A play based on the iconic gay love story is set to premiere in the West End next year.
September 13 2015 6:35 PM EST
December 14 2015 8:15 PM EST
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A play based on the iconic gay love story is set to premiere in the West End next year.
It started as a short story, became an Oscar-winning film and then an opera, and now Brokeback Mountain is going to be adapted for the legitimate stage.
Producer Tom O'Connell has acquired the rights to Annie Proulx's short story about two male ranch hands who fall in love in the 1960s and carry on a clandestine affair for years, and the production is expected to premiere in London's West End in 2016, Playbill reports.
"I am looking forward with sharp anticipation to the stage interpretation of the star-crossed lovers of Brokeback Mountain who moved from the page to the screen and now, under the skilled hand of producer Tom O'Connell and the sensibilities of the company, to the stage -- a strange journey for two messed-up wannabe cow-hands from Wyoming," said a statement issued by Proulx. "The actors who pull on their scuffed-up boots will step into a difficult time in a hard place."
The 2005 film adaptation, starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal as the lovers, was nominated for eight Oscars and won three -- for director Ang Lee, screenwriters Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana, and composer Gustavo Santaolalla. It also had wins at the BAFTA and Golden Globe Awards. Read a 10th anniversary interview with the screenwriters here.
The New York City Opera commissioned the operatic version, which premiered at Madrid's Teatro Real in 2014. American composer Charles Wuorinen wrote the music, and Proux did the libretto, in English.
To follow the play's progress toward its premiere, visit BrokebackPlay.com.
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