Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Mick Gordon (born 1970) is a Northern Irish writer, film and theatre director. Currently he is Guest Lecturer, MA Creative Writing, Queens University Belfast where he is also a PhD candidate - Translating Artificial Intelligence into Theatre.

  2. He was Artistic Director of the Gate Theatre from 1998-2000. He has written eight plays. These and his latest essays are published by Oberon Books. Awards include the Critics Circle Award for Most Promising Newcomer and the Peter Brook Award for Most Outstanding Theatre .

    Production
    Company
    Notes
    SINNERS 2017
    Lyric Theatre, Belfast
    Written by Marie Jones
    ON/OFF 2015
    Aarhus Theatre Denmark
    Co-Writer
    THE VISIT 2014
    Aarhus Theatre Denmark
    by Friedrich Durrenmatt Director
    DANCING AT LUGHNASA 2013
    Aarhus Theatre Denmark
    by Brian Friel Director
  3. People also ask

  4. Dec 1, 2005 · He presided over a golden era as artistic director of London's Gate Theatre. A close protégé of Peter Brook, he was snapped up by another luminary, Peter Hall, to work alongside him on the...

  5. Nov 27, 2008 · Mick Gordon is an award-winning director who is a former artistic director of the Gate and associate director of the National Theatre. He is the founding artistic director of On Theatre, whose latest production, or “theatre essay”, On Emotion, is currently running at Soho Theatre.

  6. Jun 4, 2010 · Prospero is 400 years old: a leading director on an enduring enigma. by Mick Gordon Friday, 04 June 2010. Prospero's girl: Sophie Franklin is Miranda in the Oxford Shakespeare Company's open-air production of 'The Tempest' The central character in Shakespeare's final play, The Tempest, is a betrayed Duke called Prospero.

  7. Nov 29, 2005 · How meat becomes mind. Mick Gordon's innovations paved the way for the National Theatre's current golden period. Now he is tackling the nature of the human brain. By Lyn Gardner. Tue 29...

  8. In this collection of seven provocative essays, acclaimed theatre director and playwright Mick Gordon argues that the theatre represents a physical corollary of the invisible workings of our minds.

  1. People also search for