Mary Loudon: Why I Swapped Being An Author For Being A Theatre Producer

October 28, 2021 by

From the moment I discovered Young Roots, a charity providing immediate & long-term support to child refugees in the UK, I swore to its patron, the actor Juliet Stevenson, that I would find a way to raise money for them.

I’d read the true story In The Sea There Are Crocodiles some years earlier, and it haunted me ever after. I’d read how, at the age of ten, Enaiat Akbari’s village fell prey to the Taliban; how, fearing for his life, Enaiat’s mother led him across the border where she left him, alone, to fend for himself. I’d read about Enaiat’s five-year ordeal: traversing bitterly cold mountains, near-suffocating in the base of a truck, steering an inflatable raft in violent seas. I’d marvelled how that young boy crossed Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, and Greece – discovering brotherhood, witnessing death, and losing everything but hope – before arriving in Italy, aged fifteen.

 

 

In August 2019, it hit me: the book would make a brilliant play, and the play could be the fundraiser. I got together with theatre director Nicola Moran, and over tea in a café in September 2019, we began work, there and then. Three months later, LoudonMoranProductions was formed, we had the UK theatre rights to the book, Nicola adapted it into a play, we cast brilliant young actors, booked professional theatres, and started fund-raising for the considerable production costs.

Then, the pandemic struck, but we were determined not to let people down: we didn’t cancel; we postponed the planned Autumn 2020 tour, and later rearranged it from scratch, with the sad loss of five venues in the process. Nonetheless, with huge efforts plus the support of kind patrons and sponsors – among them Philip Pullman, Harriet Walter, Sally Philips, Marcus Brigstocke & Julian Rhind-Tutt – the World Premiere and Tour 2021 is ready to go.

How I wish the play were fiction. How I wish it were not more relevant now than ever before. Our 21-year-old Afghan composer, Arson Fahim, is a former refugee himself and such a gifted musician that he conducted the Afghanistan National Symphony Orchestra. When still in his teens. A fortnight ago, he left Kabul for the US to take up a prestigious scholarship to a music conservatoire. It could be the greatest adventure of his life. Instead, he is sleepless, helpless and grieving, worrying for his family, friends and country. It should not be this way. It is terrible that it is.

In the Sea There Are Crocodiles is one child’s epic tale of hope and survival. As unaccompanied children around the world continue daily to seek asylum, and as the people of Afghanistan suffer in myriad ways that most of us can barely imagine, it is a tale that is re-lived by them, every single day.

I hope our play will be one of many wake-up calls. We cannot doze through this terror and tragedy.  We have to help. We have to do anything we can.

 

Mary Loudon is the prize-winning author of five internationally-published books of fiction & non-fiction. She has made over 200 radio and TV appearances, been a judge for the Whitbread Prize & Costa Book Awards. Her bestselling novel, My House Is Falling Down, is being adapted for stage in 2022.

 

 In The Sea There Are Crocodiles is at Wales Millennium Centre’s Weston Studio on 13 and 14 November 2021

8PM

£15

Loudon Moran Productions was specially formed to share this incredible story and raise money for Young Roots – a charity providing immediate & long-term support to child refugees and asylum seekers arriving in the UK.

 

 

 

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