Redgrave made his first professional appearance at the
Playhouse in
Liverpool on 30 August 1934 as Roy Darwin in
Counsellor-at-Law (by
Elmer Rice). He then spent two years with the Liverpool Repertory Company; while there, he met his future wife,
Rachel Kempson.
1930s Offered a job by
Tyrone Guthrie, Redgrave made his professional debut in London at the
Old Vic on 14 September 1936, playing Ferdinand in ''
Love's Labours Lost. During 1936–37 he also played Mr Horner in The Country Wife, Orlando in As You Like It, Warbeck in The Witch of Edmonton'' and Laertes to
Laurence Olivier's Hamlet. His hit of the season was Orlando.
Edith Evans was his Rosalind and the two fell very much in love. As he later explained: "Edith always had a habit of falling in love with her leading men; with us it just went rather further." Having spent most of 1942 in the Reserve he managed to direct
Lifeline (Norman Armstrong) starring
Frank Pettingell at the
Duchess Theatre in July; and
The Duke in Darkness (
Patrick Hamilton) starring
Leslie Banks at the
St James's Theatre in October, also taking the role of Gribaud.
1950s Redgrave joined the
Shakespeare Memorial Theatre company at
Stratford-upon-Avon and for the 1951 season appeared as Prospero in
The Tempest as well as playing Richard II, Hotspur and Chorus in the Cycle of
Histories, for which he also directed
Henry IV Part Two. After appearing as Frank Elgin in
Winter Journey at the St James's April 1952, he rejoined the Stratford company in 1953 (together with his actress wife Rachel Kempson) appearing as Shylock, King Lear and Antony in
Antony and Cleopatra, also playing Antony when the company transferred to the
Prince's Theatre in November 1953 before touring in the
Netherlands,
Belgium and
Paris, Redgrave played (and co-presented) Lancelot Dodd MA in
Arthur Watkyn's
Out of Bounds at
Wyndham's Theatre in November 1962, following it at the Old Vic with his portrayal of Claudius opposite the Hamlet of
Peter O'Toole on 22 October 1963. This
Hamlet was in fact the National Theatre's official opening production, directed by Olivier, but
Simon Callow has dubbed it "slow, solemn, long", while
Ken Campbell vividly described it as "brochure theatre." In January 1964 at the National, he played the title role in ''
Hobson's Choice'', which he admitted was well outside his range: "I couldn't do the
Lancashire accent and that shook my nerve terribly – all the other performances suffered." While still at the National in June 1964 he also played Halvard Solness in
The Master Builder, which he said 'went wrong'. At this time he had incipient
Parkinson's disease, although he did not know it.
1970s At the
Mermaid Theatre in July 1971 he played Mr Jaraby in
The Old Boys (William Trevor) and had an unfortunate experience: "My memory went, and on the first night they made me wear a deaf aid to hear some lines from the prompter and it literally fell to pieces – there were little bits of machinery all over the floor, so I then knew I really couldn't go on, at least not learning new plays." He returned to the international touring of
A Voyage Round My Father in 1974–75 with a Royal Shakespeare Company production of
The Hollow Crown, visiting major venues in the US, New Zealand and Australia, while in 1976–77 he toured South America, Canada, the UK and the United States in the anthology, ''Shakespeare's People''. Redgrave's final theatre appearance came in May 1979 when he portrayed Jasper in
Simon Gray's
Close of Play, directed on the Lyttelton stage at the National Theatre by
Harold Pinter. It was a silent, seated role, based on Gray's own father, who had died a year before he wrote the play. As Gray has said: "Jasper is in fact dead but is forced to endure, as if alive, a traditional English Sunday, helpless in his favourite armchair as his three sons and their wives fall to pieces in the usual English middle class style, sometimes blaming him, sometimes appealing to him for help and sobbing at his feet for forgiveness, but basically ignoring him. In other words I had stuck him in Hell, which turns out to be 'life, old life itself'." ==Film and television career==