Simon Slater

Simon Slater (born 7 March 1959 in Scarborough, North Yorkshire) is an English actor and composer. He was educated at Sedbergh School.

Simon Slater
Born
Simon Anthony Slater

7 March 1959

He has been performing, playing and composing since his early teens and continued through university when he attended Goldsmiths College at the University of London. He plays piano, double bass, saxophone, clarinet, and the ukulele.

Slater has had numerous music scores in theatre and films. He most recently worked as composer on Henry V and Julius Caesar for the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he worked for three years. He wrote the music for Macbeth, starring Sean Bean ("Albery")[1] and the award-winning The Blood Libel for Radio 4. He also composed for many productions at Hampstead Theatre Club, The Liverpool Everyman, Bristol Old Vic, The Bush, and Young Vic.

His film credits include Dealers, and Entrapment.

His work as a theatrical actor includes a five-year run in the musical Mamma Mia! as Sam Charmichael, as well as Forbidden Broadway (Fortune), Sugar Hill Blues (Hampstead and Warehouse Croydon), The Great White Hope (Tricycle), Aspects of Love (Sydmonton Festival), Waiting for Godot, and Wind in the Willows (Nuffield Southampton).

Slater has made guest appearances in several TV series, including in Heartbeat, Birds of a Feather, Doctor Who, Inspector Morse, Lovejoy, Monarch of the Glen and Where the Heart Is. In 1987, he appeared as Inspector Kite in the third series of The Bill.

He has also appeared in the Theatre Royal (Winchester) production of Peter Pan the Pantomime playing Captain Hook during the Christmas season of 2010/2011. He also wrote all the music for the show.

He has written the musical score to a new aerial show, 'Zoetrope' which is being produced by the theatre company Kinematic Theatre. The show debuts at Rose Bruford College's Rose theatre in late September. Simon has also written music for the Royal Shakespeare company and other London Theatres, including work at Sloane Square Theatre, The Royal Court.

in 2010, Slater's narration of Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel won an Audie Award for Literary Fiction[2] and an AudioFile magazine Earphone Award[3].

References

  1. Wolf, Matt (26 November 2002). "MacBeth". Variety. Retrieved 30 July 2010.
  2. "2010 Audie Awards® - APA". www.audiopub.org. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  3. "WOLF HALL by Hilary Mantel Read by Simon Slater | Audiobook Review". AudioFile Magazine. Retrieved 22 May 2020.


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