Sundance TV announced yesterday that Michael K. Williams (Boardwalk Empire and The Wire) will take on one of the lead roles, Leonard Pine, in Jim Mickle's (Cold in July and We Are What We Are) adaptation of Joe R Lansdale's Hap & Leonard novels for television.
HAP AND LEONARD follows the story of Hap Collins and Leonard Pine. Pine, played by Williams, is a black, openly gay Vietnam vet with anger issues. Having been raised by an uncle who shunned him after learning he was homosexual, Leonard was left with Hap as his only source of support in the not so progressive, rural South of the 1980s. Hap Collins is a white, working class laborer who spent time in federal prison as a young man for refusing to be drafted into the military and serve in the Vietnam War. Now in his late thirties, he is just barely making ends meet picking roses on an East Texas plantation. His confidante and lifelong best friend is Pine. By turns funny and shocking, HAP AND LEONARD provides an unpredictable and side-eyed look into race, class and friendship.
But I am eager to see what Williams can do in this role now. Now we wait to see who will be cast in the role of Hap.
The series will begin production on its first six hour-long episodes this year with an expected broadcast date some time in 2016.
And as any fan of the Hap & Leonard novels should do when it comes to news about the adaptation we must all go to our local grocers and pick up some vanilla wafers and Dr. Pepper to celebrate.