Indhu Rubasingham

Indhu Rubasingham, MBE (b. 1970), is a British theatre director and the current[1] artistic director of the Kiln Theatre (formerly the Tricycle Theatre) in Kilburn, London. In December 2023, it was announced she would take over as Artistic Director of the National Theatre in 2025 from Rufus Norris.[2]

Indhu Rubasingham
OccupationDirector
Known forArtistic Director of Kiln Theatre

Early life

Born in Sheffield to Tamil parents from Sri Lanka[3] in 1970, Rubasingham was educated at Nottingham Girls' High School[4][citation needed], after which she studied drama at Hull University,[5] where she received an honorary doctorate in 2017.[6]

Career

Freelance directing

Soon after graduating from Hull University, Rubasingham received an Arts Council bursary to work as a trainee director at the Theatre Royal Stratford East, where she assisted director Mike Leigh. She then worked as a freelance theatre director for over fifteen years and during this time held posts as an associate director at the Gate Theatre, the Young Vic, and the Birmingham Repertory Theatre.[7]

She has worked across the UK and internationally. Her focus has been predominantly directing new writing and developing exciting voices. Themes that often arise in her work explore and examine ideas around British identity and the threads of human connection that crosses race, culture and identity; telling stories from different perspectives and specificity that reveals the universality of the human spirit.[8]

Rubasingham had a long involvement with the international department at the Royal Court Theatre when headed by Elyse Dodgson[9] which allowed her to forge relationships with playwrights from Cuba, Mexico, Brazil, Uganda and India. Indhu has also had a longstanding relationship with Sundance Theatre Lab (2011–2019),[10] under the artistic directorship of Philip Himberg. She has directed radio plays for BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 3 and the BBC World Service.

She is a trustee for the Royal Opera House,[11] Metroland (Brent),[12] the George Devine Award and the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. Previous trustee positions include Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts, British Council Advisory Board and the Regional Theatre Young Directors Scheme, for which Rubasingham is currently a patron. She is on the judging panel for the Channel 4 Playwriting Scheme[13] and the Phil Fox Award for Playwriting. Since 2021, she has been on the judging panel of The Women's Prize for Playwriting, becoming Chair in 2023.[14]

In 2017, Rubasingham was awarded an MBE in the 2017 New Year Honours List.[citation needed]

As artistic director

Indhu Rubasingham succeeded Nicolas Kent as artistic director of the Tricycle Theatre in 2012. In April 2018, after a capital renovation, the theatre's name was changed to the Kiln Theatre.[15]  

Rubasingham's mission for Kiln Theatre is to make theatre for all by making space for unheard/ignored voices to be part of the mainstream and be a local theatre with an international vision.[16] The theatre sits in the Borough of Brent.

Rubasingham oversaw a £9 million major renovation of the building, which reopened in 2018.[17] The revamped building includes an adaptable stage in the larger 292-seat theatre, better sightlines, new lighting facilities, a new café, improved disabled access and gender-neutral toilets.

Under her artistic leadership, the creative engagement programme aims to champion the imagination, aspiration and potential of the Brent community young and old.[18]

During her time as artistic director, her production of Red Velvet by Lolita Chakrabarti was transferred to the West End's Garrick Theatre[19] and St Ann's Warehouse Theater in New York. Her production of Moira Buffini's Handbagged was transferred to the West End's Vaudeville Theatre prior to a UK tour before playing at 59e59 in New York and Washington, D.C.'s Round House Theatre.[citation needed] Her production of Zadie Smith's The Wife of Willesden has transferred to American Repertory Theatre, Harvard University and Brooklyn Academy of Music.

Rubasingham programmed Florian Zeller's ‘Family Trilogy,’ including The Son, which was transferred to the West End's Duke of York's Theatre in 2019; and The Father, which was transferred to the West End's Wyndham's Theatre in 2015 before being moved to the West End's Duke of York's Theatre in 2016. The Father was adapted for the 2020 film starring Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Colman, directed by Zeller.

In August 2014, while she was artistic director, she was at the centre of an antisemitism controversy over the funding of the UK Jewish Film Festival, intended to have been held at the theatre. Rubasingham said it was "inappropriate" to host a festival part-funded by the Israeli embassy[20] given "the current conflict in Israel and Gaza". She later claimed she had been subject to "vitriol from some elements of the Jewish community" and "people saying they are going to withdraw money".[21] The theatre eventually reversed the decision and issued a public apology, allowing the festival to go ahead.[22]

Awards

  • Best Director, The Father and the Assassin, Eastern Eye Arts, Culture & Theatre Awards (2023)[23]
  • Kiln Theatre ‘Best London Theatre’ The Stage Awards (2021)[24]
  • Best Director, White Teeth, ACTA – Eastern Eye's Arts Culture & Theatre Awards (2019)
  • Tonic Awards (2017)
  • Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre, Handbagged (2014)
  • The Arts & Culture Award, Asian Women of Achievement Awards (2012)
  • Liberty Human Rights Award (2010)
  • The Carlton Multi-Cultural Achievement Award for Performing Arts (2001)

Productions

YearPlayProductionNotes
2023The Wife of Willesden by Zadie SmithBrooklyn Academy of MusicNY premiere
2023The Wife of Willesden by Zadie SmithAmerican Repertory Theater, Harvard UniversityUS premiere
2022Kerry Jackson by April de AngelisNational TheatreUK premiere
2022The Wife of Willesden by Zadie SmithKiln TheatreFirst major revival
2022Handbagged by Moira BuffiniKiln TheatreFirst major revival
2022The Father and the Assassin by Anupama ChandrasekharNational TheatreWorld premiere
2021The Wife of Willesden by Zadie SmithKiln TheatreWorld premiere
2021The Invisible Hand by Ayad AkhtarKiln TheatreFirst major revival
2021Girl on an Altar (Rehearsed Reading) by Marina CarrKiln TheatreLive Stream. Co-directed with Susie McKenna
2020The Invisible Hand (Rehearsed Reading) by Ayad AkhtarKiln TheatreLive Stream
2020Pass Over by Antoinette NwanduKiln TheatreUK premiere
2019When the Crows Visit by Anupama ChandrasekharKiln TheatreWorld Premiere
2019Handbagged by Moira Buffini59E59 TheatersNew York Premiere, produced by Round House Theatre
2019Wife by Samuel AdamsonKiln TheatreWorld Premiere
2018White Teeth by Zadie Smith, adapted by Stephen SharkeyKiln TheatreWorld Premiere
2018Holy Sh!t by Alexis ZegermanKiln TheatreWorld Premiere
2018The Great Wave by Francis TurnlyNational TheatreWorld Premiere. A co-production with Kiln Theatre
2017Ugly Lies the Bone by Lindsey FerrentinoNational Theatre
2016The Invisible Hand by Ayad AkhtarTricycle TheatreUK Premiere
2015A Wolf in Snakeskin Shoes by Marcus GardleyTricycle Theatre
2015The Motherfucker with the Hat by Stephen Adly GuirgisNational TheatreWinner of Best Play and nominated for Best Director at Evening Standard Theatre Awards.
2015Multitudes by John HollingworthTricycle Theatre
2014The House That Will Not Stand by Marcus GardleyTricycle Theatre
2013Handbagged by Moira BuffiniTricycle TheatreWest End transfer, Vaudeville Theatre, in 2014
2012Red Velvet by Lolita ChakrabartiTricycle TheatreWinner Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre Laurence Olivier Awards. New York transfer, St. Ann's Warehouse, in 2014. UK tour in 2015. West End transfer, Garrick Theatre, in 2016
2012Belong by Bola AgbajeRoyal Court Theatre
2011Stones in His Pockets by Marie JonesTricycle Theatre
2010Ruined by Lynn NottageAlmeida Theatre
2010Women, Power and Politics by various authors including Moira Buffini and Rebecca LenkiewiczTricycle Theatre
2010Disconnect by Anupama ChandrasekharRoyal Court Theatre
2009Detaining Justice by Bola AgbajeTricycle Theatre
2009The Great Game (with Nicolas Kent )Tricycle TheatreAlso US Tour, finishing at The Pentagon, Washington.
2008Wuthering Heights, adapted by April De Angelis from the novel by Emily BrontëBirmingham Rep
2007Free Outgoing by Anupama ChandrasekharTraverse Theatre
2007Pure Gold by Michael BhimSoho Theatre
2007Heartbreak House by G.B. ShawWatford Palace Theatre
2007Free Outgoing by Anupama ChandrasekharRoyal Court Theatre
2006Sugar Mummies by Tanika GuptaRoyal Court Theatre
2006Fabulation by Lynn NottageTricycle Theatre
2005The Morris by Helen BlakemanLiverpool Everyman
2004Anna in the Tropics by Nilo CruzHampstead Theatre
2004Another America a new opera by Errolyn WallenSadler's Wells
2003Yellowman by Dael OrlandersmithLiverpool Everyman and Hampstead Theatre
2003Rhinoceros by IonescoUCDavis, California
2002The Misanthrope by Molière, in an adaptation by Martin CrimpMinerva Theatre, Chichester
2002Bombay DreamsApollo VictoriaAssociate Director
2002Romeo and JulietChichester Festival Theatre
2001Secret Rapture by David HareMinerva Theatre, Chichester
2001Clubland by Roy WilliamsRoyal Court Theatre
2001RamayanaNational Theatre
2000The Waiting Room by Tanika GuptaNational Theatre
2000RamayanaBirmingham Rep
1999Time of Fire by Charles MulekwaBirmingham Rep
1999Lift Off by Roy WilliamsRoyal Court Theatre
1998The Crutch by Ruwanthie DechickeraRoyal Court Theatre (Upstairs)
1998Starstruck by Roy WilliamsTricycle TheatreReceived the John Whiting Award and an EMMAs Award.
1998Kaahini by Maya ChowdhryBirmingham Rep
1997A River Sutra by Gita Mehta adapted by Tanika GuptaThree Mills Island StudiosReceived Diverse Acts Award from LAB.
1997Shakuntala by Kalidasa adapted by Peter OswaldGate Theatre
1996Storming Young Writers FestivalRoyal Court Theatre (Upstairs)
1996Gulp Fiction by Trish CookeTheatre Royal Stratford East
1996No Boys' Cricket Club by Roy WilliamsTheatre Royal Stratford East
1996Sugar Dollies by Klaus ChattenGate Theatre
1996A Doll's House by Henrik IbsenYoung Vic Studio
1994/1995D'yer Eat With Your Fingers?!Theatre Royal Stratford East
1994Party Girls by Debbie PlentieTheatre Royal Stratford East

References