Gilles Ramade

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Gilles Ramade

Gilles Ramade[1] is a French playwright, director, pianist, composer, actor, lyrical singer, conductor, writer, editor and producer.

He was born in 1958 in Albi, in the region of the Tarn, in southern France. His parents were both schoolteachers, and he grew up in the Albi region, first in Vaour (1958 to 1962), then at Cabannes, a small village near Cordes sur Ciel, and in Albi where he stayed until age 20.

After working and practising piano with great masters like Bruno Rigutto and Pierre Sancan, he started off his career by playing piano in bars, restaurants and hotels, and went on to become piano accompanist for the Capitole Ballet in Toulouse.

In 1988, he graduated from the National Conservatoire of Toulouse and was awarded the first prize in dramatic arts and electroacoustics as well as the gold medal of lyrical arts with jury’s congratulations, in singing and musical theory. In 1988, he won the Golden Voices Competition in Rouen.

As he became known in the classical music and opera world, he was invited to national and international theaters around the world, and sang with Anna Prucnal, José Van Dam and Chriss Meritt. He worked with Luigi Alva, Marcel Landowski, Michel Plasson, Jean-Claude Casadessus and Jerome Savary, with whom he notably played Don Giovanni, Pelléas, Figaro, Escamillo, Falstaff and even Mackie in Brecht’s Threepenny Opera.

In 1988, he was chosen for the creation of one of the leading roles of the world-famous musical Cats, which was then awarded the Molière of the best musical in 1989.

In 1992 he created his own company of musical theater, Figaro & Co[2]., and went on to write and direct over sixty plays, musicals and operas.

As both a writer and a director, he worked to break down and overcome the barriers between the arts and challenge audiences with new material, creating startling encounters between closed up artistic worlds. In his shows, lyrical art meets Queen’s rock music and ties in with the Marx Brothers’ burlesque humour, Don José slams his love to Carmen and Romeo proclaims his hatred for Juliet (Romeo Hait Juliette[3]).

With his prodigious adaptation of Carmina Burana with 600 chorists in 2010, he directed and designed his hundredth production on the stage of Toulouse’s Zenith.

His shows are staged in some of the biggest theaters in France, and he recently staged great productions like Casanova l’indécent,[4] A Taxi for Broadway,[5] Maestro Furioso,[6] Led Zep 129.[7] Always on the lookout for new experiences and unforeseen encounters between the arts, his creations are nourished by his experience and formation as a pianist,[8] and he has recently teamed up with Jéremy Ferrari, a well-known popular French humourist, for his one-man show Piano Furioso Opus 2.[9]

"You are one of the rare french creators with a sense of the theater in your compositions" Claude Michel Schonberg about Gilles Ramade

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Figaro & Co Compagnie Gilles Ramade". www.figaroandco.fr. Retrieved 2017-09-12.
  2. ^ "Figaro & Co Compagnie Gilles Ramade". www.figaroandco.fr. Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  3. ^ "Une très belle performance d'acteurs". ladepeche.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  4. ^ ""Casanova l'indécent", la nouvelle comédie musicale de Gilles Ramade". ladepeche.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  5. ^ "Comédie musicale "Un Taxi pour Broadway" au TMP". ladepeche.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  6. ^ "Maestro Furioso revient au Casino Théâtre Barrière de Toulouse". ladepeche.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  7. ^ "Spectacle "Led Zep 129" à Pibrac : un opéra rock pour dénoncer la folie d'Hitler - France 3 Occitanie". France 3 Occitanie. Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  8. ^ « Piano furioso », in 88 notes pour piano solo, Jean-Pierre Thiollet, Neva Editions, 2015, p. 219-220. ISBN 978-2-3505-5192-0
  9. ^ ""Piano furioso" s'invite en Ségala". ladepeche.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-09-11.