Tim Minchin
Tim Minchin
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Tim Minchin: Why You Should Come & See ... Matilda, A Musical
Date: 6 December 2010

Tim Minchin is best known as an Australian comedian with a unique brand of musical comedy that, in just five years, has seen him develop win a Perrier Prize, become one of the biggest acts at the Edinburgh Festival and win a global following from various sell-out tours and TV appearances.

He is also an accomplished actor, writer and musician, who launched his career in Australia in theatre, which he now returns to, making his UK musical debut penning the music and lyrics for the world premiere of Matilda, A Musical.

The adaptation of Roald Dahl’s famous children’s book, a Royal Shakespeare Company commission, has a book by Dennis Kelly, is directed by Matthew Warchus, choreographed by Peter Darling, with musical supervision by Christoper Nightingale and a cast including Josie Walker, Lauren Ward, Paul Kaye, Bertie Carvel and three teams of children.


Roald Dahl’s story is hugely uplifting, and I think our version is true to that upliftingness with the gifts of song and dance, and lighting and magic and stuff. In previews, people seemed to be walking out on air. In fact, I would defy anyone - even a 40-year-old, rugby-playing alcoholic - to come and see it with his eight mates and not cry a couple of times and laugh a lot of times.

It’s about this little girl, Matilda, whose awful parents don’t have any idea that she’s a genius. She finds a friend in her primary school teacher, Miss Honey, and then has to help Miss Honey vanquish a common enemy in the most evil headmaster ever (played by Bertie Carvel). Then later Miss Honey gets the opportunity to help her back.

It’s Dahl so it’s got this completely anarchic sense of humour. It’s silly and dark, but it’s also really touching, and in some ways quite moving. The fact is these kids are kind of victims, and they overwhelm their oppressors and get to be kids again. There’s a lot of rejoicing in naughtiness, and rejoicing in rebellion.

Back in the early Noughties, almost ten years ago, when I was still living in Perth and writing for theatre - which is what I really started out doing long, long before comedy overwhelmed my life - I was writing for a little children’s theatre company called Bark and Gekko who do theatre. I guess I read or reread the book, and I thought then it would make a great musical. I even emailed the Roald Dahl estate to ask about rights but I never wrote the score. So it seemed extraordinarily coincidental when the RSC called me in for a meeting, which I had no idea what it was going to be about, and the director Matthew Warchus, who I’d not even heard of at that stage, said “We’re doing a musical version of Matilda, have you heard of it?” “Heard of it, you idiot, mate!” I said and then I spent about 20 minutes orating what I thought a Dahl musical should be like. To an extent, I talked myself into doing it – and I think Matthew felt so shell-shocked by my enthusiasm that he thought he’d better let me do it or else face the ramifications!

Like many, many people, Roald Dahl was embedded in my childhood. There was a sense of naughtiness about his books that I loved. I find it very hard to disassociate Dahl with Quentin Blake – the sort of inkiness of those drawings and renderings of the character, the dirty messiness of it all, unrestrained by convention.

Dahl just made up words too and that had a big influence on me when I started writing poems and silly things as a child. However, I haven’t used a single one of Dahl’s words in the lyrics for Matilda. Of course, I was influenced by his style, but ultimately I didn’t respond to the book, I responded to Dennis Kelly’s script. Perhaps unjustifiably, I felt equipped to bring a Dahl-iness to the piece and I assumed that the RSC came to me, this untrained comedian, because they had confidence that I’d be able to do it. Now I’m not claiming in any way to have the gift that Dahl had, but I have a joy in words, a playfulness, and a darkness. I just had to write like me, but with a sort Dennis Kelly-ified Dahl filter across my brain.

The lyrics are typically me in that there are lots of them and there’s a huge amount of playing with words and language. It’s sort of lyrical games the whole time, and letters hidden in words and rhymes, and made-up words. But I was also very aware that Matilda is a children’s book, and that this is a musical we’re writing, and that they’re very different things. I think we’ve managed to retain the tone and everything in the story, but at the same time, it’s its own piece, with many layers and levels that wouldn’t have been appropriate in a children’s book but are appropriate to the stage.

My hopes for Matilda are enormous! I don’t think anything I make has any special right to do particularly well, nor do I set about writing things with an eye to any set goal, but I’ve worked particularly hard on this, and I’ve got an inkling that it might be quite special. So I guess I hope it runs for 30 years, gets made into a film and is projected on the moon. And before that a transfer to the West End next year, which would be ... well, not a dream come true because I don’t think it ever crossed my mind that it would be something I was capable of. When you quit piano in grade three, you don’t really think you may have a West End musical one day.

Without a doubt, Matilda has whet my appetite for more theatre, it’s been quite impactful in that way. I have absolutely loved the last five years of my life where I have discovered I can do this comedy thing, generate my own work and have lots of people come watch it. But in my head I write quirky songs for theatre - really, my comedy shows are just theatre shows with a single performer and I cast myself! If for the rest of my life I could do a solo show whenever I feel like it every couple of years and spend the rest of the time making or contributing to theatre projects, I will be a happy chap.


Matilda, A Musical receives its world premiere on 9 December 2010 (previews from 9 November) at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, where it runs for 12 straight weeks through to 30 January 2011. To view a trailer for the musical – including Minchin singing “When I Grow Up” - click here.

Related Content

Booking Tickets & Show Listings
Matilda Listing Page
Matilda Listing Page
Internal Links
Matilda, Faust & Frayn triumph at South Bank Awards - 2nd May 2012 news
Matilda wins seven, One Man overlooked at 2012 Oliviers - 15th Apr 2012 news
Matilda, Guvnors & Constellations compete at South Bank Awards - 2nd Apr 2012 news
Bertie Carvel sets Matilda departure date, show extends - 28th Mar 2012 news
Matilda, Guvnors & Ladykillers lead the field at 2012 Oliviers - 15th Mar 2012 news
Sondheim sounds off - 5th Mar 2012 blog
RSC confirms plans to take WOS Award-winning Matilda to New York - 28th Feb 2012 news
RSC Keeps Control of Matilda on Broadway??? - 9th Jan 2012 gossip
Jo Caird: Why Can't We Resist Adaptations of Children's Classics? - 9th Jan 2012 blog
Matilda The Musical starstarstarstar - 25th Nov 2011 reviews
1st Night Photos: RSC Matilda Swings into West End - 25th Nov 2011 photos
Review Round-up: Matilda is Top of the Class - 25th Nov 2011 roundup
Photos: 57th Evening Standard Awards Shortlist - 7th Nov 2011 photos
RSC Cancels First Five Previews of West End Matilda - 29th Sep 2011 news
Matilda & Girl Lead Theatre Awards UK Nominations - 29th Sep 2011 news
Take Ten ... London Autumn Season Highlights - 13th Sep 2011 features
Photos: New RSC Matildas Fly into West End - 13th Sep 2011 news
Cast Announced for West End Transfer of RSC Matilda - 23rd Aug 2011 news
Boss Blog: Theatre's Debt to Comedy - 11th Aug 2011 blog
Christie Brinkley Delays West End Debut in Chicago - 8th Jul 2011 news
Photos: First Peek at London Matilda's New Look - 19th May 2011 photos
RSC's Matilda Confirms London Opening, 22 Nov - 19th May 2011 news
Minchin's Matilda Comes to West End in Autumn - 31st Mar 2011 news
Will Minchin's Matilda Dream Come True??? - 13th Dec 2010 gossip
Review Round-up: RSC Move Critics with Matilda - 10th Dec 2010 roundup
Matilda (RSC) starstarstarstarstar - 10th Dec 2010 reviews
Book 'Em: Cameron & Clegg Give RSC Recommendations??? - 28th Oct 2010 gossip
Musical Cast: Rhys Jones Oliver!, Matilda & Bells - 13th Sep 2010 news
RSC Sets Dates for Dahl’s Matilda Musical, 9 Nov - 24th Mar 2010 news
RSC Premieres Musical of Roald Dahl’s Matilda - 30th Sep 2009 news

External Links
www.matildamusical.com



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