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Fight Direction Resume

 

Steppenwolf Theatre

Defiant Theatre

Lifeline Theatre

The Artistic Home

Shakespeare Theatre Co. (D.C.)

Goodman Theatre

Griffin Theatre

Chicago Shakespeare Theatre

Rivendell Theatre Ensemble

Rivendell Theatre Ensemble

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

Michigan Shakespeare Festival

A Crew of Patches 

A Crew of Patches 

A Crew of Patches 

A Crew of Patches 

A Crew of Patches 

A Crew of Patches â€‹

A Crew of Patches 

First Folio Shakespeare

First Folio Shakespeare

First Folio Shakespeare

InFusion Theatre

InFusion Theatre

City Lit Theatre

 City Lit Theatre

Shadow Theatre Co.

Monroe Players

The Performance Network

The Shadow Theatre Company

The Shadow Theatre Company

Artemesia Theatre Company

Matrix Theatre Company

The Brother/Sister Plays

A Clockwork Orange

Her Majesty’s Will (Jeff nominated)

Macbeth (Jeff nominated)

King Lear

King Lear

Stardust

The Merchant of Venice

Dry Land

Grizzly Mama

The Killer Angels

The Tempest

Measure For Measure

The Rover

Richard II

Julius Caesar (2017)

As You Like It (2016)

Henry IV

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

The Rivals

Cymbeline

Hamlet (2014)

Twelfth Night (2013)

King John

She Stoops To Conquer

Richard III (2012)

Love’s Labour’s Lost

Romeo & Juliet (2010)

Tartuffe

The Taming of the Shrew (2017)

The Comedy of Errors

Macbeth (2001)

Richard III (2000)

A Midsummer Night's Dream

Twelfth Night (1999)

Hamlet (1999)

Macbeth (tour)

Romeo & Juliet (tour)

Othello

The Taming of the Shrew

Romeo & Juliet

Macbeth

Julius Caesar

Twelfth Night

The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr

Macbeth (tour)

Romeo & Juliet (tour)

Warring & Wooing

Another Kind of Love

Fight Girl, Battle World

An Ecstasy of Dragonflies

Tartuffe

The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Avenue X

Romeo & Juliet

Closetland

Something Blue

Southwest Story

Reviews

           

Michigan Shakespeare Festival’s RICHARD III – 2000

The Ann Arbor News: “Blixt has choreographed a play's-end clash of swords, lances and battle axes so breathtaking it drew audience applause. Ultimately it's Richard vs. Richmond ax-to-sword, and for a moment it appears the hump-backed tyrant will lay waste his rival - a feasible outcome, since physical courage is Richard's sole virtue.”

 

Defiant Theatre’s A CLOCKWORK ORANGE - 2005
The Chicago Tribune: “David Blixt's fight choreography is "razrez" (ripping), as are both the actors who take it and those who dish it out.”

 

Michigan Shakespeare Festival’s ROMEO & JULIET – 2010

Encore Michigan: “Scott Stangland's somewhat devious Mercutio, too, adds greatly to the production, and marks the high point of David Blixt's violence design that includes some excellently choreographed swordsmanship.”

 

Michigan Shakespeare Festival’s RICHARD III – 2012

The Daily Tribune: “The pivotal moment of the show is thanks to David Blixt, who choreographed the final battle at Bosworth Field. It was poetry in motion as swords, armor and the king and his men fought the Earl of Richmond. It is an oxymoron of elegant violence that left the play exactly where Shakespeare intended, an epic battle in which good conquers evil.”

 

InFusion Theatre’s FIGHT GIRL, BATTLE WORLD – 2013

Chicago Theatre Beat: “The fighting is as impressive as the special effects. Fight Director David Blixt balances the physicality with humor.  His well-choreographed fights have Sheila O’Conner (E-V) kicking ass on the ground and in the air.  Her ferocity often takes flight as her stunts get a helping hand from the Ninja stage crew.”

 

Hope Summer Rep’s ROMEO & JULIET – 2013

Encore Michigan: “Drugs, dispensed from a manhole cover in the street, also fuel the young punks' frequent street fighting, which is very well choreographed and believable. Even the fatal fight between Mercutio and Tybalt is presented as a somewhat friendly, foolish contest, so the audience feels the loss when Mercutio is killed.”

 

Michigan Shakespeare Festival’s HAMLET – 2014

Michigan Examiner: “The sword fight between Laertes (Sam Hubbard) and Hamlet at the end of the play – devised by Fight Director David Blixt – is perhaps the best staged duel we have ever seen. By best, we mean violent, authentic and so frightening that we closed our eyes more than once – certain that someone was going to lose a valuable appendage.”

 

Michigan Shakespeare Festival’s HENRY IV – 2015

Encore Michigan: “For those who attend Shakespeare because they like the sword fighting, Henry IV won’t disappoint. This is a war play and the first act ends with a great battle that brings out the whole company for intensive sword fights that range from single duels to large-scale group battles. Fight Director David Blixt (who also plays Owain Glyndwr, Douglas, and the Archbishop of York) choreographs an exciting battle that encompasses several fighting styles from great-sword to axe to sword and shield.”

 

Michigan Shakespeare Festival’s THE RIVALS – 2015

Encore Michigan: “Blixt grounds O’Trigger with a gravitas that is in perfect contrast to Malisic’s outlandishness. Blixt also doubles as the fight director and O’Trigger’s sword fight with Jack is skilled and filled with finesse.”

 

Rivendell Theater’s GRIZZLY MAMA – 2016

Windy City Times: “Megan Carney directs a trio of actors navigating Brant's shivery boundaries between slapstick farce (high marks to violence designer David Blixt) and stranded-in-the-woods horror with never a misstep.”
 

Michigan Shakespeare Festival's JULIUS CAESAR 2017

Shakespeareances: "The most powerfully moving Caesar assassination I've ever seen. After the first round of stabs, Caesar manages to wield his own knife and fend off everybody until he turns and sees Brutus with knife poised to strike. "Et tu Brute?" Caesar says. "Then fall Caesar." He drops his knife and, with some physical effort, stands fully erect, coming to a statue-like pose of authority as he awaits Brutus's thrust."

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David has taught combat workshops at high schools, colleges, and universities, including: The University of Illinois, Beloit College, The College of Wooster, Graceland University, the University of Michigan's Residential College, Eastern Michigan University, Washtenaw and Jackson Community Colleges. 

Jeff Nominated Fight Director

Resident Stage Combat Instructor - Chicago High School for the Arts

Resident Fight Director - Michigan Shakespeare Festival

 

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