[2] He directs in the UK, working at the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Almeida Theatre, and the Donmar Warehouse – as well as on Broadway in New York City, and also in Tokyo.
[3] While taking a break in New York City, he discovered Eugene O'Neill's play, A Moon for the Misbegotten, and revived it at Riverside, starring Frances de la Tour and Ian Bannen.
Subsequently, he directed Therese Raquin at Chichester, Anna Christie in London and on Broadway, and Romeo and Juliet for the Royal Shakespeare Company.
He is the perfect man to bring Cyrano into the 21st century, presenting the play's flowery sensibility without making audiences feel they’ve been doused in perfume.
[9] In 2005, Leveaux was in an altercation with New York Post columnist Michael Riedel at Angus McIndoe, a Manhattan restaurant and theatre hangout.