Background
Rutter was born and brought up in Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England and after leaving school (Greatfield High School, Newton Hall) studied at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.
Rutter was born and brought up in Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England and after leaving school (Greatfield High School, Newton Hall) studied at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.
In the 1970s he worked with the National Youth Theatre (where Peter Terson wrote a role for him in The Apprentices) and the Royal Shakespeare Company. In the 1980s he performed in three adaptations by the poet Tony Harrison. Rutter founded Northern Broadsides in 1992, and the company continues to perform both at its Halifax base and on tour.
He continues to play major parts in many of its productions.
He has appeared in many films and television programmes, including Countdown to War, Queenie"s Castle and a regular role in the early 1980s Independent Television sitcom Astronauts and as armed robber Oakes in the film version of the British Broadcasting Corporation sitcom Porridge. In 2009 Rutter directed Lenny Henry in a production of Othello.
He said of the decision to cast the comedian, "knives might be out at me or at Lenny. I don"t care. This has come about from a completely genuine desire to do a piece of theatrical work.
Bloody hell, how long has the Donmar had Hollywood stars going there for £200? He"s six-foot five.
He"s beautifully black. And he"s Othello." After setting up the run of Othello in London, Rutter was invited to direct Richard III for the "Vanemuine" Theatre Company in Tartu, Estonia. Though he suffered a heart attack, he completed the rehearsals for the first night at the Samadateater in Tartu on 17 October 2009.
In the third quarter of 2010, Rutter also became a patron for the newly opened ALRA North.
Rutter"s former wife Carol Rutter is Professor of English at the University of Warwick and Director of the CAPITAL Centre. They have two daughters.
Quotations: "Barrie"s northern accent, fast action, factory floor Shakespeare is as far from elitism as can be, though it has never, never dumbed Shakespeare down.".