Raymond Omodei |
By Helen Musa
LAST week the
Australian theatre lost one of its most literate and most influential directors
when Raymond Omodei died at Rosewood Care in Leederville WA after
complications from aphasic Alzheimer’s.
He was, in his heyday, as famous in the East and the West
for his striking productions of the classics, whether Sophocles,
Shakespeare, Restoration high comedy,
20th century Irish drama, Patrick White and Chekhov.
But in Canberra he was best-known for his hit commercial
production of “Shirley Valentine” starring Amanda Muggleton and for his work at
the ACT Curriculum Research and Development Centre.
With a penchant for tight psychological work, Omodei was
sought-after by female performers, notably Muggleton and Angela Punch, (later
Punch-McGregor) whose first professional engagement was as Pegeen Mike in his
production of Synge’s “The Playboy of the Western World” for the Old Tote
Theatre in 1973.
The illness which eventfully cut him short was the worst possible
fate for a brilliant raconteur and wit — “it was like having Oscar Wilde in the
room” — one friend said. After
colleagues started to notice a marked deterioration in his capacity to form
sentences and complete his witty epigrams, it was to the verbal classics that
he wants to turn.
In early March 2018, I attended his production of Congreve’s
“The Way of the World,” at Guildford’s Garrick Theatre, his fourth staging of
the play. The presentation was of impeccable quality, all the more extraordinary
considering his worsening condition, but, supported around the clock by team of
willing friends and carers, he came through with flying colours.
Omodei’s life was entirely devoted to the theatre and by the
time of his illness he had staged over 200 productions.
The eldest child of Helen and Ray Omodei, he grew up in
Wiluna, once home to the biggest gold mine in Western Australia, but when gold
ran out, his family left the town and settled in in Kalgoorlie, where from the
early 1950s he acted, danced and directed with the Goldfields Repertory Club.
He then trained as a school teacher in Graylands Teachers
College, Perth while throwing himself into roles with university and amateur
companies in Perth. In 1968 he moved to London for three years, founding a theatre
company there.
Back in WA, he was from 1971-73, associate director at Edgar
Metcalfe’s National Theatre Company before being headhunted by Robin Lovejoy to
become a resident director at the Old Tote Theatre Company in Sydney for three
years.
His east coast career, working with his long-time
collaborator Jake Newby, include a stint as artistic director of the Australian
Theatre for Young People, a teaching position at the University of Newcastle
and from 1977-78 the artistic directorship of the inaugural Armidale Project ,
a regional theatre initiative.
In Sydney he met up with old WA colleagues like the
playwright Dorothy Hewett, whose notorious “Bon Bons and Roses for Dolly” he
had directed in Perth during 1972, as well as Katharine Brisbane and Philip
Parsons, who had founded Currency Press, and with them immersed himself in the burgeoning
Sydney theatre scene of the 1970s.
After working for the Curriculum Research and Development
Centre in Canberra, he returned to WA, where he became artistic director of the
Mason-Miller Theatre Company then from 1982 the artistic director of the
Hole-in-the-Wall Theatre Company.
In that year he was named Western Australian Citizen of WA
for his contribution to the arts, culture and entertainment.
After a period of commercial theatre production, during
which he made a name for himself Australia-wide, he became the first and only
artistic director of the State Theatre Company of Western Australia (now the
Black Swan State Theatre Company of WA ) from 1991-93.
Omodei’s latter years were spent teaching theatre and
staging independent productions like “A Long Day’s Journey into Night” at the
Subiaco Theatre Centre in 2004 with Angela Punch McGregor as Mary Tyrone. He
emerged in 2011 to become director-in-residence for the (80th anniversary
celebrations of the Goldfields Repertory Club.
Omodei was a larger-than-life personality. He combined the
flamboyance of his paternal Italian heritage with the canny financial caution
inherited from his mother’s side in a remarkably comfortable career for a
theatre practitioner. He lived grandly in Perth in a mansion in Leederville, in
a Georgian residence in in North Perth and finally in an apartment with
breathtaking views of the Swan River, dispensing Veuve Clicot, clever words,
Italian opera and his famous spaghetti vongele with equal aplomb.
A voracious reader and documenter of theatre, his collection
of theatrical material now rests with the Museum of Performing Arts.
Omodei is survived by his sibling Cathy, Mont and Vincent. A
private funeral will take place on April 15. He would have been 84 today.
Raymond Douglas Omodei, April 11, 1936 to April 2, 2020.