Robert Chevara is a British director and writer. He was born in London to a single parent Mother.
Early career
An original member of The Old Vic Youth Theatre with Sophie Thompson, Oliver Parker, Linda Henry, April De Angelis and Rikki Beadle-Blair. He met Rikki there when he was fifteen years old and they became lifelong friends. He started an a cappella singing group with Michelle Baughan and Rikki called Three People when he was seventeen. The group sang at the opening of Gay's the Word bookshop. He headlined singing before 40,000 people at Gay Pride on a bill which included Sandie Shaw and Andy Bell. He wrote several articles about Teenagers' problems for Gay Times, book and Ballet reviews for various magazines and assisted Derek Jarman on his film of The Tempest. At nineteen years old he started his first theatre company and directed "Mary Rose" by J.M. Barrie, "Hamlet" and his own play "Larks" to huge critical and commercial success. Rikki Beadle-Blair was Hamlet in the groundbreaking production. He then assisted Richard Jones on a production of "Rigoletto" for Opera 80 and also assisted David Freeman on several productions. David became his mentor and offered him his London opera debut directing Bruno Maderna's Satyricon for David's company Opera Factory. It was the opera's UK premiere, controversial, highly successful and Chevara received further offers to direct Worldwide.
Career
ROBERT CHEVARA is an award-winning freelance theatre and opera director who divides his time between London and Berlin. He is currently an Associate Director at the King's Head Theatre in London, and was previously the Director of Productions at English Touring Opera for four years. He is the recipient of a cultural study award from the Japanese Government, as well as a Churchill Fellowship award. His production of Tennessee Williams's Vieux Carré won Best Revival of a Play Award 2013 from Front Row Dress. His production of William's In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel starring Linda Marlowe was cited in The Times as one of the great productions of 2016. He's fluent in French, German and Italian. His numerous theatre productions include the world premiere of Lionel Bart's musical Quasimodo ; Tennessee Williams's Vieux Carré and The Glass Menagerie ; As You Like It ; Fair!, devised play with music ; Caryl Churchill's Top Girls ; Cake/Hotter than Rochester by Paul Doust ; Strindberg's Easter ; Mary and Frank by Robert Chevara ; Eva Perón/The Four Twins, a double-bill by Copi and The Magic Box by Bertie Marshall Battersea Arts Centre; the Danish premiere of Mike Bartlett's Cock and Bull ; plays at Theatre Royal Stratford East, Soho Theatre, Arcola Theatre and Unity 1918 by John Kerr. For Opera, his productions include West End Girl ; Albert Herring ; La Voix Humaine ; Powder Her Face ; Potent Shakespeare ; Pascal Dusapin's To Be Sung ; Puccini's Madama Butterfly ; Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress, Bizet's Carmen, Verdi's Macbeth, Beethoven's Fidelio, Massenet's Werther ; Barber's A Hand of Bridge; Gershwin's Blue Monday; and Bernstein's Trouble in Tahiti ; Mozart's Magic Flute ; Dvořák's The Cunning Peasant; Poulenc's Les Dialogue des Carmélites; and Britten's Albert Herring ; Prokofiev's The Fiery Angel ; Rossini's The Barber of Seville ; Maderna's Satyricon ; as well as numerous operas by Rameau, Haydn, Verdi, Bizet, Rossini, Handel, Donizetti He has also directed large casts of adults and young people including the world premiere of Luciano Berio's Twice Upon, Royal Festival Hall, the first ever Southbank Centre Summer School and work in prisons for the National Youth Theatre.
TV
THE VAMPIRE, a BBC TV mini-series which was a Bafta and Prix Italia winner.
Films
Shot and directed two recent films: "Sandra" and "Who's Afraid of Woof Woof Woof?". "Woof" was screened to great acclaim at the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.
Writer
He wrote a book, West End Girl,, several successful plays and numerous published poems. He's also written several opera libretti.
Awards
2016 "In the bar of a Tokyo Hotel" selected as one of the 10 best productions of the year. The Times.
2013 Best Revival of a Play for Vieux Carré from Front Row Dress
2009 Best Contemporary Opera Production Award Sweden
1999 Best Contemporary Opera Production Award Sweden