Sean Kenny (theatre designer)
Sean Kenny was an Irish theatre and film scenic designer, costume designer, lighting designer and director.
Kenny was most notable as the set designer for the musicals of Lionel Bart including Oliver!, Lock Up Your Daughters and Blitz!.
Life
Kenny was born in Portroe, County Tipperary, Ireland in 1929. While he was still an architecture student, at the age of 20, Kenny and three others sailed from Ireland to New York in a 36-foot sailboat, the Ituna, in 1950.Kenny was a contributor to The Establishment, a standup satire and jazz club in London founded by Peter Cook and Nicholas Luard.
In 1966, Kenny married model Judy Huxtable. She later described him as "regularly unfaithful", and left him to marry Peter Cook.
Following his divorce, Kenny lived with the actress Judy Geeson until his sudden death from a heart attack and brain haemorrhage at the age of 43. In Stoned by Andrew Loog Oldham, Oldham pays tribute to Kenny as one of the brilliant and original minds working in London theatre in the 1960s, particularly for his work on Lionel Bart's musicals Oliver! and Lock Up Your Daughters.
In Stoned, Kenny's partner Judy Geeson pays this tribute to him: "Sean had an unusual combination of abilities: he had the creativity to dream up a design. But he also had a brilliant engineer's brain so he didn't only dream it, he knew how to make it."
Design style
Kenny collaborated with the author and director to make the scenery contribute so significantly to the production that the scenery became a character in the play. Theatre impresario Cameron Mackintosh wrote about Kenny's designs for Oliver!: "A lot of the original 1960 production had been written during rehearsal to accompany the working of Sean Kenny's set, as Oliver! has an episodic story that requires quick and varied changes of locale."Peter Roberts wrote in Plays and Players about Kenny's design for the inaugural production of Hamlet for the National Theatre at The Old Vic theatre in 1963: "The scenic shorthand of Sean Kenny's revolving set has all the vigour and unfussy force of O'Toole's performance in the title role...From a practical point of view it enables the director to deploy his cast three-dimensionally, in height as well as across the stage and enables scene changes to be effected rapidly and practically." December 1963.
For each production Kenny invented what he called a "frame", as in framework or scaffold or skeleton. For productions with small budgets the frame would be stationary and for productions with large budgets the frame would be dynamic, moving. In Oliver! the frame consisted of multi-level scaffolding built on a rotating turntable and two rotating side wagons, properly called ring fragments, that followed the curve of the turntable. In Pickwick, the frame was four multi-level scaffolds on wagons that could move in any direction, like four rolling houses. For Blitz! the frame was four multi-level scaffolds on rolling wagons and two towers that rolled up and down stage, connected by a bridge that raised and lowered while the towers were moving. In each production this frame provided the different spaces, entrances, levels and playing areas needed by the script and by the action.
"... his influence on British stage design is incalculable. His imagination in the high tech use of modern theatrical technology, paved the way for all the British musical extravaganza which followed."
Projects
Incomplete list:- 1957 The Shadow of a Gunman
- 1958 The Hostage
- 1959 Cock-a-Doodle Dandy
- 1959 Mermaid Theatre
- 1959 Lock Up Your Daughters
- 1960 The Lily-White Boys
- 1960 Oliver!
- 1960 Riders to the Sea
- 1960 Chin-Chin
- 1961 Romeo and Juliet
- 1961 The Devils
- 1961 Altona
- 1961 The Miracle Worker
- 1962 Stop the World – I Want to Get Off
- 1962 I Thank a Fool
- 1962 King Priam
- 1962 Blitz!
- 1962 Uncle Vanya
- 1962 I Thank a Fool
- 1963 The Beggar's Opera
- 1963 Pickwick
- 1963 Uncle Vanya
- 1963 The Old Vic renovations for the Royal National Theatre
- 1963 Hamlet
- 1965 Maggie May
- 1965 The Roar of the Greasepaint – The Smell of the Crowd
- 1965–1966 Casino de Paris,
- 1966 Stop the World – I Want to Get Off
- 1966 Der fliegende Holländer
- 1967 Historical Section of the British Pavilion, Expo 67, Montreal, Canada
- 1967 The Gyrotron
- 1967 The Four Musketeers,
- 1968 Gulliver's Travels
- 1969 Les Noces
- 1969
- 1970 Peer Gynt
- 1970 Here are Ladies
- 1972 Clownaround
- 1973 The King of Friday's Men
- 1973 Juno and the Paycock
- 1973 New London Theatre inspired by the Total Theater designed by architect Walter Gropius for director Erwin Piscator
Awards
- American Theatre Wing Tony Award
- The American Theatre Wing's Tony Awards 1963 Winner, Best Scenic Designer, Oliver!
- The American Theatre Wing's Tony Awards 1965 Nomination, Best Scenic Designer, The Roar of the Greasepaint – The Smell of the Crowd