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Theatreland's top 100 players

Andrew Lloyd Webber and David Ian, his co-judge on the BBC's 'How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?', head this year's list of the 100 most influential people in theatre. <i>The full list appears in the December 29, 2006  issue of The Stage</i>

Thursday 28 December 2006 20:00 EST
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1= ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER

Composer, producer, theatre owner. In addition to reviving The Sound of Music in London, his 1976 show Evita was revived in the West End to rave reviews and The Phantom of the Opera became the longest-running musical on Broadway.

1= DAVID IAN

David Ian, a president of the production company Live Nation, which produces shows in the West End, the regions and the US. Co-judged How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? with Lloyd Webber, and co-produced the resulting musical.

3 CAMERON MACKINTOSH

Brought Avenue Q to London, and celebrated 21 years of Les Miserables, the West End's long- est running show.

4 HOWARD PANTER AND ROSEMARY SQUIRE

Of the Ambassador Theatre Group, which owns more West End theatres than anyone else.

5 NICA BURNS/MAX WEITZENHOFFER

Nimax duo bought first West End theatres in 2005. Shows like Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?made big profits.

6 MICHAEL BOYD

Artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Now presenting The Complete Works of Shakespeare, an ambitious project.

7 NICHOLAS HYTNER

Artistic director, the National Theatre. Also directed The Alchemist and a film version of The History Boys.

8 JUDE KELLY

Artistic director of the South Bank Centre in London. Overseeing the cultural side of the 2012 London Olympic Games.

9 BILL KENWRIGHT

The producer's successes included Hay Fever starring Judi Dench, The Crucible at the Gielgud, and a dark revival of the musical Cabaret.

10 MICHAEL GRANDAGE

Artistic director of the Donmar Warehouse. A busy year included directing Don Juan and Frost/Nixon.

11 SONIA FRIEDMAN

Producer. Worked on Tom Stoppard's Rock 'N' Roll in the West End and the reality TV winner The Play's the Thing.

12 HAROLD PINTER

After his Nobel Prize last year, Pinter acted in Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape which sold out its short run in 17 minutes.

13 JON CONWAY/ NICK THOMAS OF QDOS

The light entertainment and panto kings explored new ventures as far afield as Las Vegas.

14 KEVIN SPACEY/SALLY GREENE OF THE OLD VIC

Moon for the Misbegotten was a high for Spacey, while Greene is doing well with Billy Elliot.

15 DAVID LAN

Artistic director of London's Young Vic. He revamped and re-opened his small venue with the help of the architect Stephen Tompkins.

16 GRAHAM SHEFFIELD

Artistic director of the Barbican. Sheffield is proving adventurous, even staging the Barbican's first panto.

17 VICKY FEATHERSTONE/JOHN TIFFANY

National Theatre of Scotland. Its work has proved a triumph, especially Black Watch.

18 JONATHAN CHURCH

Artistic director of Chichester Festival Theatre. He has staged fine productions of Nicholas Nickleby and Pravda.

19 RUFUS NORRIS

A director, his work this year included Market Boy at the National and the radical revival of the musical Cabaret in the West End.

20 DOMINIC COOKE

The director made an acclaimed The Crucible and oversaw RSC's festival of new work. New artistic director of the Royal Court.

Other leading figures

Producers

Bob Boyett/Bill Haber for Spamalot, Matt Byam Shaw/Nick Salmon for A Voyage Around My Father, Judy Craymer for Mamma Mia!, Mark Goucher for Footloose, Thelma Holt for The Crucible, Richard Jordan for Lunch with the Hamiltons, Phil McIntyre for We Will Rock You, David Pugh for Rebecca, Thomas Schumacher for The Lion King, Bill Taylor for Blue Man Group, Arielle Tepper Madover for Donmar Warehouse transfers, Kevin Wood for First Family Entertainment

Dance

Matthew Bourne for Edward Scissorhands, Javier de Frutos for Cabaret, Akram Khan for his work with Sylvie Guillem

Literary

Alan Ayckbourn for If I Were You, Alan Bennett for The History Boys, Caryl Churchill for Drunk Enough to Say I Love You, David Eldridge for Market Boy, David Harrower for Blackbird, Terry Johnson for Piano/Forte, Peter Morgan for Frost/Nixon, Patrick Marber for Don Juan in Soho, Mark Ravenhill for Dick Whittington, Tom Stoppard for Rock 'n' Roll

Performers

Simon Russell Beale for Life of Galileo, Richard Griffiths for The History Boys, Judi Dench for Hay Fever, Connie Fisher for The Sound of Music, Derek Jacobi for A Voyage Around My Father, Idina Menzel for Wicked, Ian McKellen for The Cut, Elena Roger for Evita, Rufus Sewell for Rock 'n' Roll, Michael Sheen for Frost/Nixon

Design/Technical/Architects

Paule Constable for Cosi Fan Tutti, Bob Crowley for The History Boys, Chris Davey for The Merchant of Venice at the Edinburgh Lyceum, David Farley for Sunday in the Park With George, Tim Foster for Trafalgar Studios, Rob Howell for Hedda Gabler, Eugene Lee for Wicked, Katrina Lindsay for Market Boy, Christopher Oram for Evita, Stephen Tomkins for The Young Vic redesign

Regional/Subsidised

Michael Attenborough at the Almeida, Ian Brown at the West Yorkshire Playhouse, Anthony Clark at the Hampstead Theatre, Giles Croft at the Nottingham Playhouse, Dominic Dromgoole at the Globe, David Farr at the Hammersmith Lyric, Peter Hall for Amy's View, Samuel West at Sheffield Theatres

Musicals

Elton John/Lee Hall for Billy Elliot, Stephen Schwartz for Wicked

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