Russell Fewster

Teaching Strengths

Traing body and voice in ensemble environment

Dr Russell Fewster

Lecturer, Performing Arts

Elder Conservatorium of Music and School of Performing Arts

College of Creative Arts, Design and Humanities

Eligible to supervise Masters and PhD - email supervisor to discuss availability.

Available For Media Comment.


Russell has directed theatre for near 40 years including work with professional actors, students, young people, artists who identify with a disability and the socially disadvantaged. He studied at Ecole Jacques Lecoq in Paris in the early eighties and then assisted Jacques Lecoq , Monica Pagneux and Phillipe Gaulier in the 1990s establishing his methodology in play, complicite and physical-based theatre. In 2000 he completed a Masters by Research in rehearsal decision making at the Centre for Performance Studies in the University of Sydney. In 2010 he completed his PhD examining the use of video in performance through the University of Melbourne. His mis-en-scene emphasises the actor supported by minimalist design and well integrated video.
In 2024 he wrote, produced and directed the work Two of Them for the Adelaide Fringe which was  praised as “a breathtakingly immersive commentary on human identity.”  See https://www.festmag.com/adelaide/theatre/two-of-them. 
In 2018 he wrote and directed Earshot an opera that dramatised the healing nature of WW1 battlefield pilgrimage. The production partnered with Tutti Arts, with funding from Veterans SA. This was a second collaboration with Tutti Arts and featured a vision impaired performer in a lead role. See review here: http://www.thebarefootreview.com.au/menu/theatre/119-2014-adelaide-reviews/1789-earshot.html
Russell has worked extensively in Japan. He adapted and directed The Glass Rabbit by Toshiko Takagi. This true story of a survivor of the wartime bombing of Tokyo premiered at the Come Out Festival for Young People in Adelaide and toured to Japan where it was performed in front of Toshiko Takagi (1999). He also co-produced and directed the world English-language premiere of The Lost Babylon by Takeshi Kawamura (2006) for the Adelaide Fringe Festival - a collaboration with Tokyo-based company T-Factory (formerly Daisan Erotica). This was a theatre work exploring real and virtual representations of violence. It combined video projection and video game software developed at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology with actors from Japan and Australia.
He has a strong interest in the community/ensemble aspects of theatre workshops and productions. In 2012 he directed Perish the Thought by Susan Harris a moving stage portrayal of the effects of dementia on family life. His promenade adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula: Nosferatu The Undead premiered as part of the Adelaide Cabaret Fringe in 2014. In 2015 he directed the Australian premiere of the opera Six Swans a collaboration between the University of South Australia and Tutti Arts. This  production integrated artists with a disability with students. See review here: https://glamadelaide.com.au/theatre-review-six-swans/ 
In June 2019 he delivered an arts workshop program for the Soldier Recovery Centre which attracted the attention of Channel 7’s News. See TV report: https://7news.com.au/news/sa/war-veterans-using-performing-arts-to-treat-post-traumatic-stress-c-181818
He blends practice with research and has widely published in this area. His pedagogy is framed within industry frameworks through professionally simulated environments and partnerships with the State Theatre Company of SA and Tutti Arts
He is a Lecturer in Performing Arts in the Bachelor of Creative Industries (BCI) at the University of South Australia Magill Campus.

Directing for the Stage,Physical Theatre,New Media Performance,Community Theatre, Opera,Japanese Theatre,Verbatim/Political Theatre,Film Production.

Year Citation
2021 West, B., & Fewster, R. (2021). Ritual and recovery outside of regiment: performing arts in a university-based adjunct wellbeing program for injured soldiers. In B. West, & T. Crosbie (Eds.), Source details - Title: Militarization and the Global Rise of Paramilitary Culture: Post-Heroic Reimaginings of the Warrior (pp. 149-167). Singapore: Springer.
DOI
2019 Fewster, R. (2019). Memories bind us together: staging dementia. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge Companion to Criticality in Art, Architecture, and Design (pp. 32-49). England: Routledge.
DOI
2019 Fewster, R. (2019). Walter Benjamin - a life in translation (2016). In M. Crossley (Ed.), Source details - Title: Intermedial theatre principles and practice (pp. 171-174). UK: MacMillan Education.
2015 Fewster, R. (2015). Mettre en scène l'acteur vivant et les médias live. In J. -M. Larrue (Ed.), Source details - Title: Théâtre et intermédialité (pp. 327-354). France: Septentrion Presses Universitaires.
2014 Fewster, R., & Harris, S. (2014). Community theatre: approaches, challenges, and outcomes. In J. M. Chonody (Ed.), Source details - Title: Community art: creative approaches to practice (pp. 172-185). USA: Common Ground Publishing.
2012 Fewster, R. (2012). Bleeding ears Bron: playing the string of memory. In N. Starck (Ed.), Source details - Title: Legacies of war (pp. 73-86). Melbourne, Australia: Australian Scholarly Publishing.
2011 Fewster, R., Wood, D., & Chafer, J. (2011). Staging second life in real and virtual spaces. In G. Vincenti, & J. Braman (Eds.), Source details - Title: Teaching through multi-user virtual environments: applying dynamic elements to the modern classroom (pp. 217-235). United States: IGI Global.
DOI
2010 Fewster, R. D. (2010). Instance: The Lost Babylon (Adelaide Fringe Festival 2006). In S. Bay-Cheng (Ed.), Source details - Title: Mapping Intermediality in Performance (pp. 63-68). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
2010 Fewster, R., Nelson, R., Vanhoutte, K., Barton, B., & Wynants, N. (2010). Node: Modes of Experience Presence. In S. Bay-Cheng (Ed.), Source details - Title: Mapping Intermediality in Performance (pp. 46-47). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.

Courses I teach

  • COMM 2103 Freelance and Enterprise for the Creative Industries (2025)
  • PERF 1001 Effective Communication (2025)
  • PERF 1011 Stage Performance (2025)
  • PERF 2021 State Theatre Master Class (2025)
  • PERF 3013 Television Performance (2025)
  • PERF 1001 Effective Communication (2024)
  • PERF 1011 Stage Performance (2024)
  • PERF 2014 Digital Performance (2024)
  • PERF 2021 State Theatre Master Class (2024)
  • PERF 2022 Music Production (2024)
  • PERF 3013 Television Performance (2024)

Date Role Research Topic Program Degree Type Student Load Student Name
2021 Principal Supervisor - Doctor of Philosophy Doctorate Full Time Mr Geordie Brookman

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