Difference between revisions of "Pieter Toerien"
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After the political change, he grasped the opportunity of bringing the formerly banned big musicals to South Africa. These include ''[[Les Misrablés]]'' (with [[Cameron Mackintosh]], 19**), ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' (19**), ***. In 1988 he received the [[Fleur du Cap Lifetime Award]] for his contribution to the industry. In 199* he became a board member of [[Artscape]]. | After the political change, he grasped the opportunity of bringing the formerly banned big musicals to South Africa. These include ''[[Les Misrablés]]'' (with [[Cameron Mackintosh]], 19**), ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' (19**), ***. In 1988 he received the [[Fleur du Cap Lifetime Award]] for his contribution to the industry. In 199* he became a board member of [[Artscape]]. | ||
− | TOERIEN, Pieter. Impresario and producer. He became involved in presenting bio-vaudeville programmes – live entertainment preceding the film – at the [[Pinewood Cinema]] in Pinelands circa 1963 with his former boss, cinema owner [[Basil Rubin]]. He formed [[Toerien-Rubin]] and staged many variety shows topped by visiting British artists such as vocalist Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine, booked by [[Hugo Keleti]]. [[Toerien-Rubin]] brought out the English comedians [[Dora Bryan]] and [[Alfred Marks]] in 1964. Together with [[Basil Rubin]] he staged [[James Ambrose-Brown]]’s ''[[The Years of the Locust]]'' at the [[Alexander Theatre]], starring [[Johann Nell]], [[Frank Shelley]] and [[Yvonne Bryceland]] in 1966.Owner of [[Theatre on the Bay]] in Cape Town and the [[Alhambra]] in Johannesburg. He staged [[Rattigan]]’s ''[[In Praise of Love]]'' starring [[Robert Flemyng]], together with [[Shirley Firth]]. Together with [[Rubin]] he brought [[Russ Conway]] back to the [[Civic]] in 1967. Together with [[Rubin]] he brought Hollywood dancer-actress [[Cyd Charisse]] and her husband, [[Tony Martin]] to the [[Civic]] in August 1967. Together with [[Rubin]] he presented [[Aleksei Arbuzov]]’s ''[[The Promise]]'', starring English actor [[Andrew Ray]], [[John Fraser]] and [ | + | TOERIEN, Pieter. Impresario and producer. He became involved in presenting bio-vaudeville programmes – live entertainment preceding the film – at the [[Pinewood Cinema]] in Pinelands circa 1963 with his former boss, cinema owner [[Basil Rubin]]. He formed [[Toerien-Rubin]] and staged many variety shows topped by visiting British artists such as vocalist Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine, booked by [[Hugo Keleti]]. [[Toerien-Rubin]] brought out the English comedians [[Dora Bryan]] and [[Alfred Marks]] in 1964. Together with [[Basil Rubin]] he staged [[James Ambrose-Brown]]’s ''[[The Years of the Locust]]'' at the [[Alexander Theatre]], starring [[Johann Nell]], [[Frank Shelley]] and [[Yvonne Bryceland]] in 1966.Owner of [[Theatre on the Bay]] in Cape Town and the [[Alhambra]] in Johannesburg. He staged [[Rattigan]]’s ''[[In Praise of Love]]'' starring [[Robert Flemyng]], together with [[Shirley Firth]]. Together with [[Rubin]] he brought [[Russ Conway]] back to the [[Civic]] in 1967. Together with [[Rubin]] he brought Hollywood dancer-actress [[Cyd Charisse]] and her husband, [[Tony Martin]] to the [[Civic]] in August 1967. Together with [[Rubin]] he presented [[Aleksei Arbuzov]]’s ''[[The Promise]]'', starring English actor [[Andrew Ray]], [[John Fraser]] and British actress Olive McFarland [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive_McFarland] at the [[Brooke]] in 1967. It was directed by [[Leonard Schach]]. [[Toerien-Rubin]] also staged the revue ''[[Maggie and Frank]]'', starring [[Maggie Soboil]] and [[Frank Lazarus]], at the [[Brooke]] in 1967. Together with [[Rubin]] he started importing complete productions from the West End, starting with [[Oscar Wilde]]’s ''[[An Ideal Husband]]'', starring [[Richard Todd]], [[Jean Kent]], [[Vanessa Lee]], [[Peter Graves]], [[Derek Bond]] and [[Joyce Grant]] in 1969. They also brought ''[[Dames at Sea]]'' to the [[Alexander]] from America, directed by [[Don Liberto]] and [[Jimmy Edwards]]’ London hit ''[[Big Bad Mouse]]'', starring [[Cardew Robinson]] and [[Bess Finney]] circa 1969. Together with [[Shirley Firth]], and [[Rubin]] he stepped forward as new management of the [[Intimate]] in 1969. Their first co-production was ''[[The Secretary Bird]]'' which was directed by [[Kerry Jordan]] and starred [[Jeremy Hawk]], [[Shelagh Holliday]], [[Ivan Berold]] and [[Firth]]. Toerien-Rubin staged [[Noël Coward]]’s ''[[Fallen Angels]]'' at the [[Alexander]] circa 1970. It starred [[Hermione Gingold]] and [[Joan Heal]]. Toerien, [[Rubin]] and [[Firth]] staged [[Anthony Shaffer]]’s thriller ''[[Sleuth]]'', starring [[Ralph Michael]] and [[Nicholas Amer]], and directed by [[Warren Jenkins]] at the Intimate circa 1970. Toerien-Rubin brought director [[Anthony Sharp]] and actors [[Cicely Courtneidge]], [[Jack Hulbert]], [[Roger Livesey]], [[Ursula Jeans]], [[David Kossoff]] and [[Robertson Hare]] from London to star in ''[[Oh, Clarence]]'' at the [[Civic]] circa 1970. Toerien-Firth presented ''[[Who Killed Santa Claus?]]'' starring [[John Justin]] and [[Naomi Chance]], with direction by [[Anthony Sharp]] in 1971. They also staged ''[[Don’t Start Without Me]]'', directed by [[Roger Redfarn]] and starring [[Jeremy Hawk]]; and ''[[No sex Please, We’re British]]'', directed by [[Allen Davis]] and starring [[Billy Boyle]] in 1971. He staged [[Ronald Millar]]’s ''[[Abelard and Helöise]]'', starring [[Heather Lloyd-Jones]], [[Paul Massie]], [[Margaretta Scott]] and [[Mervyn Johns]] at the [[Civic]] in 1971. [[Toerien-Firth]] presented ''[[Wait Until Dark]]'' starring [[Shirley Anne Field]] at the [[Intimate]] in 1972. He presented [[Frederick Knott]]’s [[Dial M for Murder]], starring [[John Gregson[[ and [[Joan Fontaine]] and directed by [[Philip Grout]] in 1972. He presented [[Jack Popplewell]]’s ''[[Darling, I’m Home]]'' starring [[Ian Carmichael]] and [[Diane Todd]], and ''[[A Touch of Spring]]'' starring [[Leonard Whiting]] and directed by [[Philip Grout]], at the [[Civic]] in 1972. He brought [[Kenneth Connor]] to star in ''[[My Fat Friend]]'' at the [[Civic]] in 1973 and presented a compilation of [[Noël Coward]]’s material, ''[[Cowardy Custard]]'', starring [[Moira Lister]], [[David Kernan]] and [[Graham Armitage]] and directed by [[Freddie Carpenter]] at the [[Civic]] that same year. [[Toerien-Firth]] presented the [[Francis Durbridge]] thriller ''[[Suddenly at Home]]'' and [[Royce Ryton]]’s ''[[Crown Matrimonial]]'' at the [[Intimate]] in 1973. The latter starred [[Owen Holder]] and [[Peggy Thorpe-Bates]]. They also brought [[Libby Morris]] to star in ''[[Just Libby]]'' in December 1973. He brought [[Nigel Patrick]] to star in [[Alan Bennett]]’s ''[[Habeas Corpus]]'' which was directed by [[Kim Grant]] at the [[Civic]] in 1974. [[David Poulson]] directed ''[[Not in the Book]]'' with [[Wilfrid Hyde-White]] and [[Avril Angers]] for Toerien at the [[Civic]] in 1974. [[Toerien-Firth]] brought [[Muriel Pavlow]], [[Robert Flemyng]], [[Robert Beatty]] and [[Ron Smerczak]] to star at the [[Intimate]] in [[Terence Rattigan]]’s ''[[In Praise of Love]]'' in 1974. They also got [[John Fernald]] to direct [[Hildegard Neil]] in a revival of ''[[Private Lives]]'', and [[Heather Lloyd-Jones]] to star in [[Jerome Chodorov]]’s ''[[A Community of Two]]'', directed by [[Chodorov]] at the [[Intimate]] in 1974. [[Toerien-Firth]] brought [[Maxine Audley]] and [[Richard Huggett]] with director [[Laurier Lister]] from England for ''[[Not Bloody Likely]]'' at the [[Intimate]] and [[Jeremy Hawk]] and [[Elspeth March]] from England for ''[[The Payoff]]'' at the [[Intimate]] in 1975. [[Toerien-Firth]] revived [[Tennessee Williams]]’ ''[[A Streetcar Named Desire]]'' with [[Michael McGovern]] and [[Anne Rogers]] in 1975. He staged [[Peter Shaffer]]’s ''[[Equus]]'' which was directed by [[Leonard Schach]] starring British actors [[John Fraser]] and [[Dai Bradley]] together with [[Anne Courtneidge]], [[Kim Braden]], [[Fiona Fraser]] and [[Michael Howard]] at the [[Civic]] in 1975. He also presented [[Barbara Windsor]] in ''[[Carry on Barbara]]'', [[Terry Scott]] and [[June Whitfield]] in ''[[A Bed Full of Foreigners]]'' and an ensemble of British actors, led by [[Sir Michael Redgrave]] who brought ''[[Shakespeare’s People]]'', put together by [[Sir Michael Redgrave]] to the [[Civic]] in 1975. He brought out [[Leonard Whiting]] again in 1976 to star in the [[Ben Travers]] farce, ''[[The Bed Before Yesterday]]'', together with [[Jean Kent]], [[Marjorie Gordon]], [[Naomi Buch]], [[Graham Armitage]] and [[Gordon Mulholland]]. In 1976 [[Toerien-Firth]] brought back [[Owen Holder]] to star in [[Royce Ryton]]’s ''[[For the Woman I love]]''; [[Hywel Bennett]] starred in [[Simon Gray]]’s ''[[Otherwise Engaged]]'' together with [[Sandra Duncan]]; West End director [[Frith Banbury]] staged a revival of [[Frederick Lonsdale]]’s 1920s comedy ''[[On Approval]]'', starring [[Richard Todd]] and [[Moyra Fraser]]. They took a lease on the [[Little Theatre]] and renamed it the [[Barnato Theatre]], after mining magnate Barney Barnato. Their opening production ''[[Caught in the Act]]'', devised and directed by England’s [[Charles Ross]] with [[Anna Quayle]] and [[Graham Armitage]] was staged in 1976. [[Royce Ryton]]’s ''[[The Other Side of the Swamp]]'' starring [[Royce Ryton]] himself, together with [[Eckard Rabe]] under direction by [[Graham Armitage]] was staged at the [[Barnato]] in 1976. It ran for a year. [[Toerien-Firth]] staged [[William Douglas Home]]’s ''[[The Kingfisher]]'' at the [[Intimate]] in 1977. They also staged [[The Monkey Walk]] starring [[Barbara Kinghorn]] and British actor [[Richard Warwick]], later replaced by [[Paul Jericco]] at the [[Barnato]] in 1977. He presented [[Tom Stoppard]]’s ''[[Dirty Linen]]'' starring [[Richard Warwick]], [[Charles Hawtrey]], [[Peter Bowles]], [[Naomi Buch]] and [[Ron Smerczak]] at the [[Civic]] in 1977. He staged ''[[The Deep Blue Sea]]'', directed by [[Joan Kemp-Welch]] and starring [[Helen Cherry]] and [[James Faulkner]] at the [[Baxter Theatre]] in 1977. It was set to be the opening production at his new Johannesburg theatre, the [[Andre Huguenet]] in Hillbrow. He staged the American mini-musical ''[[Starting Here, Starting Now]]'', directed by [[John Montgomery]] and starring [[Andre Hattingh]], [[Denise Freeman]] and [[Richard Loring]] at the [[Intimate Theatre]] in 1978. He staged [[James Kirkwood]]’s ''[[P.S. Your Cat is Dead]]'', directed by [[Dennis Breto]] with [[John Fraser]] and [[Anthony Daniels]] in 1978. [[Toerien-Firth]] presented [[Anthony Marriott]] and [[John Chapmans]]’s ''[[Shut Your Eyes and Think of England]]'', directed by [[Roger Redfarn]] and starring [[Peter Blythe]] (later replaced by [[Simon Merrick]]). It ran at the [[Intimate]] from 1978 to January 1979. Together with [[Shirley Firth]] he presented [[Terence Rattigan]]’s ''[[Cause Célèbre]]'', directed by [[Joan Kemp-Welch]] and starring [[Mary Millar]] and [[William Lucas]] in 1978. It ran at the [[Andre Huguenet]] for nine months. He brought [[Stockton Briggle]] to South Africa to direct a season of three plays consisting of [[Ira Levin]]’s ''[[Deathtrap]]'' starring [[Peter Wyngarde]] and [[Raymond O’Neill]] at the [[Andre Huguenet]]; ''[[The Passion of Dracula]]''; and [[Neil Simon]]’s ''[[California Suite]]'', starring [[Naomi Buch]], [[Annabel Linder]], [[Anthony Fridjhon]] and [[Michael Mayer]] in 1978. [[Toerien-Firth]] staged [[Royce Ryton]]’s ''[[The Unvarnished Truth]]'' with [[Michael Richard]], [[Anthony Fridjhon]], [[Nicholas Ellenbogen]] and [[Lynne White]] and directed by [[Joan Kemp-Welch]] at the [[Intimate]] in 1979. [[Toerien-Firth]] presented ''[[Sextet]]'' by [[Michael Pertwee]] at the [[Andre Huguenet]] in 1979. [[Toerien-Firth]] produced ''[[Mothers and Fathers]]'' with [[Clive Parnell]], [[Lesley Nott]], [[Elizabeth Rae]] and [[Ian Winter]] which was staged at the [[Barnato Theatre]] in 1980. Together with [[Firth]] he staged [[Hugh Leonard]]’s ''[[A Life]]'' directed by [[Godfrey Quigley]] and starring [[Quigley]] and [[Margaret Inglis]] at the [[Brooke]], [[Mark Camelotti]]’s ''[[Happy Birthday]]'' starring [[Clive Scott]] at the [[Intimate]], and [[Simon Gray]]’s ''[[Stage Struck]]'' directed by [[Stephen Hollis]] and starring [[Michael McGovern]] and [[Kenneth Baker]] in 1980. He sponsored a tour of ''[[Middle Age Spread]]'' with [[Rex Garner]], [[Helen Jessop]] and [[Eric Flynn]] before it opened at the [[Andre Huguenet]] in October 1980. [[Toerien-Firth]] staged [[Andrew Davies]]’ ''[[Rose]]'' starring [[Sandra Duncan]] at the [[Intimate]] in 1980/1981. He staged [[Agatha Christie]]’s ''[[The Spider’s Web]]'' starring [[Rex Garner]], [[Shelagh Holliday]], [[Paddy Canavan]] and [[Kenneth Baker]] at the [[Andre Huguenet]] in 1981. [[Leslie Phillips]] starred in ''[[Canaries Sometimes Sing]]'' for Pieter at the [[Andre Huguenet]] in 1981. He purchased the [[Alhambra Theatre]] from [[JODS]] circa 1981 where he staged [[Peter Shaffer]]’s ''[[Amadeus]]'' starring [[Richard Haines]] and [[Ralph Lawson]] and directed by [[Nikolas Simmonds]] in 1981. [[Michael Atkinson]] replaced [[Richard Haines]] in a subsequent extended season. He staged [[Agatha Christie]]’s ''[[The Unexpected Guest]]'' starring [[Yvonne Banning]] and [[Eckard Rabe]] at the [[Alhambra]] in January 1982. He then staged [[John Chapman]] and [[Dave Freeman]]’s ''[[Key for Two]]'' starring [[Rex Garner]], [[Gordon Mulholland]] and [[Moira Lister]] at the [[Alhambra]] in 1982 before taking it to London. He presented [[Noël Coward]]’s ''[[Oh Coward]]'', directed by [[Freddie Carpenter]] with [[Richard Loring]], [[Judy Page]] and [[Ronnie Stevens]] at the [[Andre Huguenet]] and the [[Intimate]] in 1982. [[Toerien-Firth]] staged their last joint production at the [[Intimate]] in 1982 namely the [[Baxter Theatre]] production of [[Robert Kirby]]’s ''[[It's a Boy!]]'' starring [[Dale Cutts]], [[Bo Petersen]] and [[James Irwin]] and directed by [[Keith Grenville]]. He presented [[A.R.Gurney Jr]]’s ''[[The Dining Room]]'' starring [[Gordon Mulholland]], [[Amanda Strydom]], [[Ralph Lawson]] and [[Patricia Sanders]] with direction by [[Bobby Heaney]] at the [[Alhambra]] in 1983. He presented [[Agatha Christie]]’s [[Towards Zero]] at the [[Andre Huguenet]] starring [[John Watts]] and directed by [[Charles Hickman]] in 1983. He opened a new auditorium at the [[Alhambra]] in 1983 called the [[Leonard Rayne Theatre]]. The opening production on the 18 July 1983 was ''[[Side by Side by Sondheim]]'', a collection of [[Stephen Sondheim]]’s pieces starring [[Dianne Chandler]], [[Andre Hattingh]] and [[Eric Flynn]], who also directed. He staged [[Michael Frayn]]’s ''[[Noises Off]]'' starring [[Rex Garner]], [[Joy Stewart Spence]], [[Eckard Rabe]], [[Clare Marshall]], [[Ralph Lawson]] and [[Kenneth Baker]] at the [[Andre Huguenet]] in 1983. It returned later that same year for another run. He presented ''[[Agnes of God]]'' starring [[Fiona Ramsay]], [[Pauline Bailey]] and [[Lena Ferugia]] and directed by [[Nikolas Simmonds]] at the [[Baxter]] in 1983 before moving it to the [[Alhambra]]. He got [[Kim Grant]] to direct his 1984 [[Agatha Christie]], ''[[The Hollow]]'' starring [[Shelagh Holliday]] at the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] in February. He presented [[Ray Cooney]]’s ''[[Run for Your Wife]]'' starring [[Rex Garner]] and [[Michael Richard]] at the [[Alhambra]] in February 1984. He staged [[Francis Durbridge]]’s ''[[House Guest]]'' directed by [[Hugh Wooldridge]] in 1984. He presented [[Mastrosimone]]’s ''[[Extremities]]'' starring [[Lena Ferugia]] and [[Michael Richard]] with direction by [[Hugh Wooldridge]] in 1984. In 1985 he presented [[Agatha Christie]]’s ''[[Black Coffee]]'' with [[Bill Flynn]], [[Michael Frayn]]’s ''[[Benefactors]]'' which was directed by [[Rex Garner]], ''[[One for the Pot]]'' and ''[[The Marriage-Go-Round]]''. [[Michael Richard]] starred in [[Kean]] at the [[Leonard Rayne]] in June 1985, and in August of the same year Pieter brought back [[Equus]]. In 1986 he presented [[Agatha Christie]]’s ''[[Murder at the Vicarage]]'' and ''[[The Business of Murder]]''. At the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] he presented [[Ray Cooney]]’s ''[[Two into One]]'' in 1986. He brought ''[[Tom and Viv]]'', directed by [[Ken Leach]] to the [[Alhambra]] in August 1986. He presented ''[[Jerry’s Girls]]'' directed by [[Jimmy Bell]] and [[Richard Harris]]’ ''[[Stepping Out]]'' at the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] in 1986. [[Rex Garner]] starred in Canadian playwright Bernard Slade’s ''[[Tribute]]'' for Pieter in 1987. He presented [[Agatha Christie]]’s ''[[Peril at End House]]'' and the revue ''[[It’s Getting Harder]]'' at the [[Leonard Rayne]] in 1988. He presented [[Vladimir Gubartev]]’s ''[[Sarcophagus]]'' and [[Jerome Kilty]]’s ''[[Dear Love]]'' at the [[Andre Huguenet]] in 1988. He presented [[Terence McNally]]’s ''[[Frankie and Johnny at the Claire de Lune]]'', [[Tobie Cronje]] in ''[[Charley’s Aunt]]'' and [[Peter Shaffer]]’s ''[[Lettuce and Lovage]]'' (pg 468 spelling different) in 1988. His new theatre called [[Theatre on the Bay]] opened in mid December 1988 with a production of ''[[Nunsense]]''. He presented [[Agatha Christie]]’s ''[[Murder on the Nile]]'', [[Tom Lehrer]]’s ''[[Tom Foolery]]'' and ''[[Who Goes Bare]]'' at the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] in 1989. He presented [[David Henry Hwang]]’s ''[[M. Butterfly]]'' at the [[Alhambra]] in October 1989. He presented [[Malcolm Terrey]] and [[Kevin Feather]]’s ''[[Jo’Burg Follies]]'' at the [[Leonard Rayne]] in January 1990. Together with [[NAPAC]] he brought ''[[Ain’t Misbehavin’]]'' to the [[Andre Huguenet]] in 1990. He presented ''[[Move Over Mrs Markham]]'' at the [[Alhambra]] in 1990. In conjunction with [[Plewman Productions]] he presented [[Michael Pertwee]]’s ''[[Sextet]]'' at the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] in 1990. He presented [[Richard Harris]]’ ''[[The Maintenance Man]]'' at the [[Leonard Rayne]] in 1990. [[Deon Opperman]] and [[Garth Holmes]] wrote ''[[Playboys]]'' for him in 1990. He presented ''[[Lend Me a Tenor]]'' in 1990. He presented ''[[Jo’burg Follies 2]]'' at the [[Leonard Rayne]] during the festive season of 1990. He renovated the [[Alhambra Theatre]] in 1991, adding on a third, hundred-seater, auditorium called the [[Richard Haines Theatre]]. It opened on 27 September 1991 with [[A.R. Gurney]]’s ''[[Love Letters]]''. During this time he relinquished his lease on the [[Andre Huguenet Theatre]]. He presented [[Gordon Mulholland]] in [[Gordon Bleu]] at the [[Richard Haines]] in 1992. He presented [[Michael Pertwee]]’s [[Birds of Paradise]] at the [[Alhambra]] in 1992. He presented [[John Guare]]’s ''[[Six Degrees of Separation]]'' in 1992. [[Mark Graham]] directed ''[[I Was King]]'' for him at the [[Richard Haines Theatre]] in 1992. He presented [[Hugh Whitemore]]’s ''[[The Best of Friends]]'' in 1993. He presented ''[[Don’t Dress for Dinner]]'' in 1993. He presented [[Rupert Gavin]]’s ''[[An Evening with Gary Lineker]]'' at the [[Alhambra]], [[Edward Duke]]’s ''[[Jeeves Takes Charge]]'' and [[Kevin Feather]]’s ''[[The Doowah Girls]]'', both at the [[Richard Haines]] in 1993. He presented [[James Sherman]]’s ''[[Beau Jest]]'' at the [[Theatre on the Bay]], [[Civic’s Youth Theatre]] and the [[Leonard Rayne]] in 1993. He presented ''[[The Monkey Walk]]'' at the [[Richard Haines]] in 1994. He presented [[Bob Randall]]’s ''[[The Fan]]'' in 1994. He presented [[Giles Havergal]]’s ''[[Travels With My Aunt]]'' at the [[Leonard Rayne]] in August 1994. He brought [[Cameron Mackintosh]]’s ''[[Les Miserables]]'' to the [[Nico Malan]] in 1996. Pieter Toerien (born 1945) was, for 40 years, South Africa’s foremost theatre impresario. Toerien began his theatre career while still at school presenting puppet shows to schools in his home town, Cape Town. His first venture after school aged 17 introduced the concept of bio-vaudeville – persuading cinema managements to have live entertainment before the feature film. Under the mentorship of Britain’s theatre agent Herbert de Leon and in partnership with Basil Rubin he brought to South Africa British variety artists such as Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine; eventually adding Russ Conway (1964), Peter Nero (1966), Shelly Berman, Cyd Charisse, Tony Martin, Françoise Hardy and Maurice Chevalier (1967) to his list of luminaries . His greatest coup was Marlene Dietrich. Aged 20 he sat on the street outside her apartment until curiosity compelled her to invite him in. He signed her to tour in 1965 and again in 1966. They remained friends until her death in 1992 aged 91. In 1966 he tentatively shifted to the dramatic stage, often bringing entire productions from the West End to South Africa, cast, sets and costumes. Funding all his own productions he famously claimed that he produced farce and comedy to subsidize less commercial theatre. Continuing with the successful business formula of signing overseas box-office attractions he brought names like Hermione Gingold from New York for Noel Coward’s ''[[Fallen Angles]]'', Joan Fontaine for Fredrick Knott’s thriller ''[[Dial M for Murder]]''. Other names included Barbara Windsor, June Whitfield and Sir Michael Redgrave. With rigid censorship laws in South Africa in the 70s and 80s, plays were continually under scrutiny by the law. Ronald Millar’s ''[[Abelard and Heloise]]'' called for a nude scene and actress Heather Lloyd-Jones consented to the demands of the script. Audience curiosity filled houses to capacity. The censorship board were given a dim silhouette of Miss Lloyd-Jones and the play was allowed to continue. Toerien did not escape more aggressive raids when productions were closed down. When the word ‘gay’ was still taboo Toerien brought ''[[The Other Side of the Swamp]]'' to the boards. Writer Royce Ryton himself played opposite Echardt Rabe under Graham Armtage’s direction. By running for a year this production broke a South African record. Writers Ben Travis, Ray Clooney and Alan Eichbourne became audience favourites; as did Agatha Christie. From the early 80s, British comedy actor and director Rex Garner became associated with Toerien with many box office successes; Ray Clooney's ''[[Out of Order]]'' and ''[[It Runs in the Famiy]]'', Michael Pertwee's ''[[Birds of Paradise]]'' and Robin Hawdon's ''[[Don't Dress for Dinner]]''. Since the 70s he has always owned his own theatres. The first, The Intimate, a 235 seater, in partnership with Shirley Firth, was followed by The Barnato and the Andre Huguenet . In 1980 he saved an old theatre from demolition and opened The Alahambra in Braamfontein, Johannesburg with Peter Shaffer's ''[[Amadeus]]''. Refurbishing the old building he added two more theatres to the complex, the Leonard Rayne, opened 18th July 1983, (renamed the Rex Garner in 1994) and the Richard Haines Theatres. In 1988 he purchased the derelict Alvin Cinema in Camps Bay, Cape Town and, with designer Jan Corewyn transformed it with a post modern façade draped with a sculptured curtain. He named it Theatre on the Bay. With the decentralization of Johannesburg’s CBD Toerien moved his Alhambra operation to the north of Johannesburg opening Pieter Toerien's Montecasino Theatre complex. Here he runs 2 theatres, one with 320 seats and a studio theatre with 160 seats [1]] Lining the walls of Toerien’s theatres are photographs of the innumerable actors who have worked for him over the years as well as posters of past productions ''[[Sleuth]]'', ''[[A Streetcar Named Desire]]'', ''[[Equus]]'', ''[[Amadeus]]'', ''[[Agnes of God]]'', ''[[M Butterfly]]'', ''[[Master Class]]'', ''[[Private Lives]]'', ''[[Stage Struck]]'', ''[[Quartemaine's Terms]]'', ''[[Side By Side With Sondheim]]'' The works of such imminent British writers as Noel Coward, Tom Stoppard, Simon Gray, and Peter Shaffer have all been mounted in Toerien’s theatres. In the 80s Toerien brought Sir Cameron Macintosh’s ''[[Tomfoolery]]'' to South Africa. This association has resulted in South Africa receiving many of the phenomenal successes of Macintosh's London musical theatre, ''[[Les Miserables]]'', a co-production with Sir Cameron Mackintosh and Tsogo Sun; ''[[Cats]]'' which toured Scandinavia, the Far East and Beirut; ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' which toured the Far East, ending in Hong Kong. These were followed by ''[[The Sleeping Beauty on Ice]]'', ''[[Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat]]'' and ''[[Jesus Christ Superstar]]'' which was originally banned in South Africa as blasphemous after it opened on Broadway in 1971, which travels to Athens in 2007. 2007 will see the staging of ''[[The Lion King]]'' in a splendid new 1900 seater lyric theatre being especially built by Tsogo Sun at Montecasino in Johannesburg. It will be the tenth largest in the world. Another South African record was set by actor [[Tim Plewman]] who in 2006 ended an eight year run of Rob Becker's ''[[Defending the Caveman]]''. Plewman, had given 1500 performances of this one man show. Toerien has not limited himself to theatre management. During the period of South Africa’s transition he worked extensively with WESTAG Task Group on the Performing Arts sub-committee. In this area of civic responsibility he also gave of his expertise on the CAPAB board to assist them in their adjustment to become Artscape. He was also on the board of the National Arts Council and the Western Cape Cultural Commission. TOERIEN, Pieter, ''[[It's a Boy!]]'' [[Robert Kirby]], [[Keith Grenville] (dir). The play was a return visit to the [[Baxter]] in 83 which played to packed houses last August during the Baxter 82 season. Then transferred to JHB by Pieter Toerien. Playing at the [[Academy]]. ''[[Agnes of God]]'', ''[[Mass Appeal]]'', ''[[the Real Thing]]'', ''[[Side by Side By Sondheim]]'', 1983. [[Clarence Darrow]], [[Grahamstown Festival]], 1984. ''[[Little Shop of Horrors]]'', [[Richard Loring]], (ass. Prod) [[Cameron Mackintosh]], produced by [[Constance Grappo]], set by [[Edward T Gianfrancesco]], [[Jannie Swanepoel]]’s lighting, [[Andre Hatting]], [[Mike Huff]], [[Michael Blaise]], Vocalists: [[Stella Khumalo]], [[Connie Chiume]] & [[Mandisa Dlanga]], [[Andre Huguenet Theatre]], Jhb & [[Baxter]], 1985. |
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 15:23, 5 June 2018
(1945-) Impressario and theatre owner. Perhaps the most powerful and successful private theatre impressario of the period after 1980.
The story is that he started out on an impulse when, as a young man he invited Marlene Dietrich to visit South Africa, and successfully organised the tour. He then became involved in presenting bio-vaudeville programmes (i.e. live entertainment preceding the film )with cinema owner Basil Rubin, at the Pinewood Cinema in Pinelands circa 1963.
Contents
Theatres
The theatres he managed and owned over the years include The Intimate Theatre, The Alhambra Theatre (Johannesburg), the André Huguenet Theatre (Johannesburg), The Theatre on the Bay (Cape Town), the Montecasino Theatre (Johannesburg) ***
He always claimed that he did not need state subsidy, he subsidised himself. This was largely done by doing many popular potboilers (drawing room comedies and murder mysteries), and this enabled him to do more literary West End and Broadway successes, such as Equus, M. Butterfly, **.
Toerien's theatrical partnerships
Over the years, Toerien has collaborated with many other impressarios, producers and companies, and has a had a number of business partners for shorter or longer periods of time. Among them:
Toerien-Rubin 1963-1970
With his former boss, cinema owner Basil Rubin, he formed Toerien-Rubin and together they staged many variety shows, topped by visiting British artists such as vocalist Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine, booked by Hugo Keleti. Toerien-Rubin brought out the English comedians Dora Bryan and Alfred Marks in 1964.
They also staged James Ambrose Brown’s The Years of the Locust (1966).
Toerien-Rubin-Firth 1969-1970
Toerien-Firth 1970-
Toerien-Mackintosh
Productions
Some of his many productions over the years include ********.
After the political change, he grasped the opportunity of bringing the formerly banned big musicals to South Africa. These include Les Misrablés (with Cameron Mackintosh, 19**), The Phantom of the Opera (19**), ***. In 1988 he received the Fleur du Cap Lifetime Award for his contribution to the industry. In 199* he became a board member of Artscape.
TOERIEN, Pieter. Impresario and producer. He became involved in presenting bio-vaudeville programmes – live entertainment preceding the film – at the Pinewood Cinema in Pinelands circa 1963 with his former boss, cinema owner Basil Rubin. He formed Toerien-Rubin and staged many variety shows topped by visiting British artists such as vocalist Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine, booked by Hugo Keleti. Toerien-Rubin brought out the English comedians Dora Bryan and Alfred Marks in 1964. Together with Basil Rubin he staged James Ambrose-Brown’s The Years of the Locust at the Alexander Theatre, starring Johann Nell, Frank Shelley and Yvonne Bryceland in 1966.Owner of Theatre on the Bay in Cape Town and the Alhambra in Johannesburg. He staged Rattigan’s In Praise of Love starring Robert Flemyng, together with Shirley Firth. Together with Rubin he brought Russ Conway back to the Civic in 1967. Together with Rubin he brought Hollywood dancer-actress Cyd Charisse and her husband, Tony Martin to the Civic in August 1967. Together with Rubin he presented Aleksei Arbuzov’s The Promise, starring English actor Andrew Ray, John Fraser and British actress Olive McFarland [1] at the Brooke in 1967. It was directed by Leonard Schach. Toerien-Rubin also staged the revue Maggie and Frank, starring Maggie Soboil and Frank Lazarus, at the Brooke in 1967. Together with Rubin he started importing complete productions from the West End, starting with Oscar Wilde’s An Ideal Husband, starring Richard Todd, Jean Kent, Vanessa Lee, Peter Graves, Derek Bond and Joyce Grant in 1969. They also brought Dames at Sea to the Alexander from America, directed by Don Liberto and Jimmy Edwards’ London hit Big Bad Mouse, starring Cardew Robinson and Bess Finney circa 1969. Together with Shirley Firth, and Rubin he stepped forward as new management of the Intimate in 1969. Their first co-production was The Secretary Bird which was directed by Kerry Jordan and starred Jeremy Hawk, Shelagh Holliday, Ivan Berold and Firth. Toerien-Rubin staged Noël Coward’s Fallen Angels at the Alexander circa 1970. It starred Hermione Gingold and Joan Heal. Toerien, Rubin and Firth staged Anthony Shaffer’s thriller Sleuth, starring Ralph Michael and Nicholas Amer, and directed by Warren Jenkins at the Intimate circa 1970. Toerien-Rubin brought director Anthony Sharp and actors Cicely Courtneidge, Jack Hulbert, Roger Livesey, Ursula Jeans, David Kossoff and Robertson Hare from London to star in Oh, Clarence at the Civic circa 1970. Toerien-Firth presented Who Killed Santa Claus? starring John Justin and Naomi Chance, with direction by Anthony Sharp in 1971. They also staged Don’t Start Without Me, directed by Roger Redfarn and starring Jeremy Hawk; and No sex Please, We’re British, directed by Allen Davis and starring Billy Boyle in 1971. He staged Ronald Millar’s Abelard and Helöise, starring Heather Lloyd-Jones, Paul Massie, Margaretta Scott and Mervyn Johns at the Civic in 1971. Toerien-Firth presented Wait Until Dark starring Shirley Anne Field at the Intimate in 1972. He presented Frederick Knott’s Dial M for Murder, starring [[John Gregson[[ and Joan Fontaine and directed by Philip Grout in 1972. He presented Jack Popplewell’s Darling, I’m Home starring Ian Carmichael and Diane Todd, and A Touch of Spring starring Leonard Whiting and directed by Philip Grout, at the Civic in 1972. He brought Kenneth Connor to star in My Fat Friend at the Civic in 1973 and presented a compilation of Noël Coward’s material, Cowardy Custard, starring Moira Lister, David Kernan and Graham Armitage and directed by Freddie Carpenter at the Civic that same year. Toerien-Firth presented the Francis Durbridge thriller Suddenly at Home and Royce Ryton’s Crown Matrimonial at the Intimate in 1973. The latter starred Owen Holder and Peggy Thorpe-Bates. They also brought Libby Morris to star in Just Libby in December 1973. He brought Nigel Patrick to star in Alan Bennett’s Habeas Corpus which was directed by Kim Grant at the Civic in 1974. David Poulson directed Not in the Book with Wilfrid Hyde-White and Avril Angers for Toerien at the Civic in 1974. Toerien-Firth brought Muriel Pavlow, Robert Flemyng, Robert Beatty and Ron Smerczak to star at the Intimate in Terence Rattigan’s In Praise of Love in 1974. They also got John Fernald to direct Hildegard Neil in a revival of Private Lives, and Heather Lloyd-Jones to star in Jerome Chodorov’s A Community of Two, directed by Chodorov at the Intimate in 1974. Toerien-Firth brought Maxine Audley and Richard Huggett with director Laurier Lister from England for Not Bloody Likely at the Intimate and Jeremy Hawk and Elspeth March from England for The Payoff at the Intimate in 1975. Toerien-Firth revived Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire with Michael McGovern and Anne Rogers in 1975. He staged Peter Shaffer’s Equus which was directed by Leonard Schach starring British actors John Fraser and Dai Bradley together with Anne Courtneidge, Kim Braden, Fiona Fraser and Michael Howard at the Civic in 1975. He also presented Barbara Windsor in Carry on Barbara, Terry Scott and June Whitfield in A Bed Full of Foreigners and an ensemble of British actors, led by Sir Michael Redgrave who brought Shakespeare’s People, put together by Sir Michael Redgrave to the Civic in 1975. He brought out Leonard Whiting again in 1976 to star in the Ben Travers farce, The Bed Before Yesterday, together with Jean Kent, Marjorie Gordon, Naomi Buch, Graham Armitage and Gordon Mulholland. In 1976 Toerien-Firth brought back Owen Holder to star in Royce Ryton’s For the Woman I love; Hywel Bennett starred in Simon Gray’s Otherwise Engaged together with Sandra Duncan; West End director Frith Banbury staged a revival of Frederick Lonsdale’s 1920s comedy On Approval, starring Richard Todd and Moyra Fraser. They took a lease on the Little Theatre and renamed it the Barnato Theatre, after mining magnate Barney Barnato. Their opening production Caught in the Act, devised and directed by England’s Charles Ross with Anna Quayle and Graham Armitage was staged in 1976. Royce Ryton’s The Other Side of the Swamp starring Royce Ryton himself, together with Eckard Rabe under direction by Graham Armitage was staged at the Barnato in 1976. It ran for a year. Toerien-Firth staged William Douglas Home’s The Kingfisher at the Intimate in 1977. They also staged The Monkey Walk starring Barbara Kinghorn and British actor Richard Warwick, later replaced by Paul Jericco at the Barnato in 1977. He presented Tom Stoppard’s Dirty Linen starring Richard Warwick, Charles Hawtrey, Peter Bowles, Naomi Buch and Ron Smerczak at the Civic in 1977. He staged The Deep Blue Sea, directed by Joan Kemp-Welch and starring Helen Cherry and James Faulkner at the Baxter Theatre in 1977. It was set to be the opening production at his new Johannesburg theatre, the Andre Huguenet in Hillbrow. He staged the American mini-musical Starting Here, Starting Now, directed by John Montgomery and starring Andre Hattingh, Denise Freeman and Richard Loring at the Intimate Theatre in 1978. He staged James Kirkwood’s P.S. Your Cat is Dead, directed by Dennis Breto with John Fraser and Anthony Daniels in 1978. Toerien-Firth presented Anthony Marriott and John Chapmans’s Shut Your Eyes and Think of England, directed by Roger Redfarn and starring Peter Blythe (later replaced by Simon Merrick). It ran at the Intimate from 1978 to January 1979. Together with Shirley Firth he presented Terence Rattigan’s Cause Célèbre, directed by Joan Kemp-Welch and starring Mary Millar and William Lucas in 1978. It ran at the Andre Huguenet for nine months. He brought Stockton Briggle to South Africa to direct a season of three plays consisting of Ira Levin’s Deathtrap starring Peter Wyngarde and Raymond O’Neill at the Andre Huguenet; The Passion of Dracula; and Neil Simon’s California Suite, starring Naomi Buch, Annabel Linder, Anthony Fridjhon and Michael Mayer in 1978. Toerien-Firth staged Royce Ryton’s The Unvarnished Truth with Michael Richard, Anthony Fridjhon, Nicholas Ellenbogen and Lynne White and directed by Joan Kemp-Welch at the Intimate in 1979. Toerien-Firth presented Sextet by Michael Pertwee at the Andre Huguenet in 1979. Toerien-Firth produced Mothers and Fathers with Clive Parnell, Lesley Nott, Elizabeth Rae and Ian Winter which was staged at the Barnato Theatre in 1980. Together with Firth he staged Hugh Leonard’s A Life directed by Godfrey Quigley and starring Quigley and Margaret Inglis at the Brooke, Mark Camelotti’s Happy Birthday starring Clive Scott at the Intimate, and Simon Gray’s Stage Struck directed by Stephen Hollis and starring Michael McGovern and Kenneth Baker in 1980. He sponsored a tour of Middle Age Spread with Rex Garner, Helen Jessop and Eric Flynn before it opened at the Andre Huguenet in October 1980. Toerien-Firth staged Andrew Davies’ Rose starring Sandra Duncan at the Intimate in 1980/1981. He staged Agatha Christie’s The Spider’s Web starring Rex Garner, Shelagh Holliday, Paddy Canavan and Kenneth Baker at the Andre Huguenet in 1981. Leslie Phillips starred in Canaries Sometimes Sing for Pieter at the Andre Huguenet in 1981. He purchased the Alhambra Theatre from JODS circa 1981 where he staged Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus starring Richard Haines and Ralph Lawson and directed by Nikolas Simmonds in 1981. Michael Atkinson replaced Richard Haines in a subsequent extended season. He staged Agatha Christie’s The Unexpected Guest starring Yvonne Banning and Eckard Rabe at the Alhambra in January 1982. He then staged John Chapman and Dave Freeman’s Key for Two starring Rex Garner, Gordon Mulholland and Moira Lister at the Alhambra in 1982 before taking it to London. He presented Noël Coward’s Oh Coward, directed by Freddie Carpenter with Richard Loring, Judy Page and Ronnie Stevens at the Andre Huguenet and the Intimate in 1982. Toerien-Firth staged their last joint production at the Intimate in 1982 namely the Baxter Theatre production of Robert Kirby’s It's a Boy! starring Dale Cutts, Bo Petersen and James Irwin and directed by Keith Grenville. He presented A.R.Gurney Jr’s The Dining Room starring Gordon Mulholland, Amanda Strydom, Ralph Lawson and Patricia Sanders with direction by Bobby Heaney at the Alhambra in 1983. He presented Agatha Christie’s Towards Zero at the Andre Huguenet starring John Watts and directed by Charles Hickman in 1983. He opened a new auditorium at the Alhambra in 1983 called the Leonard Rayne Theatre. The opening production on the 18 July 1983 was Side by Side by Sondheim, a collection of Stephen Sondheim’s pieces starring Dianne Chandler, Andre Hattingh and Eric Flynn, who also directed. He staged Michael Frayn’s Noises Off starring Rex Garner, Joy Stewart Spence, Eckard Rabe, Clare Marshall, Ralph Lawson and Kenneth Baker at the Andre Huguenet in 1983. It returned later that same year for another run. He presented Agnes of God starring Fiona Ramsay, Pauline Bailey and Lena Ferugia and directed by Nikolas Simmonds at the Baxter in 1983 before moving it to the Alhambra. He got Kim Grant to direct his 1984 Agatha Christie, The Hollow starring Shelagh Holliday at the André Huguenet Theatre in February. He presented Ray Cooney’s Run for Your Wife starring Rex Garner and Michael Richard at the Alhambra in February 1984. He staged Francis Durbridge’s House Guest directed by Hugh Wooldridge in 1984. He presented Mastrosimone’s Extremities starring Lena Ferugia and Michael Richard with direction by Hugh Wooldridge in 1984. In 1985 he presented Agatha Christie’s Black Coffee with Bill Flynn, Michael Frayn’s Benefactors which was directed by Rex Garner, One for the Pot and The Marriage-Go-Round. Michael Richard starred in Kean at the Leonard Rayne in June 1985, and in August of the same year Pieter brought back Equus. In 1986 he presented Agatha Christie’s Murder at the Vicarage and The Business of Murder. At the André Huguenet Theatre he presented Ray Cooney’s Two into One in 1986. He brought Tom and Viv, directed by Ken Leach to the Alhambra in August 1986. He presented Jerry’s Girls directed by Jimmy Bell and Richard Harris’ Stepping Out at the André Huguenet Theatre in 1986. Rex Garner starred in Canadian playwright Bernard Slade’s Tribute for Pieter in 1987. He presented Agatha Christie’s Peril at End House and the revue It’s Getting Harder at the Leonard Rayne in 1988. He presented Vladimir Gubartev’s Sarcophagus and Jerome Kilty’s Dear Love at the Andre Huguenet in 1988. He presented Terence McNally’s Frankie and Johnny at the Claire de Lune, Tobie Cronje in Charley’s Aunt and Peter Shaffer’s Lettuce and Lovage (pg 468 spelling different) in 1988. His new theatre called Theatre on the Bay opened in mid December 1988 with a production of Nunsense. He presented Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Nile, Tom Lehrer’s Tom Foolery and Who Goes Bare at the André Huguenet Theatre in 1989. He presented David Henry Hwang’s M. Butterfly at the Alhambra in October 1989. He presented Malcolm Terrey and Kevin Feather’s Jo’Burg Follies at the Leonard Rayne in January 1990. Together with NAPAC he brought Ain’t Misbehavin’ to the Andre Huguenet in 1990. He presented Move Over Mrs Markham at the Alhambra in 1990. In conjunction with Plewman Productions he presented Michael Pertwee’s Sextet at the André Huguenet Theatre in 1990. He presented Richard Harris’ The Maintenance Man at the Leonard Rayne in 1990. Deon Opperman and Garth Holmes wrote Playboys for him in 1990. He presented Lend Me a Tenor in 1990. He presented Jo’burg Follies 2 at the Leonard Rayne during the festive season of 1990. He renovated the Alhambra Theatre in 1991, adding on a third, hundred-seater, auditorium called the Richard Haines Theatre. It opened on 27 September 1991 with A.R. Gurney’s Love Letters. During this time he relinquished his lease on the Andre Huguenet Theatre. He presented Gordon Mulholland in Gordon Bleu at the Richard Haines in 1992. He presented Michael Pertwee’s Birds of Paradise at the Alhambra in 1992. He presented John Guare’s Six Degrees of Separation in 1992. Mark Graham directed I Was King for him at the Richard Haines Theatre in 1992. He presented Hugh Whitemore’s The Best of Friends in 1993. He presented Don’t Dress for Dinner in 1993. He presented Rupert Gavin’s An Evening with Gary Lineker at the Alhambra, Edward Duke’s Jeeves Takes Charge and Kevin Feather’s The Doowah Girls, both at the Richard Haines in 1993. He presented James Sherman’s Beau Jest at the Theatre on the Bay, Civic’s Youth Theatre and the Leonard Rayne in 1993. He presented The Monkey Walk at the Richard Haines in 1994. He presented Bob Randall’s The Fan in 1994. He presented Giles Havergal’s Travels With My Aunt at the Leonard Rayne in August 1994. He brought Cameron Mackintosh’s Les Miserables to the Nico Malan in 1996. Pieter Toerien (born 1945) was, for 40 years, South Africa’s foremost theatre impresario. Toerien began his theatre career while still at school presenting puppet shows to schools in his home town, Cape Town. His first venture after school aged 17 introduced the concept of bio-vaudeville – persuading cinema managements to have live entertainment before the feature film. Under the mentorship of Britain’s theatre agent Herbert de Leon and in partnership with Basil Rubin he brought to South Africa British variety artists such as Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine; eventually adding Russ Conway (1964), Peter Nero (1966), Shelly Berman, Cyd Charisse, Tony Martin, Françoise Hardy and Maurice Chevalier (1967) to his list of luminaries . His greatest coup was Marlene Dietrich. Aged 20 he sat on the street outside her apartment until curiosity compelled her to invite him in. He signed her to tour in 1965 and again in 1966. They remained friends until her death in 1992 aged 91. In 1966 he tentatively shifted to the dramatic stage, often bringing entire productions from the West End to South Africa, cast, sets and costumes. Funding all his own productions he famously claimed that he produced farce and comedy to subsidize less commercial theatre. Continuing with the successful business formula of signing overseas box-office attractions he brought names like Hermione Gingold from New York for Noel Coward’s Fallen Angles, Joan Fontaine for Fredrick Knott’s thriller Dial M for Murder. Other names included Barbara Windsor, June Whitfield and Sir Michael Redgrave. With rigid censorship laws in South Africa in the 70s and 80s, plays were continually under scrutiny by the law. Ronald Millar’s Abelard and Heloise called for a nude scene and actress Heather Lloyd-Jones consented to the demands of the script. Audience curiosity filled houses to capacity. The censorship board were given a dim silhouette of Miss Lloyd-Jones and the play was allowed to continue. Toerien did not escape more aggressive raids when productions were closed down. When the word ‘gay’ was still taboo Toerien brought The Other Side of the Swamp to the boards. Writer Royce Ryton himself played opposite Echardt Rabe under Graham Armtage’s direction. By running for a year this production broke a South African record. Writers Ben Travis, Ray Clooney and Alan Eichbourne became audience favourites; as did Agatha Christie. From the early 80s, British comedy actor and director Rex Garner became associated with Toerien with many box office successes; Ray Clooney's Out of Order and It Runs in the Famiy, Michael Pertwee's Birds of Paradise and Robin Hawdon's Don't Dress for Dinner. Since the 70s he has always owned his own theatres. The first, The Intimate, a 235 seater, in partnership with Shirley Firth, was followed by The Barnato and the Andre Huguenet . In 1980 he saved an old theatre from demolition and opened The Alahambra in Braamfontein, Johannesburg with Peter Shaffer's Amadeus. Refurbishing the old building he added two more theatres to the complex, the Leonard Rayne, opened 18th July 1983, (renamed the Rex Garner in 1994) and the Richard Haines Theatres. In 1988 he purchased the derelict Alvin Cinema in Camps Bay, Cape Town and, with designer Jan Corewyn transformed it with a post modern façade draped with a sculptured curtain. He named it Theatre on the Bay. With the decentralization of Johannesburg’s CBD Toerien moved his Alhambra operation to the north of Johannesburg opening Pieter Toerien's Montecasino Theatre complex. Here he runs 2 theatres, one with 320 seats and a studio theatre with 160 seats [1]] Lining the walls of Toerien’s theatres are photographs of the innumerable actors who have worked for him over the years as well as posters of past productions Sleuth, A Streetcar Named Desire, Equus, Amadeus, Agnes of God, M Butterfly, Master Class, Private Lives, Stage Struck, Quartemaine's Terms, Side By Side With Sondheim The works of such imminent British writers as Noel Coward, Tom Stoppard, Simon Gray, and Peter Shaffer have all been mounted in Toerien’s theatres. In the 80s Toerien brought Sir Cameron Macintosh’s Tomfoolery to South Africa. This association has resulted in South Africa receiving many of the phenomenal successes of Macintosh's London musical theatre, Les Miserables, a co-production with Sir Cameron Mackintosh and Tsogo Sun; Cats which toured Scandinavia, the Far East and Beirut; The Phantom of the Opera which toured the Far East, ending in Hong Kong. These were followed by The Sleeping Beauty on Ice, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat and Jesus Christ Superstar which was originally banned in South Africa as blasphemous after it opened on Broadway in 1971, which travels to Athens in 2007. 2007 will see the staging of The Lion King in a splendid new 1900 seater lyric theatre being especially built by Tsogo Sun at Montecasino in Johannesburg. It will be the tenth largest in the world. Another South African record was set by actor Tim Plewman who in 2006 ended an eight year run of Rob Becker's Defending the Caveman. Plewman, had given 1500 performances of this one man show. Toerien has not limited himself to theatre management. During the period of South Africa’s transition he worked extensively with WESTAG Task Group on the Performing Arts sub-committee. In this area of civic responsibility he also gave of his expertise on the CAPAB board to assist them in their adjustment to become Artscape. He was also on the board of the National Arts Council and the Western Cape Cultural Commission. TOERIEN, Pieter, It's a Boy! Robert Kirby, [[Keith Grenville] (dir). The play was a return visit to the Baxter in 83 which played to packed houses last August during the Baxter 82 season. Then transferred to JHB by Pieter Toerien. Playing at the Academy. Agnes of God, Mass Appeal, the Real Thing, Side by Side By Sondheim, 1983. Clarence Darrow, Grahamstown Festival, 1984. Little Shop of Horrors, Richard Loring, (ass. Prod) Cameron Mackintosh, produced by Constance Grappo, set by Edward T Gianfrancesco, Jannie Swanepoel’s lighting, Andre Hatting, Mike Huff, Michael Blaise, Vocalists: Stella Khumalo, Connie Chiume & Mandisa Dlanga, Andre Huguenet Theatre, Jhb & Baxter, 1985.
Sources
Television documentary: To the Edge by Peter Bode of The Star newspaper.
'n Kwarteeu van energie by Mariana Malan in Die Burger Monday 18 November 2013, p. 8.
Tucker, 1997;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pieter_Toerien)
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