Trevor Nunn Quotes
23 quotations by Trevor Nunn
You are faced with the choice: either my integrity remains intact and this is the work that ends up on the screen, or I have to leave, and I have to be known to have left. |
When I was at Stratford, the very first thing that I was commissioned to work on was trying to make a musical out of the documentary material about the General Strike, which was the next big historical event in England, after the First World War. |
What you're doing is putting into professional play the way that you relate to other people, the way that you analyze and relate to a written text, the way that you would persuade anybody to do anything. It has to do with listening, with humility and a sense of yourself. |
Trying to get work and life in balance is the most difficult thing. I have that knowledge now, but it was a setback at the time. |
The first big break was winning a scholarship to go to Cambridge University. I was very lucky, because my parents couldn't have afforded a university education for me. Without a scholarship I couldn't possibly have gone. |
The film director, in many instances, has to swallow somebody else's decision about the final form of something. It's so hard as to be intolerable. |
So, through all that early professional career I would occasionally do a musical, a pantomime or a play with songs. The next stop would be a Shakespeare, or an Ibsen, or a play by a brand new writer who had never done anything in the theater before. |
So I grew up in an area where it wasn't expected that I would have a kind of scholastic career, or go to grammar school, or anything like that. |
Peter Hall was just organizing the Royal Shakespeare Company. It was going to be an ensemble, it was going to be in repertory, it was going to have a home in London as well as in the Midlands, and all of those things were happening at that time. |
One fine day I discovered that more complex plays really have to be directed. |
In the commercial theater, I've been pretty fortunate. The producers that I've worked with have allowed me to define the artistic integrity, the artistic limits of the work. |
In my early years, my father was away as a soldier in the war. When he came back, work was very difficult to come by. Even though he was a highly skilled man, a maker of furniture, the payment for that work was very poor. |
In a way, I have to have a dictatorship. I can't be told that I'm wrong. That conflicts with what I was saying earlier about listening. It isn't to do with receiving criticism and responding to other views, it's who has that last decision. |
If you feel very deeply about something, it's not possible to sacrifice your integrity about that. |
If you can't fully believe in your ideas, it very quickly communicates to a group of actors who need something to hold onto. They need to believe that whatever criticism, whatever comment is received, is meant. |
I've never had any feeling of disconnection between the classical theater, or the contemporary theater, or musical theater, or the thing that we call opera. |
I would be terribly disappointed if anything would get in the way of my being cast in something, or if performances were canceled. It was a fix that I obviously needed. |
I tend to arrive in the rehearsal process with very strongly developed ideas about what I want to do. But I don't like those ideas to be things that are not subject to change, or subject to development, or subject to challenge. |
I so wanted to perform, and I grasped every opportunity. |
I love to have as much input as possible. |
I had a feeling about Shakespeare's soliloquies, that there should be a real exchange between the actor and the audience. |
I always believe it's better to have 30 imaginations working on a project, rather than one imagination telling the other 29 what to do. |
A lot of performing instincts are involved in the business of direction, but so is analysis and having a sense of literature. |