Western Mail

Vanessa Redgrave leads tributes to Sir Peter Hall

- Kerri-Ann Roper newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

VANESSA Redgrave has led tributes to Sir Peter Hall, the former director of the National Theatre and founder of the Royal Shakespear­e Company, who has died aged 86.

The theatre great died on Monday, in a London hospital surrounded by his family.

Actress Ms Redgrave worked with Sir Peter in Stratford, on Broadway, and later, with her daughter Joely Richardson, with the Peter Hall Company.

She said in a statement to the Press Associatio­n: “I send his family lots of love.

“He was a fascinatin­g director. I remember his production in 1959 of Midsummer Night’s Dream with Charles Laughton as Bottom and Ian Holm as Puck and Albert Finney as Lysander, and in the same Stratford season of 1959 Coriolanus with Laurence Olivier.

“I was in both production­s and I watched all the rehearsals. In 1989 he directed me on Broadway in Orpheus Descending, by Tennessee Williams, and in 2004 my daughter, Joely Richardson, and I both played in his Peter Hall Company production of Lady Windermere’s Fan. I count myself very lucky to have worked with him.”

Sir Peter, who was diagnosed with dementia in 2011, founded the Royal Shakespear­e Company (RSC) in 1960, aged just 30, and stayed there until 1968.

He was appointed the National’s director in 1973, a year after joining Lord Laurence Olivier as co-director.

Under his leadership, the theatre moved from the Old Vic to the South Bank, and Sir Peter remained with the National until 1988.

The National Theatre’s current director, Rufus Norris, said: “We all stand on the shoulders of giants and Peter Hall’s shoulders supported the entirety of British theatre as we know it.

“All of us, including those in the new generation of theatre-makers not immediatel­y touched by his influence, are in his debt.

“His legendary tenacity and vision created an extraordin­ary and lasting legacy for us all.”

In a statement posted on Facebook, the Royal Shakespear­e Company included a quote from Julius Caesar and said it was “greatly saddened by the news”.

Its artistic director, Gregory Doran, remembered Sir Peter as a “colossus and visionary”.

“Not only was he a great director of theatre and opera, he was a politician who fought for the arts. It is impossible to single out his greatest production,” he said.

Sir Peter created the RSC to realise his vision of a resident ensemble of actors, directors and designers, producing modern and classic texts.

The company played in Stratford and also expanded into the Aldwych Theatre, as its first London home.

Playwright Sir David Hare, actors Sir Patrick Stewart, Laurence Fox and Toby Stephens also paid tribute.

Sir David said in a statement: “Peter Hall was not only the principal architect of post-war theatre, he founded the Royal Shakespear­e Company and moved the National Theatre on to the South Bank, but above all he was the person who insisted that new plays belonged in the classical repertory, on the same stages and given the same status.

“It was his idea to play (Harold) Pinter alongside Shakespear­e.

“Every living playwright owes him a debt.”

Sir Patrick said that the director “transforme­d classical and modern UK theatre and gave me a career”.

Actor Stephens said: “So sad to hear of the death of Sir Peter Hall. He gave me my first break as an actor. A great director and shaper of British theatre.”

Fox wrote: “He gave me my first theatre job, and boy did he whip you into shape... Rest in peace Sir Peter.”

Sir Peter had an internatio­nal reputation as the foremost authority on Shakespear­ean directing and became known for being outspoken about government and Arts Council funding for the theatre.

His most well-known theatre production­s included the world premiere of Pinter’s The Homecoming in 1965 and the nine-hour production of John Barton’s Tantalus.

 ?? RSC ?? > Sir Peter Hall at the John Gielgud Gala in 2004
RSC > Sir Peter Hall at the John Gielgud Gala in 2004

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