
Iain Mackintosh (born 1937) is a British practitioner of theatre combining four interwoven careers as theatre producer, theatre space designer, curator of theatre painting and architecture exhibitions, and author and lecturer on both modern and eighteenth century theatre. He has campaigned for the retention and restoration of historic theatres as working homes for live performance. From 1975 he curated or contributed to several exhibitions of theatre paintings and architecture.
Early life
Iain Mackintosh was born in Bristol, England, in 1937, and brought up in Bristol, Cornwall and Edinburgh, Scotland. Two years
National Service
National service is a system of compulsory or voluntary government service, usually military service. Conscription is mandatory national service. The term ''national service'' comes from the United Kingdom's National Service (Armed Forces) Act ...
in Hong Kong as a subaltern in the
Royal Artillery
The Royal Regiment of Artillery, commonly referred to as the Royal Artillery (RA) and colloquially known as "The Gunners", is one of two regiments that make up the artillery arm of the British Army. The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises t ...
, was followed by three years at
Worcester College
Worcester College ( ) is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. The college was founded in 1714 by the benefaction of Sir Thomas Cookes, 2nd Baronet (1648–1701) of Norgrove, Worcestershire, whose coat of arms was ad ...
, Oxford where he took the Worcester College Buskins to the
Kenton Theatre, Henley on Thames during the
regatta
Boat racing is a sport in which boats, or other types of watercraft, race on water. Boat racing powered by oars is recorded as having occurred in ancient Egypt, and it is likely that people have engaged in races involving boats and other wa ...
with a review entitled "''One Over The Eight''". He graduated in 1960 and immediately became resident stage manager (technical director) at the
Oxford Playhouse
The Oxford Playhouse is a theatre designed by Edward Maufe and F. G. M. Chancellor. It is situated in Beaumont Street, Oxford, opposite the Ashmolean Museum.
History
The Playhouse was founded as ''The Red Barn'' at 12 Woodstock Road (Oxford), W ...
.
In 1961 he co-founded the
Prospect Theatre Company
The Prospect Theatre Company was an English company founded, as Prospect Productions, in 1961. Based at the Arts Theatre, Cambridge from 1964 until 1969, the company, with Toby Robertson as artistic director and Richard Cottrell as associate dir ...
with
Elizabeth Sweeting, manager of the Playhouse.
Mackintosh joined Theatre Projects Consultants in 1973 as a designer of theatre space and in collaboration with many architects in the UK, USA, and Canada, and with colleagues at Theatre Projects designed many significant new and restored theatre spaces.
Theatre producer, 1961–1973
In 1962 Sweeting and Mackintosh were joined on the board of Prospect by
Richard Cottrell, who was associate director from 1964 to 1969, and by
Toby Robertson, who became artistic director in 1964, following his production of
The Provoked Wife with
Eileen Atkins
Dame Eileen June Atkins (born 15 June 1934) is an English actress. She has worked in the theatre, film, and television consistently since 1953. In 2008, she won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress and the Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting ...
. Prospect was in Cambridge from 1964 and in London from 1966. Between 1963 and 1976 Prospect toured 75 productions in 125 theatres in 21 countries. In 1973 Mackintosh resigned as administrative director but remained on the Prospect board. In these first twelve years eight productions were presented at the
Edinburgh International Festival
The Edinburgh International Festival is an annual arts festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, spread over the final three weeks in August. Notable figures from the international world of music (especially european classical music, classical music) and ...
, including the
Lila Kedrova
Yelizaveta Nikolaevna Kedrova (Russian: Елизавета Николаевна Кедрова; 9 October 1909 – 16 February 2000), known as Lila Kedrova, was a Russian actress of the screen and stage. She won the Academy Award for Best Suppo ...
Cherry Orchard (1967) and
Ian McKellen
Sir Ian Murray McKellen (born 25 May 1939) is an English actor. He has played roles on the screen and stage in genres ranging from Shakespearean dramas and modern theatre to popular fantasy and science fiction. He is regarded as a British cu ...
’s double presentation of Edward II and Richard II (1968–70). These and many other Prospect productions, such as
Timothy West
Timothy Lancaster West (20 October 1934 – 12 November 2024) was an English actor with a long and varied career across theatre, film, and television. He began acting in repertory theatres in the 1950s before making his London stage debut in 19 ...
's King Lear (1972/73), transferred to successful seasons in London West End theatres. Three productions were televised.
In 1961 Mackintosh designed settings and costumes for two special productions at the Oxford Playhouse: the Oxford University Opera production of
Benjamin Britten
Edward Benjamin Britten, Baron Britten of Aldeburgh (22 November 1913 – 4 December 1976) was an English composer, conductor, and pianist. He was a central figure of 20th-century British music, with a range of works including opera, o ...
’s The Turn of the Screw (only the second production anywhere of this opera), and Prospect’s first production, the premiere of Whiteman by Michael Picardie with Brian Blessed and Prunella Scales (refer Note 1). This stage design experience was to feed back into his later career. Thereafter Mackintosh concentrated on his role as producer for Prospect. He secured international festival engagements for Prospect in Vienna, Austria; Venice, Italy and Adelaide, Australia, as well as arranging many tours Prospect overseas tours with the
British Council
The British Council is a British organisation specialising in international cultural and educational opportunities. It works in over 100 countries: promoting a wider knowledge of the United Kingdom and the English language (and the Welsh lang ...
. Touring Prospect productions and seeing the same show succeed in some theatres and fail in others led Mackintosh to concentrate on the influence of theatre architecture on performance.
Theatre space designer
After working as theatre design consultant to architect Graham Law on the Eden Court Theatre, Inverness, Mackintosh started his second career in 1973 as a designer of theatre space, joining
Richard Pilbrow
Richard Pilbrow (28 April 1933 – 6 December 2023) was a British stage lighting designer, author, theatre design consultant, and theatrical producer, film producer and television producer. He was the first British lighting designer to light a B ...
at Theatre Projects Consultants. He retired from Theatre Projects in 2006.
His first project at Theatre Projects was the Cottesloe Theatre at the National Theatre, London. The National Theatre building on London’s Thames
Southbank, designed by architect
Sir Denys Lasdun, was then under construction as the new home for the National (which had been founded at the
Old Vic
Old or OLD may refer to:
Places
*Old, Baranya, Hungary
*Old, Northamptonshire, England
*Old Street station, a railway and tube station in London (station code OLD)
*OLD, IATA code for Old Town Municipal Airport and Seaplane Base, Old Town, Mai ...
in 1964). The Cottesloe was the third and smallest theatre, holding up to 400 people. It was located in an abandoned space under the rear of the Olivier Theatre stage. In 1973 this was a cavernous empty shell served by a partially complete foyer designed for only 200.
While the National’s Olivier and Lyttleton Theatres are fixed-format, the Cottesloe can be recast into many arrangements to suit the production design. The simple design of the Cottesloe, with two galleries of audience seating surrounding three sides of the room, was ground-breaking. In 2013, on the 50th anniversary of the National, Director
Nicholas Hytner
Sir Nicholas Robert Hytner ( ; born 7 May 1956) is an English theatre director, film director, and film producer. He was previously the Artistic Director of London's National Theatre. His major successes as director include ''Miss Saigon'', '' ...
wrote: ''‘What Iain Mackintosh did when he was asked to make a theatre inside that big black empty box had a touch of improvisatory genius.’''
In November 1973, when presenting the design concept to the National’s Director,
Peter Hall and
John Bury, head of design, Mackintosh coined the phrase ‘courtyard theatre’. He later wrote ''‘Courtyard, Cockpit or whatever …
tshould be particularly useful for experiment in non-scenic theatre … outdoor Fortune or indoor Blackfriars … or for the more formal expression of Grotowski or anyone else who has explored the notion of a ritual gathering of onlookers … The finish should be simple and workmanlike – it is designed to be unfinished in the sense that actor, designer and designer must ‘fill’ the whole space, and the audience complete the furnishings as wallpaper does a room’''.
The Cottesloe was received enthusiastically by the theatre industry and audiences. As explained by The Theatres Trust Theatres Database entry for the Royal National Theatre: ‘''It owes more in terms of inspiration to Mackintosh and Theatre Projects Consultants than to Lasdun. It was, in point of time, the second, but certainly the most influential of the modern ‘courtyard’ theatres, with something of the character of an urban barn fit-up. Its extremely simple, rectangular form, with the audience on three shallow tiers, can be readily adapted to proscenium, end stage, thrust, in-the-round, traverse or promenade form.’'' In his review of Setting the Scene: Perspectives on Twentieth-Century Theatre Architecture, edited by Alistair Fair,
Richard Pilbrow
Richard Pilbrow (28 April 1933 – 6 December 2023) was a British stage lighting designer, author, theatre design consultant, and theatrical producer, film producer and television producer. He was the first British lighting designer to light a B ...
noted ‘''It’s interesting to reflect that in our National Theatre the two architect-designed theatres have attracted not one single imitator, whereas the theatre-designed Cottesloe has prompted perhaps more than fifty successful clones around the world. Bringing human beings together in lively juxtaposition simply works.
This project led to other rectangular galleried playhouses, such as
The Tricycle (1980) with architect Tim Foster, which was constructed out of builders’ scaffolding within an existing volume.
The Founders’ Theatre (2001) at Lenox Massachusetts, developed with architect George Marsh of Boston, is likewise a scaffolded courtyard in an extended hut. Mackintosh’s smallest galleried space is also his only theatre-in-the-round, the 185 seat
Orange Tree Theatre
The Orange Tree Theatre is a 180-seat theatre at 1 Clarence Street, Richmond in south-west London, which was built specifically as a theatre in the round. It is housed within a disused 1867 primary school, built in Victorian Gothic style.
Th ...
in Richmond, London (1991).
Mackintosh developed two other forms of flexible theatre spaces, each holding around 450 patrons with three levels of seats around the edges enveloping the central audience area, which can be reconfigured for different stagings. Examples of the square form include Wilde Theatre,
South Hill Park
South Hill Park is a English country house and its grounds, now run as an arts centre. It lies in the Birch Hill estate to the south of Bracknell town centre, in Berkshire.
History
Construction by Watts
The original South Hill Park mansi ...
, Bracknell (1984), with architects Levitt Bernstein, and the
Lawrence Batley Theatre
Lawrence Batley Theatre is a theatre in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England which offers drama, music, dance and comedy.
The theatre is named after Lawrence Batley, a local entrepreneur and philanthropist, who founded a nationwide cash and c ...
, Huddersfield (1994) with the Kirklees local authority architects.
The Guardian opera critic Andrew Clements wrote ''‘The design is the work of Iain Mackintosh… and he has done a seamless job in creating a 400 plus theatre, beautifully proportioned with a handy adjustable pit.’''
The first apsidal room (parallel sides with semi-circular galleries facing the stage) was the
Martha Cohen Theatre, Calgary (1985), with architect Joel Barrett, later repeated in the Quays Theatre (2000) at
The Lowry
Lowry is a theatre and gallery complex at Salford Quays, Salford, Greater Manchester, England. It is named after the early 20th-century painter L. S. Lowry, known for his paintings of industrial scenes in North West England. The complex opened ...
, Salford, with architect
Michael Wilford. More architecturally refined examples were the
Westminster School
Westminster School is a Public school (United Kingdom), public school in Westminster, London, England, in the precincts of Westminster Abbey. It descends from a charity school founded by Westminster Benedictines before the Norman Conquest, as do ...
Theatre, Connecticut (1989), with architect
Graham Gund
Graham de Conde Gund (October 28, 1940 – June 6, 2025) was an American architect and the president of the Gund Partnership, an American architecture firm based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and founded by Gund in 1971. An heir to George Gund I ...
, and the
Vanburgh Theatre (2000) at the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
The Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, also known by its abbreviation RADA (), is a drama school in London, England, which provides vocational conservatoire training for theatre, film, television, and radio. It is based in Bloomsbury, Central London ...
, in London, in collaboration with architect
Bryan Avery.
Replacement of failed modern auditoria by returning to a traditional multilevel intimate house include the Bluma Appell Theatre at the
St. Laurence Centre for the Arts, Toronto, Canada (1983)
and the Enschede Schouwburg Netherlands with Dutch architect,
Onno Greiner (1988).
The epitome of Mackintosh’s horseshoe, galleried auditorium concepts was the
Glyndebourne
Glyndebourne () is an English country house, the site of an opera house that, since 1934, has been the venue for the annual Glyndebourne Festival Opera. The house, located near Lewes in East Sussex, England, is thought to be about six hundre ...
Opera (1994). It was undertaken for Theatre Projects Consultants in a team led by architect
Michael Hopkins.
Executive chairman Sir George Christie said ''‘It was Mackintosh who convinced everybody that the horseshoe was the best shape. It happened remarkably quickly. We all felt intimacy would be most easily achieved with the people in the audience wrapped round like wallpaper. That’s something that neither the fan shape nor the shoebox does.’'' Architectural critic Jonathan Glancy wrote ''‘Inside the auditorium the project makes near perfect sense. Mackintosh and Hopkins have produced a big but intimate space. It has as near as one can get to a timeless quality’''.
Glyndebourne was the first of the new horseshoe opera houses such as Toronto,
Dallas
Dallas () is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the most populous city in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, the List of Texas metropolitan areas, most populous metropolitan area in Texas and the Metropolitan statistical area, fourth-most ...
and
Copenhagen
Copenhagen ( ) is the capital and most populous city of Denmark, with a population of 1.4 million in the Urban area of Copenhagen, urban area. The city is situated on the islands of Zealand and Amager, separated from Malmö, Sweden, by the ...
(designed by others). Before Glyndebourne, ‘modern’ opera houses had all the seats pointing cinema-like at the stage. This format is good for audience sightlines but does not support a rich theatrical experience. Mackintosh’s theatre forms were based on strict geometry, generally ad quadratum (ascending concentric circles within successive squares). In 2004 he contributed to the design for the second space at
The Sage Gateshead
The Glasshouse is an international centre for musical education and concerts on the Gateshead bank of Quayside in northern England. Opened in 2004 as Sage Gateshead and occupied by North Music Trust, the venue's original name honours a patron ...
, with architects
Foster and Partners
Foster and Partners (also Foster + Partners) is a British international architecture firm with its headquarters in London, England. It was founded in 1967 by British architect and designer Norman Foster. The firm has been involved in the desig ...
. Hall Two holds 450 patrons for all types of musical performance, with three encircling galleries and options of performing in the centre or on a platform stage along three of the ten sides. Mackintosh believed it to be the only performance space in the world with pentagonal geometry.
In 2009 Mackintosh worked with architect Robin Snell (also a contributor to Glyndebourne), on the design of the Opera Pavilion at
Garsington
Garsington is a village and civil parish about southeast of Oxford in Oxfordshire. "A History of the County of Oxfordshire" provides a detailed history of the parish from 1082. The 2011 census recorded the parish's population as 1,689.
The v ...
Opera, which opened in 2011 and won many awards.
New Life for Historic theatres
As well as working on new theatres Mackintosh has advocated for the retention and renovation of old theatres. These include the
Festival Theatre, Edinburgh (1994), formerly the Milburn Brothers’ Empire Theatre of 1928 which he designed with architect Colin Ross of Law and Dunbar-Nasmith.
As a producer, Mackintosh in 1982 hired the
Lyceum Theatre in London on behalf of Theatre Projects Associates to transfer the National Theatre Cottesloe production of
The Mysteries
''The Mysteries'' is a cycle of three medieval English mystery plays first presented at London's National Theatre in 1977 which tell a story of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation.
Background
It is based largely on the Wakefield cycle of p ...
, adapted by
Bill Bryden. The Lyceum had not been used as a theatre since 1939 and had been partially converted into a ballroom in 1951. In 1982 it was under threat of demolition but to put on the Mysteries they built a courtyard space within the old dilapidated hulk of the theatre.
The
Georgian Theatre Royal
The Georgian Theatre Royal is a theatre and historic Georgian playhouse in the market town of Richmond, North Yorkshire, England. It is among the oldest of Britain's extant theatres.
It was built in 1788 by the actor-manager Samuel Butler ...
, Richmond, Yorkshire (1788), was fully restored in 2003 with Mackintosh and David Wilmore o
Theatresearchas historical theatre consultants working with Allen Tod Architecture. The Prospect Company had opened the first show in the Theatre Royal Richmond for over a century on its re-opening in 1963. Mackintosh later initiated a conference in celebration of the Society for Theatre Research’s sixtieth anniversary, held at the Georgian Theatre in 2008.
In 2003, on behalf of the Scottish Arts Council, Mackintosh and Sir
James Dunbar-Nasmith
Sir James Duncan Dunbar-Nasmith (15 March 1927 – 18 March 2023) was a British conservation architect.
James Dunbar-Nasmith was born in Devon, the son of Admiral Sir Martin Dunbar-Nasmith, (1883–1965) and Beatrix Justina Dunbar-Dunbar-R ...
(with whom he had worked on the Festival Theatre Edinburgh), supervised the reconstruction of the complete auditorium of the Opera House at Dunfermline, Scotland, within a new building in Sarasota, Florida. Built in 1921 by architects Swanston and Davison, it had been dismantled in the 1980s to make way for a shopping mall and after more than a decade in storage was taken to Florida to be meticulously re-assembled as a working professional playhouse, now the Mertz Theatre at the
Asolo Repertory Theatre
The Asolo Repertory Theatre or Asolo Rep (AKA: Asolo Theatre Company, Inc.) is a professional theater in Sarasota, Florida. It is the largest Equity theatre in Florida, and the largest Repertory theatre in the Southeastern United States. Asolo ...
.
Exhibitions of theatre painting and architecture
Alongside designing theatre spaces, Mackintosh developed an interest in the history of theatre paintings and architecture and curated several exhibitions, each documented in comprehensive catalogues.
In 1975 he was commissioned by the
Arts Council
An arts council is a government or private non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the arts; mainly by funding local artists, awarding prizes, and organizing arts events. They often operate at arms-length from the government to prevent pol ...
of Great Britain to curate and design ‘The Georgian Playhouse 1730–1830’ at their
Hayward Gallery
The Hayward Gallery is an art gallery within the Southbank Centre in central London, England and part of an area of major arts venues on the South Bank of the River Thames. It is sited adjacent to the other Southbank Centre buildings (the Royal ...
, in the run up to the National Theatre’s opening. ''‘This show on the delectable theme of the Georgian playhouse…is important artistically’'' wrote
Denys Sutton, editor of Apollo. The exhibition comprised 379 oil paintings, watercolours and architectural designs and attracted acclaim from both theatre and art critics. ''‘This excellent exhibition … offers much of absorbing interest to both to the playgoer and those more especially concerned with pictures’''. Geoffrey Ashton assisted in the final selections and writing of ''‘…its splendid catalogue, full of anecdote and oddity.’''
At the 1981
Buxton Festival Mackintosh and Ashton curated ‘30 Different Likenesses of
David Garrick
David Garrick (19 February 1716 – 20 January 1779) was an English actor, playwright, Actor-manager, theatre manager and producer who influenced nearly all aspects of European theatrical practice throughout the 18th century, and was a pupil a ...
– by 30 Different Artists’, ranging from Hogarth to Gainsborough, and in 1982 they collaborated on ‘The Royal Opera House Retrospective 1732 -1982’ at the Royal Academy, in celebration of the 250th anniversary of the
Theatre Royal, Covent Garden.
In 1982 the Curtains!!! Committee, formed by Mackintosh in 1976, published the first gazetteer of all British theatres, existing and demolished, built before 1914.
The publication of ‘CURTAINS!!!' has been described as a turning point in the appreciation of historic theatres.
For the 1987
Brighton Festival
Brighton Festival is a large, annual, curated multi-arts festival in England, first held in 1967. It includes music, theatre, dance, circus, art, film, literature, debate, outdoor and family events, and takes place in venues in the city of Brig ...
Mackintosh curated ‘“An Extravagant and Irrational Entertainment”: Staging the Opera in England 1632 to 1792’. In 2009 at the Orleans House Gallery, Twickenham, Marcus Risdell and Mackintosh co-curated ‘The Face and Figure of
Shakespeare
William Shakespeare ( 23 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English playwright, poet and actor. He is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's natio ...
: How Britain’s 18th Century Sculptors invented a National Hero’.
In 1995 the British Council commissioned Mackintosh to curate ‘Making Space for Theatre: 40 Years of British Theatre Architecture’, which opened at the National Theatre in London, then at the
Prague Quadrennial of Scenography and Theatre Architecture.
In 2006 the Victoria & Albert Museum London acquired ''Downfall of Shakespeare Represented on a'' Modern ''Stage'' (sic) by William Dawes, 1763-1765, and asked Mackintosh to research it. Mackintosh published his findings in an article in ''Theatre Notebook'', Volume 62 Number 1, 2008, pp 20 – 58 plus seven plates.
For the 2011 Prague Quadrennial of Scenography and Theatre Architecture Mackintosh instigated the British exhibition entry, ''The Guthrie Thrust Stage: A Living Legacy, 1948-2011'', and wrote its catalogue, published by the
Association of British Theatre Technicians (ABTT).
Author and lecturer
Mackintosh’s 1993 book on theatre design, 'Actor, Audience and Architecture', describes the influence of architecture on the theatrical experience and critiques mid-twentieth-century theatre design. It has been influential with theatre space designers and architects and was described by
Michael Coveney
Michael Coveney (born 24 July 1948) is a British theatre critic.
Education and career
Coveney was born in London and educated at St Ignatius’ College in Stamford Hill, and Worcester College, Oxford.
After graduation, he worked as a script ...
in
The Observer
''The Observer'' is a British newspaper published on Sundays. First published in 1791, it is the world's oldest Sunday newspaper.
In 1993 it was acquired by Guardian Media Group Limited, and operated as a sister paper to ''The Guardian'' ...
as ‘Environmental theatre history at its best: analytical, informed, involved’.
His other books include ‘''Pit, Box and Gallery: A history of the
Theatre Royal Bury St Edmunds''’, The
National Trust
The National Trust () is a heritage and nature conservation charity and membership organisation in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The Trust was founded in 1895 by Octavia Hill, Sir Robert Hunter and Hardwicke Rawnsley to "promote the ...
, 1979 and in 2023 "''Theatre Spaces 1920-2020 Finding the Fun in Functionalism''"
Contributions to journals, catalogues and chapters in books or catalogues edited by others include:
* ‘David Garrick and Benjamin Wilson’, Apollo, May, 1985: identifying and dating the prime version of Garrick as Romeo as 1752-53, the engraving as 1753 and establishing Benjamin Wilson as the first artist to depict Garrick on the Georgian stage and the equal of his more famous successor Zoffany.
* ‘King Kong versus Godzilla: The Competition for the Royal Opera House at The Hague 1910’ in Frank Matcham & Co, edited by David Wilmore, Theatreshire Books, Dacre Yorkshire, 2008: recounting the story of Britain’s greatest 19th century theatre architect, Frank Matcham, competing with mainland Europe’s most prolific theatre architects, Fellner & Helmer of Vienna, which the latter won but never saw built.
* ‘Departing Glories of the British Theatre: Setting Suns over a Neo-classical Landscape' in the catalogue London – World City 1800-1840, curated in Essen Germany by
Celina Fox
Celina Fox (born 4 May 1947) is an independent scholar specialising in the history of London in the 18th and 19th centuries. She held the role of Keeper of Paintings, Prints and Drawings at the Museum of London.
Education and scholarship
Fox re ...
,
Yale University Press
Yale University Press is the university press of Yale University. It was founded in 1908 by George Parmly Day and Clarence Day, grandsons of Benjamin Day, and became a department of Yale University in 1961, but it remains financially and ope ...
, 1992.
* Entry on the Theatro Jose de Alcazar, Fortaleza, an ironwork theatre forged in Glasgow and shipped to Brazil in 1910, in Teatros, Uma Memoria dop Espacos Cenica no Brasil, ed J C Serroni, Senac, São Paulo, 2002
* Entry on
Frank Matcham
Francis Matcham (22 November 1854 – 17 May 1920)Mackintosh, Iain"Matcham, Frank" ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, accessed 7 July 2019 was an English architect who specialised in the design of theatres and ...
in The
Dictionary of National Biography
The ''Dictionary of National Biography'' (''DNB'') is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history, published since 1885. The updated ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (''ODNB'') was published on 23 September ...
.
* Five illustrated papers given at the annual World of Baroque Theatre conferences held at
Český Krumlov
Český Krumlov (; , ''Böhmisch Krumau'') is a town in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 13,000 inhabitants. It is known as a tourist centre, which is among the most visited places in the country. The historic centre ...
from 2002 to 2009 and published by the Baroque Theatre Foundation at Český Krumlov, 2003 et seq.
* ‘Fifty years of Theatre-making: Anecdotes and Apercus’, a revised and expanded version of the keynote address given at the Annual Symposium at Cambridge of the Architectural Historians of Great Britain, April 2012 and now reproduced in ‘Setting the Scene, Perspectives on Twentieth-Century Theatre Architecture’ edited by Alistair Fair, Ashgate, 2015 .
International Symposium on Baroque Theatre Czech Republic 1994 Cesky Krumlov /2002 Cesky Krumlov / 2004 Cesky Krumlov / Cesky Krumlov 2009
Awards
In 1995 Mackintosh was the first Briton to sit on the International Jury at the
Prague Quadrennial of Scenography and Theatre Architecture and in 1999 collected their Special Gold Medal for Architecture on behalf of the new Glyndebourne Opera House. In 2003 he was awarded the annual Cascieri Medal and Lectureship in the Humanities by the
Boston Architectural Center. He was a jury member in 2011 for the Prague
OISTAT
The International Organisation of Scenographers, Theatre Architects and Technicians (OISTAT) is a non-governmental organization (NGO) founded in 1968 in Prague, Czech Republic. According to its founding name, the organization is mainly a network ...
Theatre Architecture Competition (International Organisation of Scenographers, Theatre Architects, and Technicians).
Theatres with which Mackintosh has been associated have won more than 20 Architecture Awards in Britain and overseas.
Notes and references
;Notes
;References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mackintosh, Iain
1937 births
Living people
British theatre designers
British curators
Alumni of Worcester College, Oxford