Stories survive longer than the people who create them.
Perhaps that is why I have always been drawn to theatre, documentary and cultural history — forms that allow the past to remain present, while constantly changing shape through new generations, cultures and audiences.
My work moves between London and Buenos Aires across film, live performance and cultural projects. Shakespeare has become an important part of that journey, not as a monument from the past, but as a way of thinking about power, identity, ambition, fear and human contradiction in the contemporary world.
This path has taken many forms: documentaries, theatre productions, festivals, books, public conversations, site-specific performances and educational initiatives developed across theatres, cathedrals, archives and public spaces.
Some projects begin with literature. Others with history, architecture or political memory.
What connects them is a continuing interest in how culture survives — and how stories continue to shape the way societies imagine themselves.
This website brings together projects and collaborations developed across Europe and Latin America over the past two decades.
Welcome.