Regrets, I've Had a Few

Told by an Idiot

Told by an Idiot's Artistic Director Paul Hunter in free-flowing conversation with friends and colleagues from the theatre industry, delving into what made them the people they are today.

  1. Episode 53: Ioana Curelea, Lulu Tam and Sonya Smullen

    12/29/2025

    Episode 53: Ioana Curelea, Lulu Tam and Sonya Smullen

    What ignites the beginnings of a design, taking inspiration from the grotesque to the world of film and the importance of mentors throughout your life. All of this and more is discussed in this month’s episode of Regrets I’ve Had A Few, featuring the three Naomi Wilkinson Award for Stage Design winners, Ioana Curelea (2019), Lulu Tam (2022) and Sonya Smullen (2025). About Ioana Curelea Ioana (she/her), is a queer Eastern European set and costume designer based in London. She works across theatre and film, building visual worlds that are rooted in politics, psychology, and lived experience.   She trained at Wimbledon College of Arts UAL (BA and MA in Theatre Design), and now teaches on the MA course there as well as Central Saint Martins and East 15 Acting School. She also runs guest sessions and creative workshops in places like the London Screen Academy. Teaching is an essential part of her practice—a two-way exchange that constantly recharges her creative approach.   Most of Ioana’s work sits in devised and physical theatre, often circling themes like power, identity, displacement, and survival. She tends to gravitate toward projects that amplify marginalised voices and challenge conventional forms. Long-term collaborators include sanctuary company PSYCHEdelight, Open Sky, and Turtle Key Arts.   About Lulu Tam Lulu Tam is a scenographer who likes to explore the relationship between materials, body, and space in performance. She trained on the MA Scenography at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama and now she teaches Performance Design at Guildhall School of Music and Drama.  Theatre credits include: The Mountaintop (Curve Theatre); The Children’s Inquiry (Southwark Playhouse); Bindweed (Mercury Theatre); Showdown (Chamäleon Theater, Berlin); I Really Do Think This Will Change Your Life (Mercury Theatre); Woodhill (Edinburgh and UK Tour); The Killing of Sister George (Told by an Idiot at New Vic Theatre); Wáltsáil Abhaile (An Taibhdhearc); A Pretty S****y Love (Theatr Clwyd); The Prince (Southwark Playhouse); This is Paradise (Traverse Theatre); Lit (Nottingham Playhouse/High Tide Festival); Seeds (Pleasance Theatre); Red/Chaos (ArtsEd); Invincible (Stephen Joseph Theatre, UK Tour, Off-Broadway Tour) and A Winter’s Tale (Les Kurbas Theatre, Ukraine).  Awards include: Linbury Prize 2015 (finalist); Taking the Stage, British Council (winner); World Stage Design 2017 (selected designer) and Naomi Wilkinson Award for Stage Design 2022 (winner).   About Sonya Smullen Sonya is a set and costume designer from Glasgow who graduated from Wimbledon College of Arts with a BA in Theatre Design in 2022. Her focus is to make exciting new work that celebrates playful and devised processes.    Design credits include: How Does Santa Go Down The Chimney? (Told by an Idiot / Unicorn Theatre); Three Sisters (WCA Theatre); Wasted (Lyric Hammersmith); The Poetry Brothel: I Spit Roses (The Century, Soho); Four Felons and a Funeral (Pleasance Theatre, Birmingham Hippodrome); Lose the Path, Find your Way (Arts Depot); Listen to The Forest (Tramway, Roxy Assembly); Speed Queen (Museum of Comedy, Soho Theatre); Callisto (Jermyn Street Theatre).

    29 min
  2. Podcast Episode 52: Jennifer Jackson

    12/12/2025

    Podcast Episode 52: Jennifer Jackson

    Living between cultures and the impact this has on theatremaking, navigating the pull between self-led work and collective creativity and a preference for Bolivian Salteñas over Coventry Godcakes. All of this and more is discussed in this month’s episode of Regrets I’ve Had A Few, featuring award winning theatre maker, Jennifer Jackson. About Jennifer Jackson Jennifer Jackson is a Midlands-born, award winning British-Bolivian theatre-maker, movement director, choreographer, and performer whose work exists at the meeting point of performance and the excitement of a sports spectacle.  With Jennifer Jackson Company, Jennifer creates exhilarating and empowering experiences for audiences and participants which invites them to dream into new kinships and cosmologies, and her performances encompass theatre, contemporary dance, live art, Bolivian folk dance, martial arts, and co-creation. Drawing from her mixed-heritage, Jennifer tells stories that speak to her diasporic heritage; exploring power & gender biases. Jennifer’s recent production, Wrestleladswrestle, features a gang of 30 local women and non-binary folk who are trained to playfight with her. Her solo work, Endurance, was shortlisted for the Stückemarkt at the Theatertreffen (Berliner Festspiele, 2022).  She has been presented at Battersea Arts Centre, HOME Manchester, Sheffield Crucible, Cambridge Junction, The Lowry and The egg (Bath Theatre Royal). She was the inaugural artist to be awarded the Artist Takeover at Factory International, and has been supported by Britten Pears; Choreodrome (The Place, London); Theaterhaus Mitte (Berlin); Barbican Open Lab; Jerwood Arts; Leverhulme Arts Scholarship; Without Walls;  MGC Futures; The Lowry; The egg; Sheffield Theatres; and Oxford Playhouse. She was invited onto the ‘Scene Change Residency’ in 2023 by Battersea Arts Centre, HET Theater Festival, and Nederlands Theater Festival. In 2024, Jennifer presented at Caravan Assembly, and was selected to pitch Endurance at Manchester International Festival 2025. As a movement director, Jennifer’s recent credits include The Last Stand of Mary Whitehouse (Nottingham Playhouse); Bindweed (Mercury Theatre); Cowbois, Julius Caesar, and Two Gentlemen of Verona (RSC); as well as I, Joan, Merchant of Venice, and Macbeth (Shakespeare’s Globe).

    32 min
  3. Podcast Episode 51: Little Soldier

    10/30/2025

    Podcast Episode 51: Little Soldier

    The wicked Queens unruly mirror, being chased by flaming torches and sharing the stage with the wild man of Billingham (aka our wonderful Idiot Stephen Harper). All of this and more is discussed in this month’s episode of Regrets I’ve Had A Few, featuring Mercè Ribot and Patrícia Rodriguez of award winning theatre company, Little Soldier. About Little Soldier Little Soldier Productions is a London-based theatre company founded in 2010 by Patricia Rodríguez and Mercè Ribot. From the beginning, we wanted to create a platform to explore how clowning and physical comedy could be used to subvert traditional modes of making theatre. Since then, our work has been presented at leading theatres in the UK, US, Mexico, Poland and Spain. We have been supported by HOME Manchester, Battersea Arts Centre, Jackson’s Lane and Ovalhouse in London, and Arts Council England. In everything we make, we try not to let go of the joy and recklessness we believe are essential to comedy. At the same time, we use those same tools to provoke questions—sometimes uncomfortable ones—for ourselves and our audiences, about theatre and about life. We’re drawn to exploring ideas around authorship, genius, success, and canon. Our shows are made through a collaborative process with other professionals - including acclaimed directors, writers and dramaturgs Kirsty Housley, Ursula Martinez, Adam Brace and Aitor Basauri - whose knowledge and experience feed directly into the work. Research and documentation are at the core of each project, which we test on stage before sharing it publicly. Each production is imagined as a space for thinking and for play.   “A riot of invention and risk-taking” THE SCOTSMAN “These clowns know exactly what they’re doing” THE GUARDIAN For more information, visit: https://littlesoldierproductions.co.uk/

    33 min
  4. Podcast Episode 50: Joe Murphy

    09/26/2025

    Podcast Episode 50: Joe Murphy

    Hauling boxes as Josie Rourke’s removal man, his lifelong love for Les Mis and taking the helm as Artistic Director of Birmingham Rep earlier this year. All of this and more is discussed in this month’s episode of Regrets I’ve Had A Few, featuring celebrated director Joe Murphy. About Joe MurphyJoe Murphy joined The Rep in March 2025, following a transformative five-year tenure as Artistic Director at the Sherman Theatre. During his time there, the theatre saw record-breaking audience numbers, staged over 18 world premieres, and earned nominations for both The Stage’s Theatre of the Year Award and the Sky Arts Theatre Award. Joe was previously Associate Director at The Old Vic and before that Soho Theatre, and formerly the Artistic Director of new writing company nabokov. His directing work spans both national and international stages touring work to New York, Moscow, St Petersburg, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore and Bengaluru (Bangalore). Joe’s directing credits include Woyzeck and No’s Knife for The Old Vic, Housemates, Christmas Carol, Odyssey 84 and Dance to the Bone for the Sherman, What I Learned From Johnny Bevan, which won two Fringe First Awards at Edinburgh and ran at Soho Theatre. He was Associate Director for Wolf Hall Bring Up the Bodies with the RSC in Stratford and the West End. Joe’s earlier credits include The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas for the Children’s Touring Partnership, Bunny (Fringe First Award winner), and Blink, which toured the UK and New York. He also directed Virgin by EV Crowe at Watford Palace Theatre and Incognito by Nick Payne at the Bush Theatre. Additional highlights include the 2nd May Response Plays at The Bush, featuring work by James Graham, Penelope Skinner, and Jack Thorne, and the West End run of Ghost Stories at the Duke of York Theatre. Joe brings to The Rep a bold artistic vision, a deep commitment to new writing, and a proven ability to connect with audiences through powerful, thought-provoking theatre.

    31 min
  5. Podcast Episode 47: Mark Babych

    05/02/2025

    Podcast Episode 47: Mark Babych

    Being star struck by Les Dawson, realising you ‘re not as good an actor as you thought you were and following in the footsteps of legendary figures Mike Bradwell and John Godber All this and more is discussed in this month’s episode of Regrets I’ve Had A Few with Hull Truck’s Artistic Director, Mark Babych. About Mark BabychMark is the Artistic Director of Hull Truck Theatre where he has directed: The Borrowers, Pinocchio, Pop Music, Ladies Unleashed, Teechers Leavers 22’, 71 Coltman Street, The Railway Children, Romeo and Juliet, Prince Charming’s Christmas Cracker, Two, Peter Pan, A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian, Paragon Dreams, Oliver Twist, Mighty Atoms, A Christmas Treasure Island, The Gaul, Educating Rita, Martha, Josie and the Chinese Elvis, Sleeping Beauty, Dancing Through the Shadows, The Ladykillers, Cinderella and A Taste of Honey.  He has directed a wide range of classic and contemporary theatre, new plays and Shakespeare, and his work has been seen throughout the UK, Republic of Ireland and Europe, including the Vanemuine Theatre in Estonia. He has twice won Fringe First Awards at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and several Manchester Evening News Theatre Awards for Best Production. Between 1999 and 2009, Mark was the Artistic Director of the Octagon Theatre, Bolton, where he directed over 47 productions, including work by Arthur Miller, Shakespeare, Martin McDonagh, Conor McPherson and new plays by Tanika Gupta, Alan Plater and Les Smith. He has held senior posts at several theatres, including Community Director at Oldham Coliseum, Associate Director at Worcester Swan Theatre, and Associate Artist at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, and Theatre Absolute, for whom he directed the award-winning Street Trilogy.  Other theatre credits include: To Sir With Love (Royal & Derngate, Touring Consortium and UK tour); Cooking With Elvis (Derby Theatre); Blonde Bombshells of 1943 (Hampstead Theatre and UK tour); Wuthering Heights (Aberystwyth Arts Centre and Welsh tour); The Last Days of Judas Iscariot (LAMDA); Auto (Vanemuine Theatre, Estonia); All the Way Home (Library Theatre in association with the Lowry); Associate Director of the 2011 production of the Olivier Award-winning The Railway Children; co-creative director of The Complete History of Drinking in the Northern Quarter for Northern Quarter Stories and Co-creative Director of Littlebigman Films.  Film and television credits include: Blackburn (Littlebigman Films); Burner and Bedlam (ALRA North); and Coronation Street (ITV).

    31 min

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Told by an Idiot's Artistic Director Paul Hunter in free-flowing conversation with friends and colleagues from the theatre industry, delving into what made them the people they are today.