Casting announced for the first UK tour of The Color Purple

The award-winning production returns

Author: Rhys FreemanPublished 11th Aug 2022
Last updated 12th Aug 2022

Casting has been announced for the UK tour of Leicester’s Curve theatre and the Birmingham Hippodrome's award-wining production of The Color Purple.

So far, the musical has only played to audiences in London, Leicester and Birmingham within the UK but will now be visiting six new UK cities on their tour.

Me’sha Bryan (Romantics Anonymous; Caroline, or Change) will play Celie, Bree Smith (The Wiz) will play Shug Avery, Aaliyah Zhané (The Comedy of Errors) will play Nettie, Harpo will be played by Ahmed Hamad (The Addams Family, The Boy in the Dress) and Squeak by Jimand Allotey (professional debut).

T-B, L-R: Me’sha Bryan, Bree Smith, Aaliyah Zhané, Ahmed Hamad, Jimand Allotey

Returning from the Curve and Birmingham Hippodrome production are Ako Mitchell as Mister, Anelisa Lamola as Sofia, KM Drew Boateng as Pa, Rosemary Annabella Nkrumah as Darlene and Karen Mavundukure as Doris and Alternate Celie.

The cast also includes Kyle Birch, Kayla Carter, Joshua Clemetson, Esme Laudat, DeeArna McLean, Monifa James, Nathaniel Morrison, Alex Okoampa and Neil Patterson.

The tour will begin at the Birmingham Hippodrome running from 13th September 2022 before heading to Plymouth, Northampton, Salford, Cardiff, Southampton and Norwich.

The Color Purple is based on Alice Walker's Pulitzer prize-winning novel of the same name and first opened on Broadway in 2005. The musical had its UK premiere at the Menier Chocolate Factory in 2013 which then transferred to Broadway two years later.

The Curve and Birmingham Hippodrome's production ran in 2019 and won the WhatsOnStage Award for Best Regional Production and Danielle Fiamanya won The Stage Debut Award for her role as Nettie.

Rosemary Annabella Nkrumah (Darlene), Danielle Kassarate (Doris) and Landi Oshinowo (Jarene) in the 2019 production

The production is directed by Tinuke Craig with the full cast and creative team to be announced at a later date. The Color Purple has music and lyrics by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray with a book by Marsha Norman.

Speaking about the news, Curve’s Chief Executive Chris Stafford and Artistic Director Nikolai Foster said:

“We are delighted to announce our exceptional The Color Purple company, assembled by the brilliant Tinuke Craig. The Color Purple is very close to our hearts, and we cannot wait to welcome back familiar faces and new colleagues to take this award-winning Curve and Birmingham Hippodrome production on tour. We know this extraordinary team will create something truly special for audiences across England and Wales this Autumn.”

Check out these musicals based on books:

Cabaret

Kander and Ebb's hugely successful Cabaret which is set in Berlin during the Weimar Republic was based on John Van Druten's play I am a Camera which in turn was based on Christopher Isherwood's semi-autobiographical novel, Goodbye to Berlin.

Cats

A slightly different type of adaptation came with Cats. A collection of T. S. Elliot's poems about cats were published in 1939 in a book called Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats.


The poems were used as lyrics in Andrew Lloyd Webber's 1981 musical Cats which was at one point the longest running musical both in the West End and on Broadway.

The Color Purple

Alice Walker's 1982 novel The Color Purple has been voted one of the UK's most loved books and Alice became the first Black woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.


The novel was adapted into a film by Steven Spielberg in 1985 and a musical that explores more of the themes included in the source material opened on Broadway in 2005. The musical version of The Color Purple is now being adapted into a film.

Doctor Doolittle

During the First World War, Hugh Lofting began sending illustrations to his children about a physician who could talk to the animals. He went on to publish the stories with the first one released in 1920.


The stories had their first big screen adaptation in 1967 with Rex Harrison as the titular character. The film and stories were adapted for the stage with the first run taking place at the Hammersmith Apollo with Phillip Schofield in the leading role.

Gypsy

Gypsy Rose Lee, who was famous for her striptease act, released her autobiography titled Gypsy: A Memoir in 1957. The book served as the inspiration behind Jules Styne, Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents' iconic 1959 musical, Gypsy.

Legally Blonde

Now many of us know that Legally Blonde was based on the hit 2001 film starring Reece Witherspoon, but did you know that the film was based on a book of the same name?


Author Amanda Brown wrote a novel based on her own experience at Stanford Law School. Before the book was even published, the manuscript caught the attention of Hollywood and both the book and film were released in 2001 with the musical adaptation first opening in 2007.

Les Misérables

Victor Hugo's 1862 novel Les Misérables is considered one of the best novels of the 19th century and it's fair to argue that Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg's musical adaptation is one of the greatest musicals of all time. Having opened in the West End in 1985, it now holds the record as the world's longest running musical.

Mary Poppins

Mary Poppins made her debut in P. L. Travers' children's stories with the first book released in 1934. It took Walt Disney 20 years to convince Travers to allow the film to be made - but she wasn't a fan of the final product.


When she was approached by Cameron Mackintosh for the stage adaptation, one of her conditions was that nobody from the original film could be involved with the production. This meant that the Sherman Brothers were barred from writing the additional music.

Matilda

Roald Dahl's beloved story of an intelligent young girl that had telekinetic powers was brought to the stage in 2010 when it opened in Stratford-Upon-Avon. Matilda the Musical has music and lyrics by Tim Minchin transferred to the West End in 2011 and won an impressive seven Olivier Awards.

Oliver!

It's fair to say that Lionel Bart's musical, Oliver! is one of the most famous British musicals around. It's fitting considering the musical's source material, Oliver Twist was written by one of the most famous British authors, Charles Dickens.

The Phantom of the Opera

There have been many adaptions of Gaston Leroux's novel The Phantom of the Opera - including multiple musicals. But it's Andrew Lloyd Webber's version that became an icon of the genre of musical theatre.


The musical first opened in 1986 and is now the second longest running West End musical and the longest running Broadway show.

South Pacific

A collection of short stories about the Pacific Campaign in World War II by James A. Michener was published in 1947. The book won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was adapted into Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific which opened on Broadway in 1949.

Wicked

Considering Wicked's huge success as a musical, many don't know that the musical is in fact based on a novel. Gregory Maguire's Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West was first published in 1995.


It's worth mentioning that the content of the novel has much more adult themes compared to the musical adaptation.

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