Revival of Happy Birthday Sunita to tour the UK from May

A new version of Harvey Virdi’s Happy Birthday Sunita is to tour the UK from May.

Written by Hollyoaks actress Harvey Virdi and directed by Pravesh Kumar MBE, the production will open on 5 May at the Watford Palace Theatre where it runs to 12 May.

The tour will then visit Northern Stage, Newcastle, (18 – 20 May), Queen’s Theatre, Hornchurch (23 – 27 May), Theatre Royal, Windsor (29 May – 03 June), Royal & Derngate, Northampton (6 – 10 June), Leeds Playhouse, Leeds (13 – 17 June), Warwick Arts Centre, Warwick (20 – 24 June), New Wolsey, Ipswich (28 June – 1 July) and Key Theatre, Peterborough (3 – 5 July).

It’s Sunita’s birthday and you’re invited to a surprise party at the Johals that leaves the whole family reeling. It’s not just the dhal that’s bubbling under the surface – the Johals have decades of unfinished business.

The hugely popular 2014 play from Rifco Theatre Company has been revived with a fresh line-up of strong female leads and a whip smart script, capturing the complex family dynamics of the Johal family in a post-Brexit and post-pandemic world.

Digging deeper into the characters and the relationships between them, the 2023 version stars Indian TV and film actress Divya Seth Shah (Goodbye, Duranga, Jab We Met) who takes on the role of Tejpal, the matriarch of the Johal house. Leicester-based actress Bhawna Bhawsar (Eastenders, Emmerdale, The Undeclared War) stars as Sunita, the reclusive birthday girl, and west London-based rising star Rameet Rauli (Eastenders, Little English) plays Harleen, Tejpal’s high-maintenance daughter-in-law.

The cast is completed by talented actors Devesh Kishore (Last Night, GH Boy and The Bone Sparrow) who plays Tejpal’s fun-loving son, a typical Punjabi mummy’s boy, and Keiron Crook (Coronation Street, Screw, and Violet) who plays Maurice, an east end builder made good, who’s been working on Tejpal’s kitchen renovations.

Virdi said: “Relationships can be hard in any family dynamic. We all go through ups and downs, and often shy away from speaking the truth. We are so worried about what ‘people’ say and what ‘people’ will think that we forget to listen to ourselves and our families and what is important for us.

“In the play, everyone’s true selves start to burst out when they least expect it. And it’s up to the family to pick each other back up and celebrate themselves for who they truly are. If we let society and community hold us back, then have we actually made the most of the one life we have been blessed with? It was a wonderful opportunity to explore this aspect of family life and show how being true and honest with ourselves can make us stronger.”

For more information and tickets, visit rifcotheatre.com

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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