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Nina Raine : ウィキペディア英語版
Nina Raine
Nina Raine is an English theatre director and playwright, and the only daughter of the poet Craig Raine and Ann Pasternak Slater; she is also a grand niece of the Russian novelist Boris Pasternak.
She graduated from Christ Church, Oxford in 1998 with a First in English Literature.
==Life and career==
She won the Channel Four/Jerwood Space Young Regional Theatre Director bursary in 2000 to train as a director at the Royal Court Theatre where she assisted on a number of plays including ''My Zinc Bed'', ''Mouth to Mouth'', ''Presence'' and ''Fucking Games''.
She has directed plays in several other theatres since then, including ''Unprotected'' at the Liverpool Everyman and the Edinburgh Festival in 2006, for which she won the TMA Best Director Award, and ''Shades'' by Alia Bano as part of the Royal Court Theatre's Young Writers' Festival in 2009, as well as ''Jumpy'' by April De Angelis at the Royal Court and in the West End.
''Rabbit'', Raine's first work as a dramatist, premiered at the Old Red Lion Theatre in London in summer 2006.〔(British Theatre Guide review )〕 The play, which she also directed, transferred to the Trafalgar Studios later that autumn. She won both the 2006 Evening Standard's Charles Wintour Award for Most Promising Playwright and Most Promising Playwright Award at the 2006 Critics' Circle Theatre Awards.
''Rabbit'' was performed in New York in June 2007 at the Brits Off Broadway Festival.〔(Curtain Up website )〕
Raine's second play ''Tribes'' was produced by the Royal Court in London, in October 2010.〔(Wall Street Journal )〕 It had its Australian premiere at the Melbourne Theatre Company in February 2012,〔()〕 and its North American premiere at New York City's Barrow Street Theatre, also in 2012.〔(www.broadway.com, retrieved February 21, 2012. )〕 It was then produced by Artists Repertory Theatre in Portland in February 2015. 〔 (Hompage Artists Repertory Theatre )〕 ''Tribes'' is about a deaf son in a Jewish family (Raine is Jewish on her mother's side).〔()〕
''Tiger Country'', commissioned by Hampstead Theatre and produced by Alcove Entertainment, opened in January 2011.〔(Off West End.com )〕
Raine also directed and dramaturged ''Behind the Image'' by Alia Bano, which premiered at the Royal Court's 2008 Rough Cuts Season.
In 2013 she directed ''Longing'', an adaptation of two Anton Chekov stories by novelist William Boyd.

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