Bitef

1995 Barcelona Critics Award for Best Foreign Production for The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol 1995 Laurence Olivier Award Nomination for Best Director (Simon Mcßurney) for The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol 1994 Manchester Evening News Award for Best Actress in a Visiting Production (Lilo Baur) for The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol 1994 Time Out Theatre Award for The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol 1994 TMA/Martini Award for Best UK Touring Production for The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol 1994 Sainsbury’s Arts for All Award 1994 Dublin Theatre Festival Award for Best Visiting Production for The Street of Crocodiles 1994 L’Académie Québécoise du Théâtre Award or Best Foreign Production for The Street of Crocodiles 1993 Manchester Evening News Award for Best Visiting Production for The Street of Crocodiles 1993 Winner of the 1993 Prudential Arts Award for Theatre 1993 Four Laurence Olivier Award Nominations: Best Director, Best Lighting Desinger, Best New Play, Best Choreographer for The Street of Crocodiles 1993 Barcelona Critis Award for Best Foreign Production for The Street of Crocodiles 1990 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress (Kathryn Hunter) for The Visit 1989 Time Out Theatre Award for Best Director (Annabel Arden) for The Visit 1988 Laurence Olivier Award Nomination for Outstanding Achievement for Season At The Almeida Theatre 1987 Sunday Tribune Award for Best Touring Company in Ireland 1986 Time Out Award for Best Touring Company for Please Please Please 1985 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Perrier Award for More Bigger Snacks Now.

COMPLICITE S MAJOR SHOWS SO FAR 1996 Foe based on the novel by J. M. Coetzee. Adapted by Mark Wheatley. Co-directed by Annie Castledine and Marcello Magni. From an idea by Annabel Arden. A coproduction with the West Yorkshire Playhouse. 1994-6 The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol adapted from John Berger’s short story by Simon Mcßurney and Mark Wheatley. Directed by Simon Mcßurney. 1994-5 Out of a House Walked a Man... musical scenes from

the writings of Daniil Kharms. Devised by the company from an adaptation by Jozef Houben, Simon Mcßurney and Mark Wheatley. Directed by Simon Mcßurney. Original score composed by Gerard Mcßurney. Co-production with the Royal National Theatre. Opened December 1994. 19924 The Street of Crocodiles based on the writing of Bruno Schulz. Devised by the company from an adaptation by Simon Mcßurney with Mark Wheatley, directed by Simon Mcßurney. Co-production with the Royal National Theatre. Toured nationally and internationally in 1993 and ‘94 1992 The Winter’s Tale by William Shakespeare directed by Annabel Arden with Annie Castledine. 1991 The Visit by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, rerived, expanded and redesigned for The Lyttelton, Royal National Theatre 1990 Help: I’m Alive inspired by a classic 16th century Commedia dell’Arte text >ll Bilora< by Ruzzante. Six week run at The Almeida and national tour 1989 The Visit, by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, revised for a national and international tour taking in the Hong Kong Festival and Perth, Australia. 1989 Anything for a Quiet Life, a television adaptation of the stage show for Signals on C 4. Complicité fan and fantasist, Terry Gilliam introduces the film. 1989 My Army Parts One and Two. A devastatingly accurate vision of Tim Barlow’s experiences with the military through the 50’s and 60’s 1989 The Lamentations of Thel - the opera by Dimitri Smirnov based on Blake’s »Book of Thel<, premiered at The Almeida Contemporary Music Festival involving over 40 young musicians, 1988 The Almeida Theatre - At the invitation of Pierre Audi Complicité presented a 15 week season of their work, collaborating with 60 people, including workshops and two foyer exhibitions. Twelve shows were performed including four world premieres: The Visit, The Phantom Violin by Gerard Mcßurney, Ave Maria and My Army, two solo shows. National and international tours with five of these productions, 1987 Anything for a Quiet Life, a show about fear, bureaucracy, Town Halls, committee meetings and despair, 1987 Burning Ambition - Complicité devised their first fiction film, commissioned by the BBC and shown on BBC 2 in July ’BB, 1987 Alice in Wonderland - a benefit evening for Chile, a large scale special adaptation of this classic story, rehearsed in two days with a cast of 40 actors, singers and performers. 1986 Huge Tenderness & Remarkable Idiocy, an exploration of the styles and techniques contributing to Complicite’s work. 1986 Foodstuff, about eating. Devised at The Albany, Empire, with 20 youth theatre members and 12 actors from