

In the 1970S Prowse twice designed Havergal's stagings of The Importance of Being Earnest, including a 1977 mounting of the play's four-act version. Through the period Oscar Wilde has been a mainstay of the company's repertoire. Over the past two decades Prowse's aesthetic has come to dominate the Citizens, helping to make it unique among Britain's regional troupes, both in its European outlook and in its sumptuous, exuberant theatricality. Two years later he moved on to the Glasgow Citizens Theatre, where he has continued to serve as part of the triumvirate (together with Giles Havergal and Robert David MacDonald) responsible for that company's artistic direction.

Trained at London's Slade School of Art, Prowse worked briefly in the model rooms at Covent Garden before becoming stage designer at the Watford Palace in 1967. 1937) is something of an anomaly in contemporary British theatre, a director who comes to his craft from a design rather than a performance background.
