Written from his own experience,
Jonathan Lewis’s Our Boys is a wonderfully funny yet searingly honest account of the tribulations, tedium and terror that young soldiers face when recovering from injuries incurred in the line of duty. It opens for a limited 12-week season at the Duchess Theatre on Wednesday 3 October, with previews from Wednesday 26 September. The cast features
Arthur Darvill (Rory in Doctor Who) and Laurence Fox (James in Lewis).
Five young soldiers are killing nothing but time when their daily routine of TV, lonely hearts ads and light-hearted banter is shattered by the arrival of an unwelcome authority figure: a young officer fresh from Sandhurst. The camaraderie of this unlikely band of brothers is soon jeopardised by a dangerous incident and an act of betrayal. With charges of misconduct looming, accusations fly - and then the fighting really starts.
Our Boys won the Best New Play award in the 1993 Writers’ Guild Fringe Awards, and this first West End production comes from the creative team behind the Tony award winning international hit, Journey’s End.
Cian Barry (Keith) played Billy Bibbit in One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (UK tour). His other stage credits include The Member Of The Wedding (Young Vic) and The Rivals (Southwark Playhouse). Cian’s film credits include leading roles in RPG, Holy Water, Ghost Town and In The Spider's Web and one television, New Tricks, Titanic, Shameless, Waking The Dead and Man And Boy.
Arthur Darvill (Parry) plays
Rory Williams in Doctor Who. His other television credits include Ladies Paradise, Little Dorritt, He Kills Coppers and The Verdict. Recent theatre credits include Soft Cops (RSC), Doctor Faustus (Shakespeare’s Globe), Been So Long (Young Vic), Swimming With Sharks (Vaudeville) and Terre Haute (Trafalgar Studios and on tour), for which he was nominated for the Outstanding Newcomer Evening Standard Award 2007. Arthur is Artistic Associate and musician/writer in residence at The
Bush Theatre.
Laurence Fox (Joe) is best known for his leading role as Detective Sergeant James Hathaway in the ITV prime-time drama series Lewis, which has been attracting audiences of over five million since it started in 2006. His London stage credits include
Peter Hall’s production of Mrs Warren’s Profession (Novello), Tis a Pity She’s a Whore (Southwark Playhouse), and
Christopher Hampton’s Treats (Garrick). Film work includes Elizabeth: The Golden Age, Gosford Park, and WE.
Jonathan Lewis is a writer and director for theatre and television. He wrote and directed the original productions of Our Boys at the Cockpit Theatre, Derby Playhouse and
Donmar Warehouse between 1993 and 1995. Other credits include Breakfast with Jonny Wilkinson (director) and All Mouth (writer and director), both at the
Menier Chocolate Factory. His solo show I Found My Horn was critically acclaimed when it opened in 2008 and subsequently toured the UK, including a run at Hampstead Theatre. Jonathan is also an actor and has appeared in numerous plays and TV dramas including the critically acclaimed Speaking in Tongues at Hampstead Theatre, Soldier, Soldier, Silent Witness, London’s Burning and Heartbeat.
David Grindley’s theatre credits include: Journey’s End (Comedy); Abigail’s Party (Hampstead/Whitehall); Six Degrees of Separation (Old Vic); A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Stratford, Ontario); The Philanthropist (Broadway); The American Plan (Broadway); Crown Matrimonial (Tour); Blackbird (Tour); Pygmalion (Broadway); Journey’s End (Broadway) which won the 2007 Tony Award for Best Revival. In The Club (Hampstead/Tour); Honour (Wyndham’s); The Philanthropist (Donmar); National Anthems (Old Vic); What The Butler Saw (Hampstead/Criterion); Some Girls (Gielgud); Loot (Chichester/Vaudeville) and The League of Gentlemen.
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http://westend.broadwayworld.com/article/Arthur-Darvill-Laurence-Fox-Set-for-OUR-BOYS-at-the-Duchess-Theatre-this-Winter-20120615#ixzz1xxYzy1Lm