We're thrilled to announce that our very own Gbolahan Obisesan and Ronkẹ Adékoluẹjo will both make their Young Vic acting débuts in Katori Hall's The Mountaintop directed by Roy Alexander Weise, winner of the 2016 JMK Award, this October.
Gbolahan Obisesan and Ronkẹ Adékoluẹjo will play Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Camae respectively.
Gbolahan Obisesan is currently Genesis Fellow at the Young Vic, a two-year grant supported by the Genesis Foundation.
Acting credits include: Concrete Jungle (Courtyard Theatre), and The Arbitrary Adventures of an Accidental Terrorist (Lyric Hammersmith).
Previous work at the Young Vic includes: Direction of Cuttin’ It by Charlene James and Sus by Barrie Keeffe (as the recipient of the 2009 Jerwood Directors Award); Feast (co-written with Yunior García Aguilera, Rotimi Babatunde, Marcos Barbosa and Tanya Barfield) directed by Rufus Norris and his play Mad About The Boy directed by Ria Parry. The production subsequently toured to venues around the UK.
Directing credits include: School Gate (a Royal Court/Guardian microplay) and 200 Years (Watford Palace Theatre).
Writing credits include: Re:Exhibit (Offstage/Theatre Uncut); Pigeon English (Bristol Old Vic, Edinburgh Theatre); Set Me Fair (Latitude); A Vision of Pride (Theatre503); Deconstructing the Barack (Tristan Bates Theatre) and Hold it up (Soho Theatre).
Gbolahan was the recipient of the Bulldog Princep Bursary 2008 – 9 as Resident Director at the National Theatre Studio. He is currently developing a new play, Black and Blue for Eclipse Theatre Company, as well as a screenplay with EMU Productions. Gbolahan’s play Zaina and Aadam will be performed as part of the Bush Theatre’s 'This Place We Know Season' in September 2016.
Ronkẹ Adékoluẹjo
Theatre credits include: Twelfth Night (Paramount Centre and international tour); The Oresteia (HOME); Pride and Prejudice (Crucible Theatre); The House That Will Not Stand, The Colby Sisters of Pittsburgh (Tricycle Theatre); Anon (Welsh National Opera); and random (Crooked Path).
TV credits include: Cold Feet, Sick Note, Suspects and the BAFTA Award-nominated Chewing Gum. Ronke will also appear in BBC 2 adaptation of Zadie Smith’s novel NW.
Film credits include: One Crazy Thing and Ready Player One.
Roy Alexander Weise is the 19th annual winner of the James Menzies-Kitchin Award for which he receives a bursary of £25,000 to direct The Mountaintop. He was the runner up for the JMK Award in 2014. Roy has previously worked at the Young Vic as the Boris Karloff Trainee Assistant Director on Public Enemy and as Assistant Director on the YV Taking Part productions of Hamlet and The Government Inspector. In June 2016, Roy made his professional debut with Stone Face by Eve Leigh (Finborough Theatre). Other Assistant Director credits include: Hangmen (Royal Court and West End); X, Escaped Alone, You For Me For You, Primetime 2015, Violence and Son, Who Cares, Liberian Girl (Royal Court); Albion, We Are Proud to Present...(Bush Theatre); and The Serpent’s Tooth (Talawa /Almeida Theatre). Previously Associate Artist at The Red Room, in 2014 he was the BBC Theatre Fellow at the Bush Theatre and the Lyric Hammersmith. His television credits include Trainee Director on Invisible (Red Room/Ballet Boys/C4). Roy is now Associate Director at Harts Theatre Company, Director and Lead Acting Tutor at Young & Talented School of Stage & Screen and is a member of the Young Vic’s Genesis Directors Network.
Katori Hall is a journalist and writer from Memphis, Tennessee whose theatre credits include: The Mountaintop, which premiered at Theatre503 and transferred to the West End where it won the 2010 Olivier Award for Best New Play. The production subsequently ran on Broadway; Hurt Village (Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, 2011), Children of Killers, Hoodoo Love, Remembrance, Saturday Night/Sunday Morning, WHADDABLOODCLOT!!!, Our Lady of Kibeho, Pussy Valley and The Blood Quilt. Her television credits include: The Dial, Legends and a television adaptation of her play, Pussy Valley. Katori is a proud member of Ron Brown Scholar Program, the Coca-Cola Scholar Program, the Dramatists Guild, and the Fellowship of Southern Writers. She is currently a member of the Residency Five at Signature Theatre in New York City. Katori will make her feature directing debut with a film adaptation of her play Hurt Village, which received its world premiere at Signature in 2012.
The JMK Award
James Menzies-Kitchin was a theatre director of thrilling promise. The JMK Trust was founded in his memory to give practical learning opportunities to young theatre directors of similar ability and vision. The JMK Award allows one such director a year to stage their own production of a classic text.
The JMK Award is kindly supported by Philip Hooker, the Leverhulme Trust Arts Scholarships Fund, the Martin Bowley Charitable Trust, the Eranda Foundation and all its individual donors. Patrons: Dame Judi Dench, Baroness Howe, Sir Ian McKellen and Tom Morris (Founding Chair) Registered Charity No. 295080
www.jmktrust.org
The Mountaintop by Katori Hall is directed by Roy Alexander Weise and runs 7 - 29 October in the Young Vic’s Maria.
Find out more and book your tickets today.