Pádraig Cusack
Pádraig Cusack | |
---|---|
Born |
Dalkey, County Dublin, Ireland | 16 March 1962
Nationality | Irish |
Occupation | Theatre Producer |
Years active | 1992 – present |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Spouse(s) | Denise Cusack (née Harris) |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Cyril Cusack,[1] Maureen Cusack |
Relatives |
Niamh Cusack (sister) Max Irons (nephew) Richard Boyd Barrett (nephew) Finbar Lynch (brother-in-law) |
Pádraig Cusack (/paw-rick/; born 16 March 1962 in Dalkey, Co. Dublin, Ireland[2]) is an International Theatre Producer. The youngest son of the Irish actor Cyril Cusack and actress Maureen Cusack, he is the brother of actresses Niamh Cusack,[3] Sinéad Cusack and Sorcha Cusack, and half brother of Catherine Cusack. He has one brother, Paul Cusack, a television producer. Cusack's wife, Denise (née Harris) Cusack, is a designer; they have two daughters Megan (b. 1996) and Kitty (b.2000).[4]
Education
Cusack was educated bi-lingually in Irish and English, initially at Scoil Lorcáin in Monkstown, Co. Dublin and subsequently at Coláiste Eoin, Booterstown, Co. Dublin. Pádraig was a Taylor Exhibition music scholar at Trinity College, Dublin before winning a scholarship to train at the Royal Northern College of Music to be a professional cellist. In 1995, he returned to education to take a post-graduate degree in Business at University College, Cork.
Career
Having begun his career as a freelance musician, playing with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra and English National Opera North, an accident ended his career as a musician, resulting in him pursuing a career in arts administration. Initially he focused on the classical music sector, working at two leading concert venues in London, the Wigmore Hall and the Southbank Centre. In 1992 he made his first move in to theatre following his appointment as Administrative Director of West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds, alongside Jude Kelly where he produced a number of plays including the touring production of Five Guys Named Moe for Cameron Mackintosh Limited. In 1996, he was appointed Head of Planning of the Royal National Theatre under the outgoing artistic director, Sir Richard Eyre and subsequently with Sir Trevor Nunn, Sir Nicholas Hytner and Rufus Norris. In 2009 in became the National Theatre's Associate Producer. During this period he produced numerous productions for tour both in the UK and internationally, taking the work of the National Theatre to five continents. Alongside this, he has worked as a touring consultant for the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, the Royal Court Theatre in London, Canadian Stage in Toronto, TheEmergencyRoom and Corn Exchange in Dublin and Galway International Arts Festival. In June 2016, he was appointed Executive Producer of Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff, working alongside Artistic Director, Graeme Farrow.
In addition to his theatre producing work, Cusack offers representation to a number of Irish artists including the director Annie Ryan, the composers Mel Mercier and Tom Lane and the Movement Director Sue Mythen.
Selected Playography - International Touring
Productions | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Play | Director | Leading Actors | Notes |
1995 | The Servant of Two Masters by Carlo Goldoni adapted by Improbable Theatre | Phelim McDermott | Toby Jones | Leeds & Venice |
2002 | The PowerBook by Jeanette Winterson | Deborah Warner | Fiona Shaw, Saffron Burrows | London, Paris, Rome |
2005 | Primo by Primo Levi | Richard Wilson | Antony Sher | London, Cape Town, New York |
2005-2007 | Happy Days by Samuel Beckett | Deborah Warner | Fiona Shaw | London, Dublin, Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid, Epidaurus, Washington DC & New York |
2006-2008 | The History Boys by Alan Bennett | Nicholas Hytner | Richard Griffiths, Dominic Cooper. Frances de la Tour | London, UK Tour, Dublin, Hong Kong, Sydney, Wellington & New York |
2007 | Waves - a work devised by Katie Mitchell and the Company from the text of Virginia Woolf's novel, The Waves | Katie Mitchell | Anastasia Hille, Kate Duchêne | London, UK Tour, Amsterdam, Luxembourg & New York |
2009 | Phèdre by Jean Racine in a translation by Ted Hughes | Nicholas Hytner | Helen Mirren | London, Epidaurus & Washington DC |
2011 | John Gabriel Borkman by Henrik Ibsen in a new version by Frank McGuinness | James MacDonald | Alan Rickman, Fiona Shaw, Lindsay Duncan | Dublin & New York |
2012-2013 | One Man, Two Guvnors by Carlo Goldoni adapted by Richard Bean | Nicholas Hytner | James Corden/Owain Arthur | London, UK Tour, Hong Kong, Adelaide, Sydney, Melbourne & Auckland |
2014-2015 | Not I, Footfalls & Rockaby by Samuel Beckett | Walter Asmus | Lisa Dwan | London, Galway, UK Tour, Hong Kong, Perth & New York[5] |
2014-2016 | riverun adapted by Olwen Fouéré from Finnegans Wake by James Joyce | Olwen Fouéré | Olwen Fouéré | Galway, Dublin, London, Edinburgh, Adelaide, Sydney, Princeton, New York & Washington DC |
2015-2016 | A Girl is A Half-formed Thing by Eimear McBride adapted by Annie Ryan | Annie Ryan | Aoife Duffin | Dublin, Edinburgh, London, UK Tour & New York[6] |
References
- ↑ NNDB Cyril Cusack, http://www.nndb.com/people/313/000136902/
- ↑ IMDB.com Pádraig Cusack http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1761216/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm#trivia
- ↑ Edworthy, Sarah (15 May 2009). "My Perfect Weekend: Niamh Cusack". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2 October 2009
- ↑ MyHeritage.com - www.myheritage.com/site-134983462/roisin-cusack
- ↑ Harvey Theater, BAM, New York, Next Wave Festival 2014 http://www.bam.org/theater/2014/not-i-footfalls-rockaby
- ↑ Baryshnikov Arts Centre, April, 2015 http://bacnyc.org/performances/performance/the-corn-exchange