Trevor rhone education

Biography

Trevor Rhone was an award winning Jamaican playwright, director and actor. After graduation, he began writing radio plays for the newly established Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation (JBC) and, in 1960, went to London on a scholarship to attend the Rose Bruford Training College of Speech and Drama. In 1965 he formed a dramatic arts group, Theatre 77, with Yvonne Brewster and other colleagues, and later opened the Barn Theatre in a converted garage. In 1970-71, Rhone collaborated with Perry Henzell on The Harder They Come, the acclaimed cinematic masterpiece. In 1996, Rhone became a lecturer at the University of the West Indies, Mona, and was later a visiting lecturer at US institutions such as Harvard University.

Productions

School's Out

School's Out

Year: 1975

Staged in: Theatre Royal, Stratford East

Old Story Time

Old Story Time

Year: 1984

Staged in: Theatre Royal, Stratford East

Smile Orange

Smile Orange

Year: 1983

Staged in: The Tricycle Theatre

Two Can Play

Two Can Play

Year: 1983

Staged in: Inventory Productions

Trevor Rhone

Jamaican actor (1940–2009)

Trevor Dave RhoneCD (24 March 1940 – 15 September 2009)[2] was a Jamaican writer, playwright and filmmaker. He co-wrote, with director Perry Henzell, the internationally successful film The Harder They Come (1972).[3]

Life

Trevor Rhone, was the last child of 23, grew up in the tiny town of Bellas Gate in Saint Catherine, Jamaica. After seeing his first play at the age of nine, he fell in love with theatre. Educated at Beckford & Smith High School, now known as St. Jago High School, he began his theatre career as a teacher after a three-year stint at Rose Bruford College, an English drama school, where he studied in the early 1960s on scholarship.[4] He was part of the renaissance of Jamaican theatre in the early 1970s. Rhone participated in a group called Theatre '77, which established The Barn, a small theatre in Kingston, to stage local performances. The vision of the group that came together in 1965 was that in 12 years, by 1977, there would be professional theatre in Jamaica.[

ABOUT

Trevor Rhone, is a revered Jamaican playwright, director, and actor, who left an indelible mark on Caribbean culture with iconic works like "The Harder They Come," "Smile Orange," and "Old Story Time." Born in Kingston, Jamaica, Rhone's artistic journey flourished at Rose Bruford College in Kent before he founded Theatre 77, a beacon of innovation. His plays, blending social critique with humor, resonate deeply with Jamaican life, while his cinematic masterpiece "The Harder They Come" propelled Caribbean cinema to global acclaim, cementing Rhone's legacy as a transformative force in theater and film.

MISSION


We commit ourselves to honoring Trevor Rhone's enduring legacy by shining a bright light on the remarkable life and contributions of the esteemed Jamaican playwright, director, and actor. Our mission is to share in-depth insights into Rhone's captivating journey, reigniting passion for his past cinematic masterpieces and breathing new life into them for modern audiences. Our ultimate aim is to resurrect these cinematic treasures and showcase them o

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