Full Cast Announced For COMING CLEAN at King's Head Theatre

By: Nov. 22, 2018
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Full Cast Announced For COMING CLEAN at King's Head Theatre

The King's Head Theatre, Making Productions and RGM Productions are delighted to announce the full cast for the West End transfer of Kevin Elyot's Coming Clean.

Tony will be played by Lee Knight. His theatre credits include A Very Very Very Dark Matter (The Bridge Theatre), Adam & Eve (Hope Theatre) and Much Ado About Nothing (Wyndhams Theatre, West End). Film credits include Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire, The Spiritualist, Away With Me, Misrule, and The Doorman.

Stanton Plummer-Cambridge will play Greg. He has recently appeared in Macbeth, The Tempest (Southwark Playhouse), Queers (King's Head Theatre), Richard III, Much Ado About Nothing (Handlebards Summer Tour), and As You Like It (Shakespeare in the Squares). His television credits include Black Earth Rising and The Durrells.

Tom Lambert makes his West End debut in the role of Robert. Tom graduated from Drama Centre London in 2018, and previously studied at Oxford University. He performed in Life According to Saki (Edinburgh Fringe 2016), which won the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award, and subsequently transferred Off-Broadway to New York City.

Elliot Hadley will play the role of William/Jurgen. He was an original cast member of the award-winning verbatim drama 5 Guys Chillin' and, after touring with it nationally and internationally (New York's Soho Playhouse), won the Micheál Mac Liammóir Award for Best Male Performance. Previous performing credits include Alfred Cummins in the BBC's Preston Passion, Dark Matters for Discovery Channel USA, Thomas Kyd in The Dead Shepherd, ITV's The Halcyon, and Far From The Madding Crowd with Michael Sheen and Carey Mulligan.

Adam Spreadbury-Maher, Artistic Director of the King's Head Theatre, will direct the production, which will run at Trafalgar Studios 2 from 9 January to 2 February 2019, with a national press night on Friday 11 January 2019.

In 2017, Adam Spreadbury-Maher directed the 35th anniversary production and the first London revival of Coming Clean, Kevin Elyot's first play. The play premiered at the Bush Theatre on 3 November 1982. Coming Clean looks at the breakdown of a gay couple's relationship and examines complex questions of fidelity and love.

The play is set in a flat in Kentish Town, north London, in 1982. Struggling writer Tony and his partner of five years, Greg, seem to have the perfect relationship. Committed and in love, they are both open to one-night stands as long as they don't impinge on the relationship. But Tony is starting to yearn for something deeper, something more like monogamy. When he finds out that Greg has been having a full-blown affair with their cleaner, Robert, their differing attitudes towards love and commitment become clear.

In his foreword to Kevin Elyot: Four Plays (Nick Hern Books, 2004), Elyot writes, "From 1976 to 1984 I'd acted in several productions at the Bush Theatre, and Simon Stokes, one of the artistic directors, had casually suggested I try my hand at a play. I presented them with a script entitled Cosy, which was passed on to their literary manager Sebastian Born. He responded favourably and, largely through his support, it finally opened on 3 November 1982 under the [new] title Coming Clean."

Written 12 years before his most famous play, My Night With Reg, Coming Clean won Elyot the Samuel Beckett Award for writers showing particular promise in the field of the performing arts.

Theatre critic Michael Coveney wrote of Elyot in his obituary for The Guardian in 2014, "In writing about the human heart and the art of living... Elyot transcended categorisation and produced a small body of stage plays that will reward revival, and not just as period pieces." Coveney goes on to describe Coming Clean as "an elegiac play about sexual relationships at a time when Aids was still a barely credible rumour in Britain, but there was a sense of foreboding in the final scene."

Director Adam Spreadbury-Maher (recent King's Head Theatre productions include the European premiere of Tommy Murphy's Strangers in Between, La bohèmeand Trainspotting) will be joined by set designer Amanda Mascarenhas (For Reasons That Remain Unclear and La Traviata for the King's Head Theatre) and lighting designer Nic Farman (La Traviata, Shock Treatment, La bohème, Così fan tutte, Madam Butterfly, and F*cking Men for the King's Head Theatre).

Coming Clean is being produced in the West End by King's Head Theatre, Making Productions and RGM Productions.



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