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Nigel Banks
Nigel Banks.

Nigel is an experienced actor, director and teacher. He was born in Bolton, Lancashire in 1951 and comes from a theatrical family. Some of his earliest memories involve hearing his parents' lines for plays they were appearing in at the Little Theatre, or watching dress rehearsals on Sunday afternoon. He was not bitten by the acting bug at that stage and an unsuccessful performance in a class play at school turned him off the theatre for many years.

He became interested in acting during his first teaching job. The school had a tradition of staging joint Staff/6th Form productions so he found himself playing two parts in Brecht's "Caucasian Chalk Circle".

His real stage "apprenticeship" started when he moved to Cumbria in 1977 and got involved with a theatre group at The Brewery Arts Centre in Kendal. At his first audition for Gogol's "Government Inspector" he convinced the director that he had a lot of experience, so had to "put his money where his mouth was" when given the leading role of Khliestakov. Having "got away with it" (the first of many!), the roles followed thick and fast over the next 10 years.

He played everything from Lysander in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" to Mike TV in "Charlie and The Chocolate Factory". He achieved celestial rank when playing God in an outdoor production of the medieval morality play "Everyman". This was counterbalanced by playing the devilish title role in a large scale community show specially commissioned for Kendal in 1981 called "The Bogeyman". He also appeared in two professional productions for the small touring theatre company Pocket Theatre Cumbria, which was based at the Arts Centre.

His directorial career began in 1984 with a one-acter by Stephen Jeffreys (who wrote "The Libertine") called "Clearing House". Having got a taste for overall control, he went on to direct "Bazaar & Rummage" by Sue Townsend, "Shadow of a Gunman" by Sean O'Casey, Arthur Miller's "American Clock" and a double-bill of David Hare plays: "Bay At Nice" and "Wrecked Eggs".

In 1988 he moved abroad to take up a post as Head of English and Drama at an international school in Milan. As well as his teaching duties and directing school productions, he co-founded a small company Teatro Falloppio, which unfortunately only did one show: "Skirmishes" by Catherine Hayes.

On his return to Cumbria in 1991 he resumed theatre work at The Brewery directing "The Loves of Cass McGuire" by Brian Friel, the Jacobean revenge tragedy "The Changeling" by Middleton&Rowley, Thomas Hardy's "The Day After The Fair" and playing Canon Throbbing in "Habeas Corpus", The Miller in Michael Bogdanov's modernised "Canterbury Tales" and Henry in Stoppard's "The Real Thing".

The pinnacle of his time in Kendal came in 1994 when he adapted, directed and played two small roles in a production of "Hamlet" which toured to Mumbai and Goa in India.

He rounded off his time in Kendal by directing "Two" by Jim Cartwright and playing Gerry Evans in a touring production of "Dancing At Lughnasa" by Brian Friel for Freehold Theatre Company, Lancaster.

On moving to Kent in 1996 he joined Playcraft in Canterbury and played Mr Smith in Ionesco's "The Bald Primadonna" followed by the title roles in "Macbeth" and "An Inspector Calls" at The Gulbenkian Theatre. It was whilst playing Lucky in Playcraft's 2001 production of "Waiting For Godot" that he met Brian Ross and Caroline Lamoon and along with Alan Pope, whom he already knew, the nucleus of what would become AshCan Theatre Company was formed.

Since AshCan's first show "Someone Who'll Watch Over Me" in which he played Michael, he has taken the roles of George in "Duck Variations" by David Mamet and Gerardo in "Death and The Maiden" by Ariel Dorfman.

In 2004 he moved back up to Kendal for personal and family reasons. The following two years were theatrically fallow, so when he returned to Kent in 2006 the urge to resuscitate AshCan was irresistible. He directed Pinter's "Old Times" in June 2007, played Yvan in "Art" in March 2008 and, most recently, directed "On An Average Day" by John Kolvenbach in February this year.

When not acting or directing, Nigel supports lost causes i.e. Bolton Wanderers F.C. and Lancashire and England Cricket teams!

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Nigel is an experienced actor, director and teacher. He was born in Bolton, Lancashire in 1951 and comes from a theatrical family. Some of his earliest memories involve hearing his parents' lines for plays they were appearing in at the Little Theatre, or watching dress rehearsals on Sunday afternoon. He was not bitten by the acting bug at that stage and an unsuccessful performance in a class play at school turned him off the theatre for many years.

He became interested in acting during his first teaching job. The school had a tradition of staging joint Staff/6th Form productions so he found himself playing two parts in Brecht's "Caucasian Chalk Circle".

His real stage "apprenticeship" started when he moved to Cumbria in 1977 and got involved with a theatre group at The Brewery Arts Centre in Kendal. At his first audition for Gogol's "Government Inspector" he convinced the director that he had a lot of experience, so had to "put his money where his mouth was" when given the leading role of Khliestakov. Having "got away with it" (the first of many!), the roles followed thick and fast over the next 10 years.

 

He played everything from Lysander in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" to Mike TV in "Charlie and The Chocolate Factory". He achieved celestial rank when playing God in an outdoor production of the medieval morality play "Everyman". This was counterbalanced by playing the devilish title role in a large scale community show specially commissioned for Kendal in 1981 called "The Bogeyman". He also appeared in two professional productions for the small touring theatre company Pocket Theatre Cumbria, which was based at the Arts Centre.

His directorial career began in 1984 with a one-acter by Stephen Jeffreys (who wrote "The Libertine") called "Clearing House". Having got a taste for overall control, he went on to direct "Bazaar & Rummage" by Sue Townsend, "Shadow of a Gunman" by Sean O'Casey, Arthur Miller's "American Clock" and a double-bill of David Hare plays: "Bay At Nice" and "Wrecked Eggs".

In 1988 he moved abroad to take up a post as Head of English and Drama at an international school in Milan. As well as his teaching duties and directing school productions, he co-founded a small company Teatro Falloppio, which unfortunately only did one show: "Skirmishes" by Catherine Hayes.

On his return to Cumbria in 1991 he resumed theatre work at The Brewery directing "The Loves of Cass McGuire" by Brian Friel, the Jacobean revenge tragedy "The Changeling" by Middleton&Rowley, Thomas Hardy's "The Day After The Fair" and playing Canon Throbbing in "Habeas Corpus", The Miller in Michael Bogdanov's modernised "Canterbury Tales" and Henry in Stoppard's "The Real Thing".

The pinnacle of his time in Kendal came in 1994 when he adapted, directed and played two small roles in a production of "Hamlet" which toured to Mumbai and Goa in India.

He rounded off his time in Kendal by directing "Two" by Jim Cartwright and playing Gerry Evans in a touring production of "Dancing At Lughnasa" by Brian Friel for Freehold Theatre Company, Lancaster.

On moving to Kent in 1996 he joined Playcraft in Canterbury and played Mr Smith in Ionesco's "The Bald Primadonna" followed by the title roles in "Macbeth" and "An Inspector Calls" at The Gulbenkian Theatre. It was whilst playing Lucky in Playcraft's 2001 production of "Waiting For Godot" that he met Brian Ross and Caroline Lamoon and along with Alan Pope, whom he already knew, the nucleus of what would become AshCan Theatre Company was formed.

Since AshCan's first show "Someone Who'll Watch Over Me" in which he played Michael, he has taken the roles of George in "Duck Variations" by David Mamet and Gerardo in "Death and The Maiden" by Ariel Dorfman.

In 2004 he moved back up to Kendal for personal and family reasons. The following two years were theatrically fallow, so when he returned to Kent in 2006 the urge to resuscitate AshCan was irresistible. He directed Pinter's "Old Times" in June 2007, played Yvan in "Art" in March 2008 and, most recently, directed "On An Average Day" by John Kolvenbach in February this year.

When not acting or directing, Nigel supports lost causes i.e. Bolton Wanderers F.C. and Lancashire and England Cricket teams!