Brook, Peter
Related Category: Theater: Biographies
1925, English theatrical director, b. London. An innovative, unconventional, and controversial figure, Brook mounts energetic productions in which the entire stage is utilized and realistic sets are banished in favor of bold, abstract, and austere settings. His approach is extremely physical, and he often has his actors sing, play musical instruments, and perform acrobatics. His production of
Love's Labour's Lost (1946) began his long association with what became in 1961 the
Royal Shakespeare Company. Subsequent Shakespearean productions included
Measure for Measure (1950),
Titus Andronicus (1955),
King Lear (1962), and
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1970), which was set in a kind of adult playground with trapezes, stilts, and spinning plates. Other Brook productions for the Royal Shakespeare Company included his famous staging of Peter
Weiss's
Marat/Sade (1964), a play within a play set in the insane asylum housing the Marquis de Sade that examines both revolution and madness, and
US (1966), an attack on U.S. involvement in Vietnam. During the 1960s, Brook's productions were influenced both by the shock tactics of Antonin
Artaud and the analytical detachment of Bertolt
Brecht.
Brook has also directed films, such as Moderato Cantabile (1960), Lord of the Flies (1963), and King Lear (1971); and operas, such as Faust and Eugene Onegin. In the 1970s, he founded the International Center of Theatre Research in Paris, an assembly of actors, dancers, musicians, and other performers of many nationalities. Their most recognized achievement was a nine-hour presentation of the Indian epic The Mahabharata (1985). Since then Brook has created a variety of other theatrical works, such as a version of Oliver Sacks's The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat (1994), a production of Mozart's Don Giovanni (1998), a streamlined Hamlet (2000), and Tierno Bokar (2005), a theater piece based on the life of a West African Sufi in the 1930s. His books on the theater include Empty Space (1969), The Shifting Point (1987), and The Open Door (1995).
See his autobiographical Threads of Time (1998); Gregory Boyd, ed., Between Two Silences: Talking with Peter Brook (1999); biographies by J. C. Trewin (1971), A. Hunt and G. Reeves (1995), and M. Kustow (2005).