Word has reached Diary that Kyme has taken on an acting challenge in the Hong Kong premiere of David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross, which will be staged at the Arts Centre in March.
He will play the character of Shelley Levine, a down-and-out salesman, who will stoop to anything to get back into the game.
Kyme, who's never had such a major acting role until now, said he got a part in the play only by accident.
"I've done a few things before like acts at the Fringe Club and MC-ing 4As creative awards but nothing as intense as this.
"A friend said he was going to the audition and, because I like plays such as Death of a Salesman, I went along and tried out and got the part.
It just happened. It wasn't like I was chasing anything."
Adding to his already heavy workload of launching his agency start-up, Kyme is hard at work in rehearsals - three times per week, at four hours each time.
"I never realised it would be this tough."
However, he did say that there were similarities between Glengarry Glen Ross and the advertising world which is giving his thespian outing a helping hand.
"There's a great deal of experience that I could draw on - the targets that have to be met and the slick presentations that you have to make to be able to flog what you are selling," he says.
Produced by Big Bad and Below Entertainment, the play is essentially about a team of real estate salesmen trying to make a buck in hard times.
The atmosphere is dark and foreboding.
The header on the poster says it all: 'Mislead. Conspire. Commit a Crime.
All in One Shift.'
As Kyme describes it: "Sounds like a normal day in an ad agency."