Oscar Toeman

Director

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Photograph: Credit The Other Richard

Film, TV & Theatre

Agent: Giles Smart
Assistant: Lee Byrne

Film, TV & Theatre

Oscar Toeman is a director for stage and screen. He was recently appointed as the Baylis Director at the Old Vic for 2024.  

He’s an alumni of LCT’s Directors Lab in New York, a recipient of a Michael Grandage Company Futures Bursary, and an Associate at NYT.  He has been runner up for the JMK Award, and twice a finalist for the Peter Hall RTST Award. He trained on the NT Studio’s Directors Course.

In 2023 Oscar was selected for the Hollyoaks ‘Stage to Small Screen Programme’ (SDUK/ DUK/ ScreenSkills/ Lime Pictures) to train up theatre directors for TV.

He is a dual national, and holds an EU passport.

Theatre

ProductionCompanyNotes

AS DIRECTOR

THE MISFORTUNE OF THE ENGLISH

2022

Orange Tree

By Pamela Carter

THE SUGAR SYNDROME

2020

Orange Tree

By Lucy Prebble
*Nominated 4 Off West End Awards

ACTUALLY

2019

Trafalgar Studios

By Anna Ziegler

THE BIG LIE

2018

Edinburgh Fringe Festival

By Shaniaz Hama Ali
*Nominated for the Amnesty Freedom of Expression Award

NO SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL; HOLIDAY DESTINATION and BLUE IS A BOY'S COLOUR (Readings)

2018

National Theatre

Readings for NT New Views

STILL FOOLS

2018

Arcola/ Minaturists

By Adam Hughes

ITALIAN NIGHT (workshop)

2017

Orange Tree

By Odon von Horvath

WINTER'S TALES

2017

The Coronet

Christmas readings by Emili Sandé, Penelope Wilton, Shappi Khorsandi and Toby Stephens

AFTER OCTOBER

2016

Finborough Theatre

By Rodney Ackland
*Nominated 3 Off West End Awards

WHAT THEY TOOK WITH THEM: A LIST (Reading)

2016

National Theatre

By Jenifer Toksvig

WHY I WANT TO WORK AT TESCO'S

2013

Bush Theatre Attic Space

By Joseph Wilde

LABURNUM GROVE

2013

Finborough Theatre

By J. B. Priestley

A.G.M

2012

nabokov/ Soho

By Freddy Syborn

THE BALLAD OF THE COPPER REVOLUTION

2012

Vaults/ nabokov

By Jay Luxembourg

DRAMA SCHOOL PRODUCTIONS

THE ANGRY BRIGADE

2023

LAMDA

By James Graham

THE GRAIN STORE

2023

Mountview Academy

By Natalie Vorozhbit

PARTY TIME/CELEBRATION

2023

Royal Central School of Speech and Drama

By Harold Pinter

OUR TOWN

2022

Arts Ed

By Thornton Wilder

THE BIG KNIFE

2021

Arts Ed

By Clifford Odets

AS YOU LIKE IT

2021

Arts Ed

By Shakespeare

DEALER'S CHOICE

2019

Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama

By Patrick Marber

MEPHISTO

2019

East 15

Adapted from the novel by Klaus Mann by Ariane Mnouchkine, trans. Timberlake Wertenbaker.

ENRON

2018

Arts Ed

By Lucy Prebble

THE FAMILY THAT COULD TALK ABOUT ANYTHING

2018

East 15

By Christian Lollike

MEASURE FOR MEASURE

2016

Oxford School of Drama /North Wall, Oxford

By William Shakespeare

RICHARD III

2016

Stanwix Theatre

By William Shakespeare

THE GRANDFATHERS

2015

Mountview Academy

By Rory Mullarkey

AS DRAMATURG

FEELING AFRAID AS IF SOMETHING TERRIBLE IS GOING TO HAPPEN

2022

Summerhall

By Marcelo Dos Santos
Fringe First Winner

AS ASSOCIATE/ ASSISTANT

THE CONSTITUENT

2024

Old Vic

As Associate
By Joe Penhall
Dir. Matthew Warchus

OSLO

2017

Lyttelton, National Theatre/ Harold Pinter Theatre

As Associate
By J.T. Rogers, Dir. Bartlett Sher

WASTE

2016

Lyttelton, National Theatre

By Harley Granville Barker
Dir. Roger Michell

THE MERCHANT OF VENICE

2015

Royal Shakespeare Theatre, RSC

By William Shakespeare
Dir. Polly Findlay

ION / THE BACCHAE / HIPPOLYTUS

2015

Chichester FT; one week workshop

versions by Mike Poulton
Dir. Lucy Bailey

HITLER'S CUFFLINKS

2014 - 2015

Northampton; one week workshops

By Mike Poulton
Dir. James Dacre

WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?

2014

Theatre Royal, Bath

By Edward Albee
Dir. Adrian Noble

TWELFTH NIGHT

2013

Shakespeare's Globe/ Apollo Theatre

By William Shakespeare
Dir. Tim Carroll

UNCLE VANYA

2012

Print Room

version by Mike Poulton
Dir. Lucy Bailey

MIRROR TEETH

2011

Finborough Theatre

By Nick Gill
Dir. Kate Wasserberg

ACCOLADE

2011

Finborough Theatre

By Emlyn Williams
Dir. Blanche McIntyre

SKANE

2011

Hampstead Theatre

By Pamela Carter
Dir. Tim Carroll

THE RIVALS

2010

Southwark Playhouse

By Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Dir. Jessica Swale

Other

ProductionCompanyNotes

VISITING DIRECTOR

Arts Ed, East 15, RWCMD, National Youth Theatre, Guildhall

WORK WITH YOUNG PEOPLE

Course Leader, Introduction to Directing, NYT, 2021. Visiting Practitioner, Theatre By The Lake Young Creatives, 2021. Masterclass Workshop for Theatre Royal Haymarket 2020.
Director for National Theatre Learning's New Views Programme, 2018.
Guest Practitioner at Arts Ed, Professional Practise, 2017.
Ran workshops in Shakespearean Verse for NYT REP, 2016; The Actors Class 2014. Leader of 'Making Shakespeare Week' for the RSC, 2015. Mountview Young People's Company Leader 2014.

DRAMATURGY, NEW WORK DEVELOPMENT & LITERARY

Workshops on new plays by Anders Lustgarten, Joe Marsh, James Rushbrooke, D. A. Nixon. Interim Resident Director at the National Theatre Studio, Winter 2016.
Senior Reader at Hampstead Theatre, 2018-2020, with further experience reading for Shakespeare's Globe, the RSC, The Orange Tree, Theatre 503 and The Print Room.

THE MISFORTUNE OF THE ENGLISH - Orange Tree Theatre

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (Dominka Fleszar, Time & Leisure) "A piece of great theatre....alive, relevant, moving, and very well crafted with many an interesting concept explored throughout. And it doesn’t fail to make one ponder: are we also following a Keast of our time?"

★ ★ ★ ★ (Laura De Lisle, The Arts Desk) "Heaven, Burton, and Tennyson’s energy is infectious....though there’s only three of them, Oscar Toeman’s direction makes us feel the presence of the other 24, along with hero-worshipped Keaty. Like any good school trip, it’s rife with food: the boys munch Babybels and satsumas, and Lyons is very particular about his cake arrangements...it's about a third of the way through that things begin to go wrong. The house lights dim as a storm rolls in, Dan Balfour’s jaunty soundtrack warping and twisting, the boys falling out of step with each other. It’s as if the approaching tragedy is too devastating for the play’s form to contain."

★ ★ ★ (Miriam Gillinson, Guardian "Director Oscar Toeman keeps the tone so light in the opening scenes that, much like the boys and their schoolmaster, you won’t realise this is a tragedy until much too late…something about the connection between boyhood and Englishness, and the mutual comfort and danger these concepts provide, that really stings."

Listed in the Guardian Readers' Favourite Stage Shows of 2022 (Chris, Richmond, Guardian) "As a European living in the UK, it was a play that really spoke to me. The production was extraordinary; the whole set design was fog, that transformed a theatre space into mountains. The acting was moving, and I felt sorry for the English, but now understand them better. I’d love to see it return."

 

THE SUGAR SYNDROME - Orange Tree Theatre

★ ★ ★ ★ (Aleks Sierz, Arts Desk) "Director Oscar Toeman and designer Rebecca Brower bring the pre-broadband age alive... In a production which respects the difficult pauses of the text, as well as its moments of full-on comedy...this is a really excellent revival."

★ ★ ★ ★ (David Jays, Sunday Times, Critics Picks) "Oscar Toeman, who directs, has a real gift for gauging the space between actors: the air feels charged as they edge close or shuffle at an awkward distance. In this play about honesty and the performance of honesty, he gets rich portrayals of people with shame on their minds."

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (Alice Flynn, A Younger Theatre) “I love it… The level of control and tension in both Toeman’s direction and Chi-San Howard’s movement is never dropped… Rebecca Brower’s design of the production also compliments the bleakness of Dani’s world beautifully.”

★ ★ ★ ★ (Aliya Al-Hassan, Broadway World) “A striking and difficult exploration of loneliness, self-doubt and the darkness of humanity.”

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (Stephen Bates, Reviews Hub) “Jessica Rhodes is utterly convincing… Prebble’s writing is stark and provocative, but the dark humour which was to characterise her later works, such as Enron and A Very Expensive Poison, is evident throughout. Director Oscar Toeman balances the play’s tenderness and cynicism assuredly, maintaining tension.”

 

ACTUALLY - Trafalgar Studios

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (Hilary Webb, A Younger Theatre) “Oscar Toeman has done brilliant job of injecting energy and movement into the minimalistic production…  Actually is one of those rare plays that tackles big, complicated, human issues in a way that is bound to strike a connection with anyone.”

★ ★ ★ ★ (Gabriel Wilding, Everything Theatre) “Toeman’s attention to detail creates some lovely symbolic moments.” 

★ ★ ★ ★ (David Guest, Reviews Hub) "Director Oscar Toeman shows deep comprehension of the writer’s intentions when it would be all too easy to focus on a single issue."

★ ★ ★ ★ (Loretta Monaco, London Theatre1) "One of the beautiful aspects of Actually is that it is so visually spare. There is no set to speak of, the actors stand throughout, they do not look at one other, rather it is the audience they address and the audience who must decide whether a rape took place. It is an extremely rigorous feat of acting…… Actually, is an extraordinary piece of theatre."

 

AFTER OCTOBER - Finborough

★ ★ ★ ★ (Fiona Mountford, Evening Standard"A hugely appealing revival...an ebullient production of infectious energy ...Smart, another winning revival from this pub theatre powerhouse."

★ ★ ★ ★ (Emma Henderson, The Independent) "Toeman’s production is engaging and fast-paced...drawing you into the manic family’s lives."

★ ★ ★ ★ (Matt Breen, Time Out) "Oscar Toeman ably directs his third production at the Finborough. Warm and affectionate, this does great justice to an under-sung figure of British theatre."

★ ★ ★ ★ (Ben Lawrence, Sunday Telegraph) "There is a comic exuberance and a conviction that make this an enjoyable and often profoundly moving evening"