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Tim Luscombe

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Name
  
Tim Luscombe

Role
  
Playwright

Books
  
The Schuman Plan


Tim Luscombe wwwtimluscombecomwpcontentuploads201302tim

Parents
  
Jill Patricia Luscombe, David William Luscombe

Nominations
  
Laurence Olivier Award for Most Promising Newcomer of the Year in Theatre

Similar People
  
Sara Crowe, Alan Ayckbourn, Marcia Jean Kurtz, Stephanie Roth Haberle, Jess Goldstein

Luscombe Interview


Tim Luscombe (born 1960) is a British playwright, director, actor and teacher.

Contents

A map of the region by tim luscombe


Training

After graduating with an MA (Geography) from Oxford University, Luscombe trained as a director at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School in the mid 1980s.

Director

As a director, Luscombe has worked in London’s West End, On and Off-Broadway, in Sweden, the Netherlands, Japan and all over the UK. His most notable West End productions include Tom Stoppard’s Artist Descending a Staircase (at the Duke of Yorks, and subsequently at the Helen Hayes Theatre in New York), and Private Lives with Joan Collins at the Aldwych Theatre. His London fringe credits include a 1993 production of Joe Pintauro’s Snow Orchid featuring Jude Law at the Gate Theatre.

Playwright

As a playwright, Luscombe has written for the National Theatre Studio in London, the Royal Court Theatre (The One You Love) and Hampstead Theatre (The Schuman Plan). All three of his Jane Austen adaptations (Northanger Abbey, Persuasion and Mansfield Park) have been produced in the UK, Northanger Abbey being revived in Chicago in 2013. His play Pig was produced at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre in Toronto in 2013 where it was nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding New Play of 2014. Hungry Ghosts was produced at the Orange Tree Theatre in 2011, and EuroVision at the Drill Hall in 1994, subsequently transferring to the Vaudeville Theatre where it was produced by Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber.

Awards

He was nominated for a Lawrence Olivier award for his productions of Noël Coward’s Easy Virtue and Terrence Rattigan’s The Browning Version & Harlequinade (1988). His play A Map of the Region was shortlisted for the Bruntwood Prize in 2011.

References

Tim Luscombe Wikipedia