Graeme Phillips MBE dies at the age of 77
Monday, 1 September 2025
It is with great sadness that we announce that Unity’s former Artistic Director, Graeme Phillips MBE, has died of complications relating to Parkinson’s Disease, which he had lived with for the last 10 years.
Since April, Graeme had been working on a new production of Jean Genet’s The Maids, which is scheduled for performances in Unity’s autumn season.
Graeme Phillips, Unity Theatre’s former Artistic Director, has died at the age of 77 following complications relating to Parkinson’s Disease, which he was diagnosed with in 2015, the year he retired from the Hope Place venue after 33 years, and the year he was awarded an MBE.
A seasoned and well-respected member of Liverpool’s artistic community, he died in his sleep at Green Heys Care Home, where he had been living since the acceleration of Lewy Body dementia in 2021.
Graeme trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London before working extensively throughout the country including Ipswich, Leeds, London, and at the Chester Gateway and Lancaster Duke’s Theatre.
In 1982 he joined The Merseyside Unity Theatre (which later became Unity Theatre), becoming Artistic Director in the early 1990s. He presided over two capital redevelopments which transformed a leaky-roofed old synagogue into a state-of-the-art small-scale theatre that has established itself as a major asset to both the city and national theatre portfolio.
Core to his leadership had been his unerring support of new theatre companies in Liverpool and a plethora of writers, actors and directors. He brought to the city many of the best touring international and national theatre companies including Told By An Idiot, The Right Size, Frantc and Improbable.
He was also instrumental in the development of Homoptopia and the very early days of FACT, both of which were established at the Unity.
During a recent interview in celebration of the Unity’s Heritage Lottery Fund project which is a celebration the theatre’s radical and political past, Graeme cited two of his highlights as being Tony Kushner’s epic Angels in America and the national and international tour of David Yip’s acclaimed Gold Mountain.
Despite his condition, Graeme continued to inspire, and last year directed a revival of Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape, a play he had loved since his youth, when he played the title role at the age of 17, and to which he brought his own experience of dementia to the production.
Since April, Graeme had been working on a new production of Jean Genet’s The Maids, which will be presented in October. Produced by That Theatre Group, the directorial baton will be handed to Elinor Randle, who has been Artistic Director of his beloved theatre since last year. She says:
“Graeme has been such an incredible inspiration to me, and to so many artists in the city and beyond. He poured his heart into making Unity a true home for brilliant, daring, and experimental new work, and gave countless people the chance to bring their creative dreams to life. His 30 years at Unity have left a lasting mark, and I feel so proud to be carrying his legacy forward, something I could never have done without his generosity, guidance, and friendship. He will be deeply missed, but his spirit will always live on in Unity and in those us of whose lives he touched”
Elinor Randle- Artistic Director
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