Peter Curtis

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Peter Curtis (1919-2006) was an actor, director, and theatre manager.

Also known by his stage name Peter Craig.

Biography

Born in England in 1919, he graduated at the University of London and later became involved in theatrical productions in Salisbury. He attended training courses through the British Drama league and joined the Questors Theatre in 1946, where he acted in and directed numerous productions. He also performed for Richmond Stage Society. His notable roles included Sir Harry Flutter in The Discovery, Archer in The Beaux Stratagem, Jack Worthing in The Importance of Being Earnest and Charleston in Thunder Rock.

In 1951 he came to South Africa with his wife Jennifer Craig and son Craig Curtis, going on to appear in many successful theatrical productions in Cape Town, Durban and Port Elizabeth under the name Peter Craig.

In 1967 he was appointed Artistic Director of the CAPAB English Company (alongside Pieter Fourie as Artistic Director of the Afrikaans company) and staged over 110 productions which built a strong reputation for the company across South Africa.

In 1978 he was appointed as Artistic Director of the Youth Drama Company (CAPAB), but in 1979 he opted to return to England and later moved to Canada to join the Citadel Theatre Company in Edmonton. He also directed and performed for other companies in Canada and the USA. In later years, his most successful performances were as "Sir" in Ronald Harwood’s The Dresser (1984) and "Cauchon" in Nicol Williamson’s production of The Lark (1983).

He passed away in Owen Sound, Ontario in 2006.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

After moving to South Africa in 1951, he acted and directed numerous productions under the stage name of Peter Craig. These included works for different companies in Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, and Durban. In 1967, he returned to Cape Town and was appointed Artistic Director of the CAPAB English Drama Company, a position which he held until 1978. In this position, he staged over 110 productions, which established the excellent reputation of the company. He was an advocate of balancing a mixture of classical and modern work including 16 South African plays. His greatest success was persuading Athol Fugard to produce his plays in South Africa. This resulted in the South African premiere of People are Living There and the world premiere of Boesman and Lena. These CAPAB productions were considered landmarks in South African theatre and confirmed Fugard’s reputation as a leading playwright on the world stage. A strong opponent of apartheid, Curtis considered the playwright’s boycott to be counterproductive to social change and persuaded a number of European playwrights to allow their works to be performed in South Africa. These included the South African premieres of Hadrian VII by Peter Luke, Biography by Max Frisch and the world premiere of Shrivings by Peter Shaffer. Each of the three productions received an outstanding critical reception.


===Theatre Work 1951 to 1967 (as Peter Craig)===.

His performances during this period include The River Line (1954), As You Like It (1954), The Constant Wife (1954), The Rivals (as Sir Anthony Absolute, 1955), Medea (as Jason, 1955), Mirandolina (as the Knight of Ripafratta, 1956), The Summer House (1956), Journey’s End (1956), The Living Room (1956), A Midsummer Nights Dream (as Bottom, Maynardville 1957), The Autumn Crocus (as Andreis Steiner, PEMADS, 1959), Inherit the Wind (as Mathew Harrison Brady, Durban 1961), Thunder Rock (as Charleston, Durban, 1964). Critics particularly praised his performances as Bottom, the Knight of Ripafratta and Sir Anthony Absolute. He also received notable success as Andreis Steiner in Leontine Sagan’s production of The Autumn Crocus. His directing credits included The Young Elizabeth (1953), The Living Room (Port Elizabeth, 1958), The Second Mrs. Tanqueray (Durban, 1961), Mirandolina (Durban,1962), Thunder Rock (Durban, 1964), and Medea (Lyric Theatre).

Theatre work 1967 to 1989 (as Peter Curtis).

In 1987, Curtis was appointed as Artistic Director of the Cape Performing Arts Board (CAPAB) English Company, a position he held until 1968. Over the course of 12 years, he staged over 120 productions, and the company established an excellent reputation throughout South Africa. As Artistic Director he was responsible for the staging of a wide range of theatre providing unique opportunities for local actors, directors and writers to grow their theatrical expertise. These included Portuguese Match (1967), Dock Brief (1967), The Best of Dorothy Parker (1967), Heartbreak House (1967), The Happy Journey and Garden at the Threshold (1967), All Roads Lead to Rome (1967), The Beaux Stratagem (1967), Winter Journey (1967), The King’s Mare (1967), Peter Pan (1968), Seven Ages (1968), Candida (1968), The Lion in Winter (1968), The Chalk Garden (1968), Cape Charade (1968), Don’t Let Summer Come (1968), A Suite in Three Keys (1968), Fury (1968), Dangerous Corner (1968), The Lesson (1968), Antigone (1969), School for Scandal (1969), Rosencrantz and Guilderstern are Dead (1968), People are Living There (1969), Twelfth Night (1969), Wholly Matrimony (1969), The Sniper and the 65th Square (1969), Boesman and Lena (1969), Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1970), The Way of the World (1970), The Cherry Orchard (1970), Man of Destiny and O’Flaherty VC (1970), Tango (1970), The Importance of Being Earnest (1970), Episode on an Autumn Evening (1970), Talk of the Devil (1971), Orestes (1971), Winners (1971), Enter a Free Man (1971), Dear Antoine (1971, Opening play at the Nico Malan Theatre), Hadrian VII (1971), Strindberg without Tears (1971), Biography (1971), The Daughter-in-Law (1971), Hedda Gabler (1972), McCullough (1972), The Real Inspector Hound and Police (1971), Under Milk Wood (1972), Macbeth (1972), The Good and Faithful Servant (1972), The Stronger and Orison (1972), The Friday Bench (1973), See How They Run (1973), Miss Julie(1973), The Collector (1973, Annie Get Your Gun (1973), A Sleep of Prisoners (1973), The Mandrake (1973), School for Wives (1973), Mother Courage and Her Children (1973), London Assurance (1974), A Collier’s Friday Night (1974), Lorenzo: A Biography of D.H.Lawrence (1974), The Game of Kings (1974), King Lear (1974), Present Laughter (1974), A Tribute to Noel Coward (1974), King Stag (1974), Three Cheers for President Charlie (1974), The Alchemist (1975), Story Theatre (1975), Rookery Nook (1975), Dear Janet Rosenberg, Dear Mr.Kooning (1975), Antony and Cleopatra (1975), A Doll’s House (1975), The First Night of Pygmalion (1975) Good Grief (1975), Pygmalion (1975), The Story of an African Farm (1975), You Never Can Tell (1975), Julius Caesar (CAPAB at Maynardville,1976), Shrivings (1976), Mr. Rhodes and the Princess (1976), Playboy of the Western World (1976), Richard III (1976), Fury (1976), Out of Sea (1976), Much Ado About Nothing (CAPAB at Maynardville 1977), The Misanthrope (1977), Arms and the Man (1977), Roulette (1977), Hamlet (1977), Twelfth Night (CAPAB at Maynardville 1978), Private Lives (1978), Time-Sneeze (1978), Tartuffe (1978), Hay Fever (1978). During and after his tenure as Artistic Director of CAPAB English Drama Curtis acted and directed for CAPAB, the Little Theatre, Carousel Productions and the UCT Dramatic Society as well as radio productions. His directing credits included Medea (UCT, 1969), Antigone (CAPAB,1969), The Importance of Being Earnest (CAPAB,1970), London Assurance (1974), Pygmalion (1975), Blithe Spirit (1976) Hay Fever (1978) and You never Can Tell (1979). Critics agreed that Curtis had a particular skill in directing period comedy and most of these productions received excellent reviews and record attendance. The Importance of Being Earnest toured to Johannesburg and Curtis received a nomination for a Three Leaf Award for Best Direction. The cast included the outstanding actor Michael Atkinsion, with whom Curtis formed a strong partnership over more than twenty CAPAB productions. As an actor, Curtis received notable success as Bolingbroke in Richard II (Maynardville 1968), as Falstaff in Henry IV part 1 (Little Theatre, 1968), as Master Ford in The Merry Wives of Windsor (1969), as George Buchanan in Joe Orton’s The Good and Faithful Servant, as Krapp in Krapp’s Last Tape (UCT, 1974) and as Enobarbus in Antony and Cleopatra (CAPAB, 1975). Critics identified Falstaff and George Buchanan as being his “finest roles”.

As actor he has appeared in The Beaux Stratagem (1967), Henry IV (as Falsatff in the Little Theatre, 1968), A Midsummer Night's Dream, Macbeth, Richard II, The Merry Wives of Windsor (Maynardville, January 1969), See How They Run, Antony and Cleopatra, Richard III, Hamlet, The Good and Faithful Servant (1972). Tartuffe (1978).

He directed The Importance of Being Earnest (1970), Antigone, Pygmalion (1975), London Assurance (1974), Blithe Spirit (1976), Private Lives, Arms and the Man (1977), Hay Fever (1978).

Awards, etc

Sources

Tartuffe theatre programme, 1978.

Various entries in the NELM catalogue.


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