Joe Hill-Gibbins
Joseph Hill-Gibbins is a British theatre and opera director.
Background
Hill-Gibbins was born and raised in Surrey. He attended a local comprehensive, George Abbot School, and later read Drama at Manchester University.Career
Hill-Gibbins directed his first professional production, Wallace Shawn’s A Thought In Three Parts, at the Battersea Arts Centre as winner of the 2002 James Menzies-Kitchen Trust Award for young directorsHe trained at the Royal Court Theatre, both as an assistant director and script reader in the literary office. In 2004 he became Trainee Associate Director at the Royal Court, helping curate the Young Writer’s Festival for which he directed A Girl In A Car With A Man by Rob Evans.
In 2006 Hill-Gibbins joined the staff of the Young Vic theatre. After directing Bertolt Brecht’s one-act comedy A Respectable Wedding in a new translation by Rory Bremner, he became an Associate Director. In 2010 he was appointed Deputy Artistic Director and directed acclaimed productions of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie and The Beauty Queen of Leenane by Martin McDonagh, which returned to the theatre in 2011.
In 2011 he also directed Penelope Skinner's new play The Village Bike at the Royal Court.
Directing credits include
The Tragedy of King Richard the Second by William Shakespeare- Edward II by Christopher Marlowe
- The Changeling by Thomas Middleton & William Rowley
- The Village Bike by Penelope Skinner
- The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams
- The Beauty Queen of Leenane by Martin McDonagh
- The Girlfriend Experience by Alecky Blythe
- Bliss by Olivier Choinière, translated by Caryl Churchill
- Family Plays: The Good Family by Joakim Pirinen & The Khomenko Family Chronicles by Natalia Vorozhbit
- A Respectable Wedding by Bertolt Brecht, translated by Rory Bremner
- The Fever by Wallace Shawn
- A Girl In A Car With A Man by Rob Evans
- The One with the Oven by Emma Rosoman
- A Thought In Three Parts by Wallace Shawn