Robert Chuter

Robert Chuter is an Australian theatre director, film director and producer.

Personal life

Chuter studied at St. Martin's Theatre School and the Melbourne Theatre Company Youth Theatre. In 1976, he studied with the Lindsay Kemp touring company and cites the experience as one of his inspirations for becoming involved in theatre direction. His interest in film direction originated while he was working in a bookstore during school holidays, when he was encouraged to create some material using Super 8 film by the silent screen and stage actress Agnes Dobson. He subsequently attended the Victorian College of Arts - Drama School and in 1983 graduated from the Swinburne Film and Television School winning the AAV Australia award for his short film The Mortal Coil.[1]

He founded the Performing Arts Projects in Melbourne in the late 1980s with playwright Daniel Lillford.[2] In 1990, he won the Best Production award at the Green Room Awards for the critically acclaimed production of Sam Sejavaka's In Angel Gear. He has directed over 200 plays both in Australia and internationally and between 2005-2008, Chuter worked in London's West End.[1]

Stage actor

Stage Director

Stage producer

Heeding advice given to him by the British film director Ken Russell, Chuter has been diverse in his stage productions:

I direct family shows, like the sell-out seasons of Anne of Green Gables and the children’s classic: Seven Little Australians, to plays about gay porn icons, drug culture, the Bloomsbury group, the Brontes, IVF, flamboyant artists, feminist writers and serial killers. Diversity is the name of the game and I love work which is challenging to the imagination. Can you imagine directing an opera when you don’t speak French and can’t remember music? Yep, I’ve done it - not sure if I was successful or not.[1]

Among the productions as producer have been:

Film

The 2015 feature film release The Dream Children was directed and co-produced by Chuter.[4] He had previously directed a stage version, written by Julia Britton, for Fly-On-The-Wall Theatre at the La Mama Courthouse in 2009.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Piening, Simon (23 March 2008). "Robert Chuter". Australian Stage. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  2. Milne, Geoffrey (2004). Theatre Australian (un)listed: Australian Theatre Since the 1950s. Rotopi. p. 304.
  3. Cook, Mark (23 June 2005). "Humour Triumphs over the Unkindest Cut of All". The Evening Standard. Retrieved 2014-11-09 via Questia. (subscription required (help)).
  4. "The Production Book 14" (PDF). The Production Book. p. 12. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  5. Michelle-Wellis, Simonne (20 January 2009). "The Dream Children - Fly-On-The-Wall Theatre". Australian Stage. Retrieved 2014-11-09.

External links

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