Claire Louise van Kampen, Lady Rylance (born 3 November 1953) is an English director, composer, and playwright. She composed the music for her husband Mark Rylance's 1989 performance as Hamlet and shared the 2007 Sam Wanamaker Award with him and theatrical designer Jenny Tiramani. Her composing credits include music for productions of the plays Days and Nights and Boeing-Boeing.
In 2015, she was a historical music advisor and arranger of Tudor music on the BBC TV series Wolf Hall.
Studying music theory with Dr. Ruth Gipps, she also specialised in the performance of 20th-century music, premiering works by today's composers.[2]
Career
In 1986, she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal National Theatre, becoming the first female musical director with both companies. In 1990, she co-founded the theatre company Phoebus Cart with her husband Mark Rylance.
Since the opening of the Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in 1997, van Kampen has been the Director of Theatre Music, creating both period and contemporary music for 30 of the Globe's productions – including the 'jazz' Macbeth in 2001, and The Golden Ass in 2002, which contained a 30-minute opera Cupid and Psyche.
In the spring of 2007, she received the Vero Nihil Verius Award for Distinguished Achievement in the Arts, conferred upon her by Concordia University in Oregon, United States. Together with Rylance and theatrical designer Jenny Tiramani, she received the 2007 Sam Wanamaker Award for her founding work during the opening ten years at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.
Van Kampen was previously married to an architect, Chris van Kampen, with whom she had two daughters, the actress Juliet Rylance and the late filmmaker Nataasha van Kampen.[5] She met Mark Rylance in 1987, and they married in Oxfordshire on 21 December 1989.[6]
Her daughter Nataasha died of a suspected brain haemorrhage on a flight from New York in July 2012 at the age of 28.[7]