Simon Corble is an English
playwright,
director and performer. He is the great nephew of
Archibald Corble, the British fencer. He grew up in rural Oxfordshire, the son of a country vicar.[1] The family moved north in 1974, and at the age of sixteen he played
Hamlet at Lymm Grammar School, Cheshire and "never looked back". After training as an actor at Manchester Polytechnic (now
Manchester Metropolitan University) he went on to create his own dramatic works. He has explored the potential of
site-specific theatre in both his own works and those of others. On his website he writes that his strengths lie in "comedy, site-specific and promenade theatre, audio work, directing Shakespeare, and in creating unique theatrical experiences".[2]
Writing
According to Tony Craze and Katie Brannigan, Corble writes "in obeyance of the unities of time and space – applying realistic and parallel scales between worlds of performance and real environment (short promenades for short distances traveled in a fictional world, careful allotment of time at each stationary point). Temporal and spatial settings for his work were seen to be of paramount importance. For The Woodlanders, this writer's research included a close study of the North of England countryside, focusing on a site with the largest, most remote wooded area, accessible only by a mile and a half trek."[3]
Midsommer Actors' Company
Corble was the founder and artistic director of the Midsommer Actors' Company (1990–1999) which created open-air site-specific theatre with an emphasis on the actor's performance.[4] It moved indoors in 1997 to stage The 39 Steps, a play Corble co-wrote with Nobby Dimon[5] which, proved to have a long life in theatres all over the world, with runs in London's
West End and in
Broadway. The adaptation, written for a cast of four actors and funded by a £1,000 Yorkshire Arts Grant, premiered in 1995 before an audience of 90 people at the
Georgian Theatre Royal in
Richmond, North Yorkshire, before embarking on a tour of village halls across the north of England.[6]
Found Theatre
He created Found Theatre in 2005, with the aim of telling powerful stories through simple means.[7]
Playscripts
The Woodlanders, 1991
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, 1992 (a dramatisation of
the 14th-century Arthurian romance); it was originally written for The Midsommer Actors' Company in 1992 and played in eight outdoor venues.;[8] Corble later substantially revised the play, which was produced indoors by Cardboard Menagerie at the
O'Reilly Theatre, Oxford in February 2014.[9]
^Staged after rehearsals on the Greek island of
Ikaria; see
"The Fisherman and his Soul", The Stage, 13 October 2005. Retrieved 6 July 2009.
^"A Dickensian tale", on tour in small-scale venues in autumn 2009, according to
Simon Corble's website.
^Premiered at the 2010
Adelaide Fringe Festival, performed by the Adelaide University Fringe Club to critical acclaim. See: Adelaide Theatre Guide
Operation Mincemeat. Retrieved 27 February 2010.