Martin McCallumFRSA (6 April 1950 – 14 January 2024) was a British theatrical producer who was President of the Society of London Theatre.[1] He worked on over 500 shows, many as an independent producer, on Broadway and in the West End.[2]
Leaving the National Theatre in 1978, McCallum established the Production Office with former colleague Richard Bullimore and was soon engaged to supervise shows including Franco Zeffirelli'sFilumena, Harold Prince'sEvita, and Cameron Mackintosh'sCats.[7] Following the latter show's success, McCallum would partner with Mackintosh in 1981.[8][9] His subsequent 22-year tenure as Mackintosh's Managing Director and later Vice Chairman spanned a period of extraordinary commercial success.[10][11] Described by The Stage as "a key figure in the British musical theatre boom of the 1980s",[12] McCallum would oversee the international roll-out of shows such as Cats,Les Misérables, The Phantom of the Opera, and Miss Saigon, across Europe, Asia and North America.[13][14]
During this time, McCallum was also regarded for his work in theatre design, collaborating on the renovation of London's Prince Edward and Prince of Wales theatres.[3] In 2001, he acted as a consultant on the restoration of the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago, USA.[15]
Society of London Theatre
From 1992 to 2003, McCallum served as Chairman of the Donmar Warehouse, a period in which both Sam Mendes and Michael Grandage were appointed as artistic directors.[16] As Chairman, his support of subsidised theatre led to the commission of Tony Travers' Wyndham Report in 1998, the first major study of the economic impact of the West End theatre industry.[17] The following year, McCallum was made President of the Society of London Theatre.[1]
McCallum's presidency was marked by a commitment to youth access and by the inauguration of the joint Theatre Conference in 2001, exploring the future of London's theatrical buildings and spaces.[18][19] In the wake of the September 11 attacks, he would collaborate with Mayor Ken Livingstone in the campaign to revitalise London's commercial centre,[20] and was later appointed to London's Cultural Strategy Group (2003-2005), tasked with developing strategic policy in regard to culture, arts, and heritage in the capital city. From 1999 to 2003, McCallum sat on Arts Council England’s Drama Panel, serving as a member of its Advisory Task Group until 2005.[21]
McCallum served on the board of the Sydney Theatre Company from 2005 to 2015, and as a member of the STC Chair’s Council oversaw planning for the renovation of its Wharf Theatre in 2018.[25] He died in Sydney on 14 January 2024, at the age of 73.[26]