings by Doug Lucie, Unsuitable For Adults by Terry Johnson, The Fosdyke Saga by Bill Tidy and Alan Plater, Love And Understanding by Joe Penhall, Dogs Barking by Richard Zajdliz, Dead Sheep, Shang-a-Lang[4] and Little Baby Nothing by Catherine Johnson, Howie The Rookie by Mark O'Rowe, Normal by Helen Blakeman, Flamingos by Jonathan Hall, Blackbird by Adam Rapp, Resident Alien by Tim Fountain, Airsick by Emma Frost, When You Cure Me[5] by Jack Thorne, Adrenalin-heart by Georgia Fitch, The Glee Club by Richard Cameron, The Girl With Red Hair by Sharman Macdonald, Crooked by Catherine Trieschman and Pumpgirl by Abbie Spallen[6]

Other work includes Mrs Gauguin and Mrs Vershinin by Helen Cooper (Almeida, Riverside and Kampnagel, Hamburg), Tuesday's Child by Terry Johnson (Stratford East) The Cochroach Trilogy by Alan Williams (National and international tour), The Dalkey Archive by Flann O’Brien (Long Wharf Theatre) and Queen of the Nile by Tim Fountain[7] Bradwell has directed productions at The Tricycle Theatre, West Yorkshire Playhouse, King's Head Theatre, Hampstead Theatre, The Science Fiction Theatre Of Liverpool, The National Theatre Of Brent, The Rude Players of Manitoba and The Royal Court Theatre. His production of The Empire by D C Moore at the Royal Court in 2010 won the Critic's Circle Award and was nominated for an Olivier Award.

Bradwell has also has written and directed for film, television and radio including The Writing on the Wall, Games Without Frontiers, Chains Of Love, Happy Feet, and I Am A Donut. His book, The Reluctant Escapologist: Adventures in Alternative Theatre won the Theatre Book of the Year Award in 2010[8] His book, Inventing the Truth: Devising and Directing for the Theatre was published by Nick Hern Books.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 'I wanted to be a nuisance': the riotous rise of Hull Truck. Mike. Bradwell. January 6, 2022. The Guardian.
  2. Web site: New blue plaque installed honouring founding of Hull Truck Theatre. Deborah. Hall. March 2, 2022. Hull Live.
  3. Web site: 20 Questions With… Mike Bradwell. February 5, 2007.
  4. News: Holiday camp comedy is no joke, says Butlins . The Guardian . 9 January 2009 . London . Maev . Kennedy . 8 October 1999.
  5. Web site: Bush Theatre . Bush Theatre . 17 December 2005 . 13 March 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716174704/http://www.bushtheatre.co.uk/production/when_you_cure_me/ . 16 July 2011 .
  6. Web site: MIKE BRADWELL. Royal Court.
  7. News: Hull Truck theatre founder Mike Bradwell returns to direct new comedy. Matt. Trueman. March 5, 2013. The Guardian.
  8. Web site: 2010 Report – Society for Theatre Research. www.str.org.uk.
  9. Web site: Mike Bradwell. Nick Hern Books.