Simon Dormandy was, as an actor, known largely for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1988 and 1995. Over the period he worked with many well known directors, including Adrian Noble, Sam Mendes, Deborah Warner, Katie Mitchell and Max Stafford-Clark. He also took part in several films and television series. He was perhaps best known for his performances in Little Dorrit and Vanity Fair. He was also known for his work with the theatre companyCheek By Jowl. He taught Drama and English at Eton College for fifteen years from 1997 to 2012, where he was Director of Drama and Head of Theatre Studies. His pupils included the actors Tom Hiddleston, Eddie Redmayne, Harry Lloyd and Adetomiwa Edun, director James Dacre and comedians Tom Palmer and Tom Stourton of comedy duo Totally Tom and Humphrey Ker. School productions include Henry VI with Eddie Redmayne, Waiting for Godot with Harry Lloyd, King Lear, Three Sisters, Pool, No Water, Henry IV,, Joseph K and Spring Awakening. Since January 2013 he has been working as a freelance theatre director. In 2013 he was assistant director on the world premiere of The Low Road by Bruce Norris at The Royal Court Theatre. In 2014 he directed the UK Premiere of Eldorado by Marius von Mayenburg and a production of Waiting for Godot with young comedians in the leading roles, both at The Arcola Theatre in London. In 2015 he co-directed his own stage adaptation of the Coen Brothers' film The Hudsucker Proxy with Toby Sedgwick at the Nuffield Theatre, Southampton and the Liverpool Playhouse in association with Complicite. The production won Best Design at the 2015 UK Theatre Awards. He was also an artistic collaborator on Simon McBurney's The Encounter for Complicite at the Edinburgh International Festival and subsequently at the Barbican, London and on tour. In 2016 he directed Mel Giedroyc in the highly acclaimed UK Premiere of Luce by J. C. Lee at Southwark Playhouse. In 2017 he directed Julius Caesar at the Bristol Old Vic, and developed and co-directed his own adaptation of A Passage to India, which toured early in 2018 before a five-week run at The Park in London. His production of Much Ado About Nothing will open at the Rose Theatre, Kingston in April 2018. He teaches and directs at Shakespeare’s Globe, Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Drama Centre, Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, and the British American Drama Academy.
Filmography
Film credits
Television credits
Selected stage appearances
Non-Royal Shakespeare Company
Death and the King's Horsemen, Royal Exchange, 1990
Adam Was A Gardener, Minerva Studio, Chichester, 1991