Name Hugh Cruttwell | Role Teacher | |
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Full Name Hugh Percival Cruttwell Occupation Teacher, creative consultant People also search for Geraldine McEwan, Greg Cruttwell, Claudia Cruttwell, Nora McKeown, Donald McKeown |
Hugh Cruttwell (31 October 1918 – 24 August 2002) was an influential teacher of drama and principal of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts.
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Biography

Hugh Percival Cruttwell was born in Singapore, but lived in England from the age of eight. He was educated at King's School, Bruton, in Somerset, and studied History at Hertford College, Oxford. He began his career as an assistant stage manager at the Theatre Royal, Windsor. He soon became an associate director and over a period of three years directed sixty plays. While working at Theatre Royal, he first met his future wife, actress Geraldine McKeown (who later took the stage name Geraldine McEwan). The couple married in 1953, and had two children. Their son, Greg is an actor, screenwriter, director, and film producer.

After leaving Windsor, Cruttwell enjoyed much success as a freelance director. Following a spell teaching at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, he was approached to take over the principalship of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, following the resignation of John Fernald in 1965. He was heavily involved in the activities of Renaissance Theatre Company and Renaissance Films; companies established by David Parfitt and Kenneth Branagh. He was a production/creative consultant of Branagh's films of Henry V, Much Ado About Nothing, Dead Again, Peter's Friends and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. He adapted, from a short story by Chekhov, the Academy Award winning short film Swan Song, starring Sir John Gielgud.
Influence

In his eighteen years as principal of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Cruttwell spotted, nurtured and polished generations of actors who have gone on to become household names. In paying homage to his former teacher and associate, Kenneth Branagh wrote:

Hugh Cruttwell was the greatest teacher and student of acting I have ever known. He was a cherished friend and mentor, an inspiration to a generation of British actors - and a modest, shy man who would have been the last to recognise himself thus.