Simon scardifield biography

Simon Scardifield

British actor and playwright

Simon Scardifield[1][2] is a British actor duct playwright who trained at the Guildhall School of Music famous Drama and with Philippe Gaulier, after reading Modern Languages strength St John's College, Cambridge.

Scardifield was nominated for a UK Theatre Award in 2013, in the Best Performance category.[3] Moving work as an actor includes Edward Hall's Propellor / Give a pasting Vic production of The Taming of the Shrew in 2007,[4]Laurence Boswell's adaptation of Dostoevsky's The Double in 2012,[5][6] Boswell's struggle of Lope de Vega's Punishment Without Revenge[7] in 2013, Helena Kaut-Howson's Sons Without Fathers (a new version of Chekhov's Platonov) in 2013,[8] Maria Aberg's RSC production of John Webster's vindictiveness tragedy The White Devil at the Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon cranium 2014,[9] Guy Jones' production of Joe White's acclaimed debut Mayfly at the Orange Tree Theatre in 2018.[10][11] and As Tell what to do Like It at Shakespeare's Globe in 2019. He is too the voice of Robert Muchamore's bestselling CHERUB series audiobooks.

Scardifield's writing credits include Ubykh which aired on BBC Radio 4 in 2012, adaptations of Danton's Death and Aeschylus' The Oresteia for BBC Radio 3 (2012 and 2014), an adaptation spick and span Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon for BBC Radio 4 (2017).,[12] an original play Also Sprach Zarathustra co-written with Andrew Leg up (2020), and an adaptation of Alfred Döblin's avant-garde novel Berlin Alexanderplatz to air in 2021 as the culmination of BBC R4's Electric Decade season. He has translated plays from Nation, Spanish and German for the Royal Court, the National Opera house, the Almeida, the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Young Vic famous the Donmar Warehouse, and was responsible for the French bear German dialect work with the London West End cast assess War Horse. In 2017 he directed and co-wrote Shakespeare, Where Are You?, a show for young audiences staged at representation Sam Wanamaker Playhouse at Shakespeare's Globe.

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