Miami Herald (Sunday)

British theater, film director won multiple awards

- BY MIKE FULLER Associated Press

LONDON

Peter Brook, a British theater and film director known for an influentia­l and distinguis­hed career that saw him garner worldwide acclaim, has died. He was 97.

The two-time Tony Award winner, who had settled in France decades ago, directed the film adaptation­s of his best stage works as well as the 1963 movie “Lord of the Flies.”

Brook’s publisher Nick Hern Books said in a statement Sunday that he “leaves behind an incredible artistic legacy.” French media reports said Brook died in Paris on Saturday.

Born in London in 1925, Brook would go on to study at Oxford University and direct his first London show “Doctor Faustus” while he was still a teenager.

After serving as director of production­s at the Royal Opera House, he gained further notoriety through his work with the Royal Shakespear­e Company, including “Titus Andronicus” starring Laurence Olivier.

He was a Tony Award winner for

Best Direction in

1966 for his interpreta­tion of Peter Weiss’ “Marat/Sade” and in 1970 for the production of Shakespear­e’s

“A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”

Brook was also the recipient of an Olivier Award, an Emmy and an Internatio­nal Emmy during his sevendecad­e career.

After settling in Paris in the 1970s, the director founded the Internatio­nal Center for Theater Research, for which he would regenerate the rundown Bouffes du Nord theater in the French capital.

Worldwide recognitio­n also saw him honored with art prizes including Japan’s Praemium Imperiale, Italy’s Prix Italia, and most recently Spain’s Princess of Asturias in 2019.

British actor Adrian Lester, who worked with Brook across RSC production­s of Hamlet, tweeted he had been a “giant in our field.”

Brook was married to actress Natasha Parry from 1951 before she died following a stroke in 2015. They are survived by two children, Irina and Simon, both of whom are directors.

 ?? JACQUES BRINON AP file ?? British director Peter Brook in 2011.
JACQUES BRINON AP file British director Peter Brook in 2011.

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