Everything about Tyrone Guthrie totally explained
Sir William Tyrone Guthrie (
2 July 1900 -
15 May 1971) was a
Tony Award-winning
Anglo-Irish theatrical director instrumental in the founding of the
Stratford Festival of Canada, the
Guthrie Theater in
Minneapolis, Minnesota and the
Tyrone Guthrie Centre, at his family's home, Annaghmakerrig, in
County Monaghan, Ireland.
Biography
Guthrie was born in
Tunbridge Wells,
Kent,
England, the son of Dr. Thomas Guthrie (a grandson of the
Scottish preacher
Thomas Guthrie) and Norah Power. His mother Norah was the daughter of Sir William James Tyrone Power,
Commissary-General-in-chief of the
British Army from 1863-1869 and Martha, daughter of Dr. John Moorhead of Annaghmakerrig House. His great-grandfather was the
Irish actor
Tyrone Power. He was also a cousin of the Hollywood actor
Tyrone Power. His sister, Susan Margaret, married his close university friend, fellow Anglo-Irishman
Hubert Butler. Butler translated the text for Guthrie's 1934 production of
Anton Chekhov's
Cherry Orchard, for perhaps the first English-language production.
He received a degree in history at
Oxford University, where he was active in student theatre, and worked for a season at the newly-established
Oxford Playhouse. In
1924 Guthrie joined the
British Broadcasting Corporation as a broadcaster and began to produce
plays for radio. This led to a year directing for the stage with the Scottish National Players, before returning to the
BBC to become one of the first writers to create plays designed for radio performance.
During the period from 1929 to 1933 he directed at various theatres, including
Pirandello's
Six Characters in Search of an Author in 1932. During 1933–1934, and 1936–1945 he was director of the
Shakespeare Repertory Company. While in
Montreal, Guthrie produced the
Romance of Canada series of radio plays for recalling epic moments in Canadian history. The series was broadcast on the
Canadian National Railway radio network.
In the 1940s Guthrie began to direct
operas, to critical acclaim, including a realistic
Carmen at
Sadler's Wells and the
Metropolitan Opera in New York. In 1953, he was invited to help launch the
Stratford Festival of Canada. Intrigued with the idea of starting a Shakespeare theatre in a remote Canadian location, he enlisted
Tanya Moiseiwitsch to design the thrust stage, and actors
Alec Guinness and
Irene Worth to star in the inaugural production of
Richard III. All performances in the first seasons took place in a large tent on the banks of the Avon River. He remained as Artistic Director for three seasons, and his work at Stratford had a strong influence in the development of
Canadian theatre.
In 1963, he founded the
Guthrie Theater in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, and again enlisted
Moiseiwitsch to design a thrust stage similar to the one in Stratford.
In the prologue to his biography
James Forsyth wrote: "Anti-
Broadway, anti-
West End, anti everything implied in the term 'Legitimate Theatre', he ended up with a legitimate claim to the title of 'most important, British-born theatre director of his time".
Peter Hall wrote "Among the great originators in British Theatre...Guthrie was a towering figure in every sense. He blazed a trail for the subsidised theatre of the sixties. He showed how to run a company and administer a theatre. And he was a brilliant and at times great director..."
Guthrie wrote two major books about the creation of effective drama:
Theatre Prospect (1932) and
A Life in the Theatre (1959).
Guthrie was married to Judith Bretherton, who survived him by only a year. He was
knighted in 1961, and died at home a decade later in Newbliss, County Monaghan, Ireland, at the age of 70 from undisclosed causes.
Quotations
On being tall: 'If you're very tall its not just rude boys who feel entitled to pass remarks. Perfect strangers in pubs are always coming up and saying: "Me and my friends are just having a bet. Just how tall are you?" Women, to whom one has just been introduced think that it breaks the ice if they scream, "Goodness, you're tall!' How would they like it if I broke the ice first, by screaming "Goodness, what thick ankles!" or "Goodness what a bust!"
- Sir Tyrone Guthrie, In Various Directions.
On the
Shakespeare Authorship Question and Stratford, England's tourist business: "But what if it turns out, as it just possibly might, that William Shakespeare of Stratford wasn't the author of the plays ascribed to him? There is a theory, advanced by reputable scholars, seriously and, in my opinion, plausibly, that Shakespeare merely lent his name as a cover for the literary activities of another person, perhaps the Earl of Oxford. If, by some terrible chance, this theory should be proved, then straightway Stratford's tourist business would dwindle. It would become just one more, and honestly not not one in the first ten, of England's picturesque small towns."
- Guthrie in New York Times Magazine,
April 22,
1962Further Information
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