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Theo Adams
Theo Adams
from Wikipedia

Theo Adams (born 29 September 1989 in London, England)[1] is a performance artist and director of the contemporary theatrical performance group Theo Adams Company.

Key Information

Biography

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Education

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Adams studied at Fine Arts College, Hampstead. He left the formal education system early, at the age of 15 to concentrate on performance.[2]

Work

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Adams is known for both his live productions and film work. He made his professional stage debut aged 9 in the Royal National Theatre's production of An Inspector Calls directed by Stephen Daldry at the Garrick Theatre in London's West End. Ponystep Magazine described the 15-year-old Adams as "central to a scintillating brand of gender-dysphoric, mid-2000s London nightclub chaos" and, over the next few years, he "turned his arresting social presence and brilliant performance compulsion into high art".[3]

After several solo shows which he performed internationally, Adams formed The Theo Adams Company with their first performance on 4 January 2008 at the Tate Britain . The contemporary theatrical performance art group comprises a collection of dancers, performers, actors, artists and musicians[4] creating work described by CNN as part ballet, part theater, part pop.[5]

Adams has contributed to a number of magazines including W Magazine, i-D and Dazed & Confused, appeared on the cover of Time Out London and was featured topless in the June 2008 issue of French Playboy shot by Rankin. Adams has starred in music videos for artist such as Florence and the Machine and Róisín Murphy and was the focus of the BBC documentary Singing with the Enemy in 2007.

In April 2009, The Theo Adams Company completed their Performance project, a series of performances in an abandoned Catholic school in northwest London. It was published as a 16-page photo feature in the May 2009 issue of W Magazine with photography by David Sims. The company invited and were joined in their performances by special guests Lorna Luft daughter of Judy Garland and Tony award-winner Frances Ruffelle.[4] On 27 February 2010 the short film made as part of the project was screened at the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in New York.[6] It was then screened at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia on 23 June 2010 [7]

In November 2009, The Theo Adams Company announced Cry Out a new theatrical production. The world premiere took place on 30 November 2009 at the Za Koenji Theatre in Tokyo, Japan.[8] While in Tokyo, Theo Adams Company were invited to give a lecture at the Musashino Art University about their work. The production and build up to the world premiere was captured on film for the documentary, 9 Days Of Cry Out. It had its premiere screening on 28 February 2010 in Tokyo. The full production had its European premiere on 8 May at Klangraum, in Krems, one of the oldest Mendicant orders’ churches in world. The performance was part of the annual Donaufestival in Austria. The performance was part of the final night of the festival which was curated by Peaches

It was announced on 15 November 2010 that The Theo Adams Company would present their UK premiere of 'Cry Out' at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London on 18 and 19 December 2010 and tickets sold out within a day.[9][10]

In June 2010, Adams was the youngest person to be shortlisted in the Emerging Performance category for the Hospital Club and Independent Newspaper's 100. A search for the most influential people in the creative and media industries.[11]

On 14 October 2010, Louis Vuitton presented a new promenade performance production by Theo Adams Company in Tokyo, Japan. Collaborating with some of the most respected people within the performance world including Emmy award-winning set designer Joseph Bennett and Complicite's stage designer and Tony award nominee Rumi Matsui, the company transformed a warehouse on the edge of Tokyo bay into a maze of rooms and walkways. Adams' integrated international actors, singers and dancers within several separate performances around the space. The performance culminated in a finale performance on a two story high set featuring a cast of over 50 and a special performance by legendary Disco group Sister Sledge[12]

References

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from Grokipedia
Theo Adams is a British performance artist, director, and creative director known for founding Theo Adams Company, a London-based collective renowned for producing large-scale interdisciplinary theatrical works that bridge fashion, art, music, and performance. Born and raised in London, Adams is self-taught, having left school at the age of 15 to pursue his art, and made his West End debut as a performer at age 9. He gained early attention at age 20 when commissioned by Louis Vuitton to create a major work featuring more than 80 performers. Theo Adams Company debuted at Tate Britain in 2008 and has since presented ambitious productions at leading institutions and festivals worldwide, including Tate Modern, ICA London, the Museum of Old and New Art in Tasmania, and venues in Tokyo, Melbourne, and New York. Adams has directed high-profile projects across music and fashion, including FKA twigs' 2019 world tour Magdalene and the live video for her song Cellophane, as well as music videos and films for artists such as Paloma Faith, Kylie Minogue, Jessie Ware, and collaborations with Róisín Murphy. His work extends to large-scale events, installations, and campaigns for luxury brands including Louis Vuitton, Veuve Clicquot, MAC Cosmetics, Fiorucci, Michael Halpern, and Liberty. Frequently described as blending references from classical opera, high camp, Greek tragedy, queer cabaret, reality television, and expressionist dance, Adams' productions emphasize ritualized catharsis, fearless self-expression, opulent spectacle, and boundary-crossing performance that subverts glamour and creates intense, immersive experiences. Through Theo Adams Company, an ever-expanding collective of multidisciplinary artists, designers, dancers, musicians, and performers from around the world, Adams continues to push the limits of live performance and visual storytelling in collaboration with leading figures in art, fashion, and music.

Early life

Family background

Theo Adams was born on 29 September 1989 in London, England, as the second child and first son of Adam Adams and Jenny Adams. He has an elder sister, Andrea, a Cambridge-educated academic who has occasionally performed with the Theo Adams Company. Adams also has a younger brother who left home for studies by 2014. His mother, Jenny Adams, lived with multiple sclerosis, a condition that had progressed significantly by the time of his birth; doctors had specifically warned her that childbirth could detrimentally affect her health. Despite this advice, she gave birth to Adams, and her disabilities worsened progressively throughout his childhood. Jenny Adams died in 2010, shortly after Adams returned from a performance in Austria. From early childhood, Adams served as a young carer for his mother, forming a mutual care dynamic in which they supported each other deeply. His mother had loved dance in her younger years, an interest that directly shaped Adams' own commitment to celebrating movement in his work, rooted in his lifelong awareness of the fragility of physical ability. Adams' family heritage is half-Cypriot Greek through his grandparents, with a lineage that includes Greek Orthodox priests, which exposed him to Greek music and culture from an early age. These early experiences with mortality and the precariousness of movement would later influence the themes in his artistic practice.

Childhood and education

Adams attended Fine Arts College in Hampstead. He left formal education at the age of 15 to concentrate on performance work. Described as a self-taught performance artist, Adams pursued no further formal qualifications beyond that point. His decision to exit traditional schooling reflected a commitment to developing his artistic practice independently from an early age.

Early stage experience

Theo Adams made his professional stage debut at the age of nine in Stephen Daldry's production of An Inspector Calls, performed at the Garrick Theatre in London's West End as part of the Royal National Theatre's presentation. In a non-speaking symbolic role, he appeared on stage throughout the production, an experience he later described as a major influence despite lacking dialogue. In his mid-teens, from around age 14 to 15, Adams emerged as a central figure in London's underground nightclub scene during the mid-2000s. He was a notable presence at venues including Kash Point, Anti Social, and BoomBox, where he contributed a distinctive youthful dystopian energy to the parties. To gain entry to these clubs while underage, Adams employed heavy makeup and dramatic clothing as a means of disguise. Around age 17, Adams declined offers to appear on Big Brother and other television programs to preserve his artistic independence. He also featured in the 2007 BBC documentary Singing with the Enemy.

Career

Formation of Theo Adams Company

Theo Adams founded the Theo Adams Company in 2008. The company emerged when Adams chose to stage a performance at Tate Britain rather than accept an offer to appear on the reality television show Big Brother. This decision led to the company's debut performance at Tate Britain in 2008, marking the first time Adams performed with a group rather than solo. Adams serves as the founder and artistic director of the collective. The Theo Adams Company is a London-based, ever-growing collective of multidisciplinary artists, designers, dancers, musicians, and performers from diverse backgrounds. By 2012, the group included approximately 20 performers, artists, actors, musicians, and dancers. Members are recruited organically without formal auditions, often drawn from Adams' network of friends and collaborators in the performance scene. From its inception, the company has rejected divisions between high art and low art, viewing them as interconnected extremes that meet at the top. Adams draws inspiration from a wide spectrum of influences, including avant-garde dance-theatre practitioners like Pina Bausch and popular spectacles such as the Eurovision Song Contest, blending elements of dance, theater, and pop culture in pursuit of emotional intensity and visceral impact. The formation built upon Adams' pre-2008 experiences performing in London's club scene, where he honed his approach to dramatic, glamorous, and emotionally charged performance.

Early performance works (2008–2010)

Theo Adams Company's first major performance debuted at Tate Britain in London in 2008, marking the group's initial public presentation. In this work, Adams mixed Whitney Houston's vocals with Orthodox choral chants while covered in white glitter on stage, as ten dancers emerged from semi-sheer flesh-tone sacks wearing black wigs that reached the floor. In April 2009, the company staged a performance project in an abandoned Catholic school in northwest London, which was documented in a 16-page photo feature in the May 2009 issue of W Magazine, photographed by David Sims. The project included special guests Lorna Luft and Frances Ruffelle. A short film from this performance was later screened at P.S.1 in New York and ICA in Philadelphia in 2010. The company's next significant production, Cry Out, premiered on 30 November 2009 at Za Koenji Theatre in Tokyo. Its European premiere took place on 8 May 2010 at Donaufestival in Austria, followed by the UK premiere on 18–19 December 2010 at ICA London, where performances sold out quickly. The work was documented in the film 9 Days Of Cry Out. On 14 October 2010, Theo Adams Company presented a promenade performance commissioned by Louis Vuitton in a Tokyo warehouse, collaborating with Joseph Bennett and Rumi Matsui, featuring a cast of more than 80 performers and including a performance by Sister Sledge.

Music and media direction (2010s–present)

In the 2010s and beyond, Theo Adams shifted toward directing short films, music videos, and providing creative and performance direction for prominent artists' live tours, television specials, and awards performances, often through his multidisciplinary Theo Adams Company. He directed the Channel 4 short Safety Curtain in 2016 and the short Dream Like the Stars in 2019. In 2019, Adams directed FKA twigs' acclaimed Magdalene world tour, described as a bold reimagining of staged music, along with live performances including Cellophane and TV specials such as FKA twigs Live at Maida Vale, Later... with Jools Holland, and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. Adams entered music video direction with Paloma Faith's "Better Than This" in 2020, where he served as both director and creative director. He acted as creative director for the visuals of Paloma Faith's album Infinite Things, assembling Theo Adams Company members and collaborators to produce work during lockdown in London, including creative direction for the music videos "Gold" (2020) and "Monster" (2021), as well as the live performance of "Better Than This" on BBC's The One Show. He later directed Paloma Faith's "How You Leave A Man" in 2023. Adams directed music videos for Jessie Ware, including "Pearls" (2023) and "Freak Me Now" featuring Róisín Murphy (2023). His work with Kylie Minogue includes directing "Kiss of Life" with Jessie Ware (2021) and co-directing "Lights Camera Action" (2024). Adams has held creative and performance direction roles with Years & Years, serving as creative director for Night Call (2022) and The Big New Years & Years Eve Party TV special (2021), performance director for the "A Second to Midnight" music video with Kylie Minogue (2021), and artistic director for the "It's a Sin" performance by Elton John and Years & Years at the BRIT Awards 2021. He was creative consultant for ABBA's "Little Things" music video in 2021. As founder and artistic director of Theo Adams Company, Adams has drawn on his collective's performers and collaborators to infuse theatrical spectacle into these music and media projects.

Artistic style and influences

Personal life

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