Kristin Linklater (22 April 1936 – 5 June 2020) was a Scottish vocal coach, acting teacher, actor, theatre director, and author. She retired from the Theatre Arts Division of Columbia University where she was professor emerita. She taught residential courses in Orkney.
Educated at St Leonards School and Downe House School, she was a founding member in 1973 of Shakespeare & Company which was for many years in residence on the former estate of Edith Wharton in Lenox, Massachusetts. Linklater and several British-trained American actors founded the acting troupe of the same name, Shakespeare & Company. She served as co-director, with Tina Packer. She left in the mid-1990s to develop her own approach to voice for actors, influenced by her teachers at LAMDA as well as the Alexander Technique.
Her work was designed to liberate the natural function of the vocal mechanism as opposed to developing a vocal technique.[citation needed] Her writings on voice included Freeing the Natural Voice (1976) (ISBN0-89676-071-5) and Freeing Shakespeare's Voice. (1992); (ISBN1-55936-031-3)
She was of partial Swedish descent, through her father, Scottish novelist Eric Linklater.[6]
In 2013, Linklater established the Linklater Voice Centre in Quoyloo, Orkney, Scotland, to train and coach students in voice technique. That year she was made an honorary fellow of the University of the Highlands and Islands.[8]
On 5 June 2020, Linklater died of a heart attack at the age of 84.[3]
Bibliography
Linklater, Kristin (June 1976). Freeing the Natural Voice. Drama Publishers. ISBN0-89676-071-5.
Linklater, Kristin (November 2006). Revised and Expanded Edition, Freeing the Natural Voice. Drama Publishers, an imprint of Quite Specific Media Group, Ltd. ISBN978-0-89676-250-3.