In 2002 Matthew Lutton formed the ThinIce theatre company which staged Ionesco's The Bald Prima Donna at the 2003 Perth International Fringe Festival. For ThinIce he directed the premiere of Brendan Cowell's play Bed at Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts[1] and devised two new works with Eamon Flack, The Gathering in 2005 and The Goose Chase in 2007. The Goose Chase was a solo piece for Eamon Flack, co-produced with Deckchair Theatre.[citation needed]
In 2008 Lutton was Michael Kantor's Assistant Director on Malthouse Theatre's production of Moliere's Tartuffe in Melbourne. Kantor fell ill two days before rehearsals commenced and Lutton was invited to take over the production as director.[2] He then went on to direct the world premiere of Tom Holloway's play Don't Say the Words at Sydney's Griffin Theatre Company[3] and Red Shoes (a version of the Hans Christian Andersen story adapted by Humphrey Bower) for ThinIce and Artrage.[citation needed]
In 2009 ThinIce was appointed triennial funding from both the Australia Council for the Arts and ArtsWA. Over the next three years ThinIce created six new works in partnership with other Australian arts organisations. These included a new production of Antigone (adapted by Eamon Flack and featuring singer Rachael Dease) with the Perth International Arts Festival; The Duel (a Dostoevsky adaptation written by Tom Wright) with Sydney Theatre Company;[4] Tom Holloway's Love Me Tender with Belvoir Street Theatre and Griffin Theatre Company; and The Trial (adapted from the Kafka novel by Louise Fox) with Sydney Theatre Company and Malthouse Theatre;,[5] The same year Lutton directed part one of The Mysteries: Genesis at Sydney Theatre Company. Parts two and three were directed by Tom Wright and Andrew Upton.[citation needed]
Lutton was appointed as the Associate Artist (Directing) at Melbourne's Malthouse Theatre in 2011, which initiated his decision to close down ThinIce and relocated to Melbourne. ThinIce was officially disestablished in April 2012.[citation needed]
As Associate Artist (Directing) Lutton directed award-winning productions including "On the misconception of Oedipus" by Tom Wright and "The Bloody Chamber[6]" by Angela Carter, adapted by Van Badham.
In 2015 Lutton was appointed Artistic Director and Co-CEO of Melbourne's Malthouse Theatre.[7] Directing highlights include the 5-hour stage adaptation of Tim Winton's Cloudstreet co-produced with the Perth International Arts Festival, the Australian premiere of Tom Waits' musical The Black Rider co-produced with Victorian Opera,[8] the world premiere of the stage adaptation of Picnic at Hanging Rock, which was invited to be performed at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh and the Barbican in London, The Real and Imagined History of the Elephant Man,[9] David Grieg's Solaris in a co-production with the Lyric Hammersmith London and the Royal Lyceum Edinburgh, John Harvey's First Nations epic, The Return, co-directed with Jason Tamiru as part of RISING Festival, and Australia's largest immersive theatre production, Because the Night[10] (2021). In 2025 Lutton will direct a new adaptation of Daphne du Maurier's The Birds and a new play about the fall of Troy, by Tom Wright, for Malthouse Theatre.
In 2012 Lutton directed Strauss's Elektra for West Australian Opera, Opera Australia, ThinIce, and Perth International Arts Festival, with Danish soprano Eva Johansson singing the title role.[13][14][15] In 2013 Lutton directed Wagner's The Flying Dutchman for New Zealand Opera and in 2022 Kurt Weill's Happy End for Victorian Opera.
Awards
2003 – Best Production at the Perth International Fringe Festival for The Bald Prima Donna[citation needed]
2005 – Best Production at the Equity Guild Awards for The Visit[citation needed]
2005 – Young West Australian of the Year for Arts[citation needed]
2007 – ArtsWA Young People and the Arts Fellowship[citation needed]
2010 – Western Australia Citizen of the Year: Youth Arts[16]
2011 – State Finalist Young Australian of the Year 2011: Western Australia[17]
2023 - Awarded Order of Australia Medal (OAM) for services to the arts as a director[18]