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{{Short description|English theatre director}}
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| occupation = Theatre director
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'''Jeremy Herrin''' is an English theatre director. He is the Artistic Director of [[Headlong Theatre]]. He trained at both the [[Royal Court Theatre]] and the [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]].<ref>http://www.curtisbrown.co.uk/tft/client/user1671/</ref>
'''Jeremy Herrin''' is an English theatre director. He is one of the founding directors of Second Half Productions.


==Career==
==Career==
Having trained at the [[Royal Conservatoire of Scotland|Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama]] in Glasgow, Herrin was an assistant director under [[Stephen Daldry]] at the Royal Court Theatre from 1993–95. He then was a staff director at the [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]] from 1995 to 1999. In 2000 he became Associate Director at Live Theatre, Newcastle upon Tyne.
Having trained at the [[Royal Conservatoire of Scotland|Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama]] in Glasgow, Herrin was an assistant director under [[Stephen Daldry]] at the Royal Court Theatre from 1993 to 1995. He then was a staff director at the [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]] from 1995 to 1999. In 2000 he became associate director at Live Theatre, Newcastle upon Tyne, where his credits included plays by [[Richard Bean]] and Joe Harbot.


In 2007 he directed the critically successful ''[[That Face]]'' by [[Polly Stenham]] at the Royal Court Upstairs, which subsequently transferred to the [[West End theatre|West End]]. He was nominated for the [[Evening Standard Award]] for Best Director for Stenham's ''Tusk Tusk'' in 2009. He became the Deputy Artistic Director at the Royal Court to [[Dominic Cooke]] in 2009. He has directed a number of new plays at the Royal Court including ''[[Spur of the Moment (play)|Spur of the Moment]]'' by [[Anya Reiss]], [[Richard Bean]]'s ''[[The Heretic (play)|The Heretic]]'' and ''No Quarter'', also by Stenham, in 2013.<ref>[http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/no-quarter "No Quarter at The Royal Court Theatre"], ''Royal Court Theatre''. Retrieved 10 June 2013.</ref>
His breakthrough show was the critically successful ''[[That Face]]'' by [[Polly Stenham]] at the Royal Court Upstairs in 2007, which subsequently transferred to the [[West End theatre|West End]]. He was nominated for the [[Evening Standard Award]] for Best Director for Stenham's ''Tusk Tusk'' in 2009. He became the deputy artistic director at the Royal Court to [[Dominic Cooke]] in 2009. He has directed a number of new plays at the Royal Court including ''[[Spur of the Moment (play)|Spur of the Moment]]'' by [[Anya Reiss]], [[Richard Bean]]'s ''[[The Heretic (play)|The Heretic]]'' and ''No Quarter'', also by Stenham, in 2013.<ref>[http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/no-quarter "No Quarter at The Royal Court Theatre"], ''Royal Court Theatre''. Retrieved 10 June 2013.</ref>


Herrin made his Shakespearean debut at the [[Globe Theatre]] in 2011, directing [[Eve Best]] in ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]''. In 2011 Herrin directed several West End productions, including a well received revival of [[Alan Ayckbourn]]'s ''[[Absent Friends (play)|Absent Friends]]''. He also directed the UK premiere of [[David Hare (dramatist)|David Hare]]'s ''[[The Vertical Hour]]'' as well as the world premiere and West End transfer of Hare's ''[[South Downs (play)|South Downs]]''. He has directed [[Roger Allam]] in ''[[Uncle Vanya]]'' and in ''[[The Tempest]]'' at [[Shakespeare's Globe]].
Herrin made his Shakespearean debut at the [[Shakespeare's Globe|Globe Theatre]] in 2011, directing [[Eve Best]] in ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]''. In 2011 Herrin directed several West End productions, including a well received revival of [[Alan Ayckbourn]]'s ''[[Absent Friends (play)|Absent Friends]]''. He also directed the UK premiere of [[David Hare (dramatist)|David Hare]]'s ''[[The Vertical Hour]]'' as well as the world premiere and West End transfer of Hare's ''[[South Downs (play)|South Downs]]''. He has directed [[Roger Allam]] in ''[[Uncle Vanya]]'' and in ''[[The Tempest]]'' at [[Shakespeare's Globe]]. He was nominated as Best Director in the 2013 Olivier Awards for his work on ''[[This House (play)|This House]]'' by [[James Graham (playwright)|James Graham]] at the [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]].


In December 2013 he directed the world premiere of two plays adapted from [[Hilary Mantel]]'s novels ''[[Wolf Hall]]'' and ''[[Bring Up the Bodies]]'' for the [[Royal Shakespeare Company|RSC]].<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-22843852 "Wolf Hall director to become Headlong artistic director"], ''BBC News'', 10 June 2013. Retrieved 10 June 2013.</ref> The plays subsequently transferred to The Aldwych Theatre. In 2021 he directed the stage adaptation of Mantel's third novel in the trilogy ''[[The Mirror and the Light]]'', which played at the [[Gielgud Theatre]].
He was nominated as Best Director in the 2013 Olivier Awards for his work on "[[This House (play)|This House]]" by James Graham at the [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]].


In 2013, he succeeded [[Rupert Goold]] as the artistic director of [[Headlong (theatre company)|Headlong]], where he has directed a number of hit productions including [[Jennifer Haley]]'s ''[[The Nether]]'' (at [[Royal Court Theatre|The Royal Court Theatre]]), ''[[People, Places and Things]]'' by [[Duncan Macmillan (playwright)|Duncan Macmillan]] and ''[[Labour of Love (play)|Labour of Love]]'' by James Graham, featuring [[Martin Freeman]] and [[Tamsin Greig]] in the West End.
In December 2013 he directed the world premiere of two plays adapted from [[Hilary Mantel]]'s novels ''[[Wolf Hall]]'' and ''[[Bring Up the Bodies]]'' for the [[Royal Shakespeare Company|RSC]].<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-22843852 "Wolf Hall director to become Headlong artistic director"], ''BBC News'', 10 June 2013. Retrieved 10 June 2013.</ref> The plays subsequently transferred to The Aldwych Theatre.


In 2022 he directed [[Amy Adams]], who made her West End debut, in a production of [[Tennessee Williams]]' ''[[The Glass Menagerie]]'', his inaugural production for Second Half Productions.
In July 2014, he will direct the European premiere of Jennifer Haley's "[[The Nether]]" as a coproduction between [[Headlong Theatre]] at [[Royal Court Theatre|The Royal Court Theatre]].

His production of Best of Enemies based on the acclaimed documentary by Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville transferred from the Young Vic theatre to the West End, winning the South Bank Show’s best Production award. The show was broadcast on NT Live.

== Philosophy ==
Herrin describes himself as the archetypal [[Royal Court Theatre]] director, putting the writer before the director:<blockquote>You never want anything onstage that the writer doesn’t like. You need them to be entirely proud. What you want is to give them the deluxe version of their play... I try to disappear into the work. I’d hate for someone to say, in the way they do about other directors, ‘That’s a very Jeremy Herrin production.’ Ego’s a really dangerous thing in theatre. It’s a collegiate enterprise.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.thestage.co.uk/features/interviews/2013/jeremy-herrin-interviewed/|title=The vanishing man {{!}} Interviews {{!}} The Stage|date=2013-01-21|work=The Stage|access-date=2017-07-12|language=en-US}}</ref></blockquote>Herrin has been instrumental in the founding of [[Stage directors uk|Stage Directors UK]], an organisation that aims to create better working conditions and terms for directors.


==Theatre==
==Theatre==
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! scope="col" width="300" | Notes
! scope="col" width="300" | Notes
|-
|-
|2024
| 2012 || ''Hero'' || E. V. Crowe || [[Royal Court Theatre|Royal Court]]||
| ''[[Long Day's Journey into Night]]''
|[[Eugene O'Neill]]
|[[Wyndham's Theatre]]
|
|-
|-
| 2012 || ''[[This House (play)|This House]]'' || [[James Graham (playwright)|James Graham]] || [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]] ||Nominated for 2013 [[Laurence Olivier Award for Best Director]]
| 2017 || ''[[Labour of Love (play)|Labour of Love]]'' || [[James Graham (playwright)|James Graham]] || [[Noël Coward Theatre]] ||
|-
| 2017 || ''The House They Grew Up In'' || Deborah Bruce || [[Chichester Festival Theatre]] ||
|-
| 2017 || ''Common'' || D. C. Moore || [[Royal National Theatre]] - Olivier Stage ||
|-
| 2017 || ''Junkyard'' || [[Jack Thorne]] || [[Bristol Old Vic]], [[Theatr Clwyd]] and [[Rose Theatre, Kingston]] ||
|-
| 2016 || ''[[Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme]]'' || [[Frank McGuinness]] || UK Tour ||
|-
| 2015 || ''[[People, Places and Things]]'' || [[Duncan Macmillan (playwright)|Duncan Macmillan]] || [[Royal National Theatre]] - Dorfman Stage, 2016 transfer to [[Wyndham's Theatre]], 2017 transfer to [[St. Ann's Warehouse]] New York and 2017 UK tour ||
|-
| 2015 || ''[[The Absence of War]]'' || [[David Hare (playwright)|David Hare]] || UK Tour ||
|-
| 2014 || ''[[The Nether]]'' || [[Jennifer Haley]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] - 2015 transfer to Duke of York's Theatre ||
|-
| 2012 || ''[[This House (play)|This House]]'' || [[James Graham (playwright)|James Graham]] || [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]] - 2016 Transfer to Chichester Festival Theatre and Garrick Theatre, 2018 UK Tour ||Nominated for 2013 [[Laurence Olivier Award for Best Director]]
|-
|-
| 2012 || ''Children's Children'' ||Matthew Dunster || [[Almeida Theatre]] ||
| 2012 || ''Children's Children'' ||Matthew Dunster || [[Almeida Theatre]] ||
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| 2011 || ''[[South Downs (play)|South Downs]]'' || [[David Hare (playwright)|David Hare]] || [[Minerva Theatre, Chichester]] ||
| 2011 || ''[[South Downs (play)|South Downs]]'' || [[David Hare (playwright)|David Hare]] || [[Minerva Theatre, Chichester]] ||
|-
|-
| 2011 || ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' || [[William Shakespeare]] || [[Globe Theatre]] ||
| 2011 || ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' || [[William Shakespeare]] || [[Shakespeare's Globe|Globe Theatre]] ||
|-
|-
| 2011 || ''[[The Heretic (play)|The Heretic]]'' || [[Richard Bean]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Winner Best New Play [[Laurence Olivier Award]]
| 2011 || ''[[The Heretic (play)|The Heretic]]'' || [[Richard Bean]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Winner Best New Play [[Laurence Olivier Award]]
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| 2010 || ''[[Spur of the Moment (play)|Spur of the Moment]]'' || [[Anya Reiss]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Nominated for [[Evening Standard Award]] Best Director
| 2010 || ''[[Spur of the Moment (play)|Spur of the Moment]]'' || [[Anya Reiss]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Nominated for [[Evening Standard Award]] Best Director
|-
|-
| 2010 || ''The Laws of War'' || various authors<ref>http://www.whatsonstage.com/news/theatre/london/E8831273589550/Galas%3A+Court+Laws,+Cardboard+Seats+%26+Grateful.html</ref>|| [[Royal Court Theatre]] ||
| 2010 || ''The Laws of War'' || various authors<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.whatsonstage.com/news/theatre/london/E8831273589550/Galas%3A+Court+Laws,+Cardboard+Seats+%26+Grateful.html |title=Galas: Court Laws, Cardboard Seats & Grateful - - News - Whatsonstage.com |access-date=11 May 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110615164630/http://www.whatsonstage.com/news/theatre/london/E8831273589550/Galas%3A+Court+Laws%2C+Cardboard+Seats+%26+Grateful.html |archive-date=15 June 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>|| [[Royal Court Theatre]] ||
|-
|-
| 2009 || ''[[The Priory (play)|The Priory]]'' || [[Michael Wynne]]<ref>http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/whatson01.asp?play=559</ref> || [[Royal Court Theatre]]|| Winner Best Comedy [[Laurence Olivier Award]]
| 2009 || ''[[The Priory (play)|The Priory]]'' || [[Michael Wynne]]<ref>http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/whatson01.asp?play=559 {{Dead link|date=February 2022}}</ref> || [[Royal Court Theatre]]|| Winner Best Comedy [[Laurence Olivier Award]]
|-
|-
| 2009 || ''Tusk, Tusk'' || [[Polly Stenham]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Nominated for [[Evening Standard Award]] Best Director
| 2009 || ''Tusk, Tusk'' || [[Polly Stenham]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Nominated for [[Evening Standard Award]] Best Director
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| 2009 || ''Marble'' || [[Marina Carr]] || [[Abbey Theatre]] ||
| 2009 || ''Marble'' || [[Marina Carr]] || [[Abbey Theatre]] ||
|-
|-
| 2008 || ''[[The Family Reunion]]'' || [[T.S. Eliot]]<ref>http://www.whatsonstage.com/interviews/theatre/london/E8821226922273/Jeremy+Herrin+On+...+TS+Eliot,+The+Playwright.html</ref> || [[Donmar Warehouse]] ||
| 2008 || ''[[The Family Reunion]]'' || [[T.S. Eliot]]<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.whatsonstage.com/interviews/theatre/london/E8821226922273/Jeremy+Herrin+On+...+TS+Eliot,+The+Playwright.html| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110616101709/http://www.whatsonstage.com/interviews/theatre/london/E8821226922273/Jeremy+Herrin+On+...+TS+Eliot,+The+Playwright.html| archive-date = 2011-06-16| title = Jeremy Herrin On ... TS Eliot, The Playwright - - Interviews - Whatsonstage.com}}</ref> || [[Donmar Warehouse]] ||
|-
|-
| 2008 || ''[[The Vertical Hour]]'' || [[David Hare (playwright)|David Hare]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] ||
| 2008 || ''[[The Vertical Hour]]'' || [[David Hare (playwright)|David Hare]] || [[Royal Court Theatre]] ||
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| 2007 || ''[[Blackbird (play)|Blackbird]]'' || [[David Harrower]] || The Market Theatre ||
| 2007 || ''[[Blackbird (play)|Blackbird]]'' || [[David Harrower]] || The Market Theatre ||
|-
|-
| 2007 || ''[[That Face]]'' || [[Polly Stenham]]<ref>http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/files/downloads/THATFACErelease.doc.pdf</ref> || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Nominated for Best New Play in the [[Laurence Olivier Awards]]
| 2007 || ''[[That Face]]'' || [[Polly Stenham]]<ref>http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/files/downloads/THATFACErelease.doc.pdf {{Dead link|date=February 2022}}</ref> || [[Royal Court Theatre]] || Nominated for Best New Play in the [[Laurence Olivier Awards]]
|-
|-
| 2007 || ''Gathered Dust and Dead Skin'' || Joe Harbot || [[Live Theatre Company|Live Theatre]] ||
| 2007 || ''Gathered Dust and Dead Skin'' || Joe Harbot || [[Live Theatre Company|Live Theatre]] ||
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<references/>
<references/>


{{Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Director}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
{{Authority control}}
| NAME =Herrin, Jeremy

| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = British theatre director
| DATE OF BIRTH =
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Herrin, Jeremy}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Herrin, Jeremy}}
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:British theatre directors]]
[[Category:English theatre directors]]
[[Category:English theatre directors]]
[[Category:1970 births]]


{{theat-bio-stub}}

Latest revision as of 07:13, 13 April 2024

Jeremy Herrin
Born19 January 1970
New York City USA
Alma materRoyal Conservatoire of Scotland
OccupationTheatre director

Jeremy Herrin is an English theatre director. He is one of the founding directors of Second Half Productions.

Career[edit]

Having trained at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow, Herrin was an assistant director under Stephen Daldry at the Royal Court Theatre from 1993 to 1995. He then was a staff director at the National Theatre from 1995 to 1999. In 2000 he became associate director at Live Theatre, Newcastle upon Tyne, where his credits included plays by Richard Bean and Joe Harbot.

His breakthrough show was the critically successful That Face by Polly Stenham at the Royal Court Upstairs in 2007, which subsequently transferred to the West End. He was nominated for the Evening Standard Award for Best Director for Stenham's Tusk Tusk in 2009. He became the deputy artistic director at the Royal Court to Dominic Cooke in 2009. He has directed a number of new plays at the Royal Court including Spur of the Moment by Anya Reiss, Richard Bean's The Heretic and No Quarter, also by Stenham, in 2013.[1]

Herrin made his Shakespearean debut at the Globe Theatre in 2011, directing Eve Best in Much Ado About Nothing. In 2011 Herrin directed several West End productions, including a well received revival of Alan Ayckbourn's Absent Friends. He also directed the UK premiere of David Hare's The Vertical Hour as well as the world premiere and West End transfer of Hare's South Downs. He has directed Roger Allam in Uncle Vanya and in The Tempest at Shakespeare's Globe. He was nominated as Best Director in the 2013 Olivier Awards for his work on This House by James Graham at the National Theatre.

In December 2013 he directed the world premiere of two plays adapted from Hilary Mantel's novels Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies for the RSC.[2] The plays subsequently transferred to The Aldwych Theatre. In 2021 he directed the stage adaptation of Mantel's third novel in the trilogy The Mirror and the Light, which played at the Gielgud Theatre.

In 2013, he succeeded Rupert Goold as the artistic director of Headlong, where he has directed a number of hit productions including Jennifer Haley's The Nether (at The Royal Court Theatre), People, Places and Things by Duncan Macmillan and Labour of Love by James Graham, featuring Martin Freeman and Tamsin Greig in the West End.

In 2022 he directed Amy Adams, who made her West End debut, in a production of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie, his inaugural production for Second Half Productions.

His production of Best of Enemies based on the acclaimed documentary by Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville transferred from the Young Vic theatre to the West End, winning the South Bank Show’s best Production award. The show was broadcast on NT Live.

Philosophy[edit]

Herrin describes himself as the archetypal Royal Court Theatre director, putting the writer before the director:

You never want anything onstage that the writer doesn’t like. You need them to be entirely proud. What you want is to give them the deluxe version of their play... I try to disappear into the work. I’d hate for someone to say, in the way they do about other directors, ‘That’s a very Jeremy Herrin production.’ Ego’s a really dangerous thing in theatre. It’s a collegiate enterprise.[3]

Herrin has been instrumental in the founding of Stage Directors UK, an organisation that aims to create better working conditions and terms for directors.

Theatre[edit]

Stage productions directed by Jeremy Herrin
Year Title Author Theatre Notes
2024 Long Day's Journey into Night Eugene O'Neill Wyndham's Theatre
2017 Labour of Love James Graham Noël Coward Theatre
2017 The House They Grew Up In Deborah Bruce Chichester Festival Theatre
2017 Common D. C. Moore Royal National Theatre - Olivier Stage
2017 Junkyard Jack Thorne Bristol Old Vic, Theatr Clwyd and Rose Theatre, Kingston
2016 Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme Frank McGuinness UK Tour
2015 People, Places and Things Duncan Macmillan Royal National Theatre - Dorfman Stage, 2016 transfer to Wyndham's Theatre, 2017 transfer to St. Ann's Warehouse New York and 2017 UK tour
2015 The Absence of War David Hare UK Tour
2014 The Nether Jennifer Haley Royal Court Theatre - 2015 transfer to Duke of York's Theatre
2012 This House James Graham National Theatre - 2016 Transfer to Chichester Festival Theatre and Garrick Theatre, 2018 UK Tour Nominated for 2013 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Director
2012 Children's Children Matthew Dunster Almeida Theatre
2012 Absent Friends Alan Ayckbourn Harold Pinter Theatre
2011 Uncle Vanya Anton Chekhov Chichester Festival Theatre
2011 Death and the Maiden Ariel Dorfman Harold Pinter Theatre
2011 Haunted Child Joe Penhall Royal Court Theatre
2011 South Downs David Hare Minerva Theatre, Chichester
2011 Much Ado About Nothing William Shakespeare Globe Theatre
2011 The Heretic Richard Bean Royal Court Theatre Winner Best New Play Laurence Olivier Award
2010 Kin E.V. Crowe Royal Court Theatre
2010 Spur of the Moment Anya Reiss Royal Court Theatre Nominated for Evening Standard Award Best Director
2010 The Laws of War various authors[4] Royal Court Theatre
2009 The Priory Michael Wynne[5] Royal Court Theatre Winner Best Comedy Laurence Olivier Award
2009 Tusk, Tusk Polly Stenham Royal Court Theatre Nominated for Evening Standard Award Best Director
2009 Marble Marina Carr Abbey Theatre
2008 The Family Reunion T.S. Eliot[6] Donmar Warehouse
2008 The Vertical Hour David Hare Royal Court Theatre
2007 Statement of Regret Kwame Kwei-Armah National Theatre
2007 Blackbird David Harrower The Market Theatre
2007 That Face Polly Stenham[7] Royal Court Theatre Nominated for Best New Play in the Laurence Olivier Awards
2007 Gathered Dust and Dead Skin Joe Harbot Live Theatre
2005 The Lovers Bridget O'Connor Live Theatre
2004 Our Kind of Fun Alice de Smith Live Theatre
2004 Toast (new version) Richard Bean Live Theatre
2004 Sudden Collapses in Public Places Julia Darling Live Theatre
2004 Dirty Nets Karen Laws Live Theatre
2003 Smack Family Robinson Richard Bean Live Theatre
2002 Attachments Julia Darling Live Theatre
2001 From the Underworld Sean O'Brien Live Theatre
2000 The Last Post Julia Darling Live Theatre then tour in County Durham, Northumberland and Cumbria
1999 Personal Belongings Julia Darling Live Theatre

References[edit]

  1. ^ "No Quarter at The Royal Court Theatre", Royal Court Theatre. Retrieved 10 June 2013.
  2. ^ "Wolf Hall director to become Headlong artistic director", BBC News, 10 June 2013. Retrieved 10 June 2013.
  3. ^ "The vanishing man | Interviews | The Stage". The Stage. 21 January 2013. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  4. ^ "Galas: Court Laws, Cardboard Seats & Grateful - - News - Whatsonstage.com". Archived from the original on 15 June 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
  5. ^ http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/whatson01.asp?play=559 [dead link]
  6. ^ "Jeremy Herrin On ... TS Eliot, The Playwright - - Interviews - Whatsonstage.com". Archived from the original on 16 June 2011.
  7. ^ http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/files/downloads/THATFACErelease.doc.pdf [dead link]