Full cast announced for To Kill a Mockingbird in London’s West End

Full casting has been announced for To Kill a Mockingbird in the West End.

The transfer of the hit Broadway play will open in London this Spring following a delay due to the pandemic.

Performances are scheduled to begin at the Gielgud Theatre from 10 March, 2022 with tickets on sale now here.

To Kill a Mockingbird West End cast

Joining the previously announced Rafe Spall (Atticus Finch) are Harry Attwell (Mr Cunningham/Boo Radley), Amanda Boxer (Mrs Henry Dubose), Poppy Lee Friar (Mayella Ewell), John Hastings (Bailiff), Simon Hepworth (Mr Roscoe/Dr Reynolds), Laura Howard (Miss Stephanie/Dill’s Mother), Lloyd Hutchinson (Link Deas), Gwyneth Keyworth (Scout Finch) and Tom Mannion (Sheriff Heck Tate).

They’re joined by David Moorst (Dill Harris), Pamela Nomvete (Calpurnia), Jim Norton (Judge Taylor), Patrick O’Kane (Bob Ewell), Jude Owusu (Tom Robinson), Harry Redding (Jem Finch), David Sturzaker (Horace Gilmer) and Natasha Williams (Mrs Dubose’s Maid).

Completing the company are Helen Belbin, Laurence Belcher, Paul Birchard, Ryan Ellsworth, Rebecca Hayes, Danny Hetherington, Matthew Jure, Anna Munden and Itoya Osagiede making up the ensemble.

The production is directed by Bartlett Sher with production design by Miriam Buether, costume design by Ann Roth, lighting by Jennifer Tipton, sound by Scott Lehrer, original score by Adam Guettel, music supervision by Kimberly Grigsby and hair & wigs by Campbell Young Associates.

They’re joined by Serena Hill as Casting Director, Hazel Holder as Voice & Dialect Coach, Titas Halder as Associate Director, Rasheka Christie-Carter as Assistant Director, Tavia Rivée Jefferson as Cultural Coordinator, and Candida Caldicot as Musical Director.

Book To Kill a Mockingbird tickets here »

To Kill a Mockingbird is a play based on the 1960 novel of the same name by Harper Lee, adapted for the stage by Aaron Sorkin.

Exploring racial injustice in 1930s America, the piece follows lawyer Atticus Finch’s attempts to prove the innocence of a black man falsely accused of rape.

The play first opened on Broadway in 2018 where it was nominated for nine Tony awards.

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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.