David Leveaux


David Leveaux is a British theatre director who has been nominated for five Tony Awards as director of both plays and musicals. He directs both in the UK, working at the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Almeida Theatre, and the Donmar Warehouse, on Broadway, and also in Tokyo.
Leveaux made his film directorial debut with The Exception, which will be released by A24.

Early life

Leveaux was born in Leicester and raised in Derby in the Midlands, the son of a cardiologist. He read English language and literature at Manchester University.

Career

In his early 20s, Leveaux became assistant to Peter Gill at Riverside Studios. When the Studios became bankrupt he was one of a group who occupied the building illegally to keep it running until it was reestablished legitimately. While taking a break in New York City, he discovered Eugene O'Neill's play, A Moon for the Misbegotten, and revived it at Riverside, starring Frances de la Tour and Ian Bannen. The production transferred to the West End and Broadway.
Subsequently he directed Therese Raquin at Chichester, Anna Christie in London and on Broadway, and Romeo and Juliet for the Royal Shakespeare Company. At the Almeida Theatre he directed Harold Pinter's No Man's Land, Moonlight, Betrayal and Neil LaBute's The Distance From Here.
He was Artistic Director of Theatre Project Tokyo, directing productions in Tokyo, including Electra, Lulu, Modern Noh Plays, The Changeling, Hedda Gabler, and Two Headed Eagle.
He was associate director of the Donmar Warehouse, under Sam Mendes' artistic directorship. His revival of the musical Nine at Donmar in 1996 transferred to Broadway in 2003 with Antonio Banderas, where he received a nomination for the Tony Award, Best Direction of a Musical and the musical itself won the Tony Award as Best Revival of a Musical. He directed Electra, for which Zoë Wanamaker received an Olivier Award. He received the Olivier Award nomination for Best Director for his 1999 revival of Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing.
In 2003 he revived Tom Stoppard's
Jumpers for the Royal National Theatre in London. This then toured the UK regions before eventually transferring to Broadway in 2004.
He directed
Cyrano de Bergerac on Broadway, starring Kevin Kline, with Ben Brantley writing in The New York Times:
"Mr. Leveaux, the British director of the exquisite-looking Broadway productions of "Nine" and "Jumpers," does pretty better than most of his peers, which is his blessing and his curse. He also has a strong sentimental streak, tempered by his aesthetic sense. He is the perfect man to bring "Cyrano" into the 21st century, presenting the play's flowery sensibility without making audiences feel they’ve been doused in perfume."

He directed the first West End revival of Tom Stoppard's play
Arcadia'', which opened in May 2009.

Michael Riedel Controversy

In 2005, Leveaux was in an altercation with New York Post columnist Michael Riedel at the Manhattan restaurant and theatre hangout, Angus McIndoe. Riedel, who later admitted to being "tipsy", insulted Leveaux by claiming that English directors often ruin classic American musicals. While rumours circulated that Leveaux hit Riedel so hard that the columnist had to go to the emergency room, the truth is that Riedel was merely shoved to the floor and was not injured.

Work

;Broadway
;Donmar Warehouse
;Almeida Theatre
;Duke of York's Theatre
;Film