Cast announced for PROUD at The King’s Head Theatre this Spring

Casting has been announced for new play PROUD which will run at The King’s Head Theatre this Spring.

Described as a “captivating queer love story”, PROUD will run from 22 February to 12 March at the Islington venue.

Written by Bren Gosling (Moment of Grace, The Actors Centre; Invisible Me, Studio at New Wimbledon Theatre), the moving tale of conflict and connection tackles themes of race, trauma, religion, and sexuality.

Double Telling’s production will feature the talents of Taofique Folarin (The Lion King, Lyceum theatre; Norma Jean is Dead, Above the Stag; Safe, Hackney Empire), Andrei Maniata (The White Devil, Tristan Bates Theatre; Children of Killers, Orange Tree Theatre; [BLANK], National Theatre) and Kaine Hatukai (The Secret Love Life of Ophelia, Greenwich Theatre; The Wind in The Willows, Derby Theatre; Robin Hood, Liverpool Everyman).

Proud centres around three complex characters. After his Pentecostal mother dies, Roland is liberated to live openly as a gay man. He relocates from Brixton to Walthamstow, where he unexpectedly falls for Amir, a much younger refugee with a war-torn past.

Their magnetic connection is tested, however, by Amir’s PTSD, his inability to identify as gay and Roland’s strained relationship with his teenage son, Gary. What binds these characters together is the desire to know and understand one another as they struggle to come to terms with their own identities.

Tickets are on sale now from https://kingsheadtheatre.com/whats-on/proud.

Director Marlie Haco (Lovesick, Hope Theatre; Chinese Boxing, Playground Theatre; Words Without Consent, Southwark Playhouse) said: “PROUD has been a long time in the making, but the play now feels more relevant than ever, providing a glimpse into the emotional lives of those oppressed by the forces of war, white supremacy, and homophobia.

“In directing PROUD, I hope to reveal both the light and dark of the protagonists’ experience – the joy to be found in relationships, alongside the pain carried within. For me, this is a story of how the desire for connection can overcome the debilitating effects of our past and stir us to uncover hidden parts of the other.”

Adapted by Gosling from his own award-winning novel, The Street Sweeper, the play won a callout by ATG in 2021 and was long-listed for Papatango & Radius Playwriting prizes in 2020.

About the author: Josh Darvill

Josh is Stageberry's editor with over five years of experience writing about theatre in the West End and across the UK. Prior to following his passion for musicals, he worked for more than a decade as a TV journalist.

 

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