George’s Marvellous Medicine

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Information

  • Adapted by David Wood
  • Published by:
    • Samuel French, USA.

Description

George lives on a farm, managed by his mother and father. Their lives are thrown into disarray by the arrival of Grandma, who behaves appallingly. George tries to make her ‘better’ by creating a marvellous medicine, which has the most extraordinary effect on Grandma, who grows and grows until she bursts through the ceiling. George’s father realises that the magic medicine could work on his farm animals, providing extra food to help feed a hungry world. But attempts to make more medicine lead to hilarious and frustrating happenings… The play uses puppets to considerable effect, plus a Giant Chicken, played by an actor.


Covers


The Magic Finger

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Information

  • Adapted by David Wood
  • Published by:
    • Samuel French Ltd.

Description

People familiar with Roald Dahl’s imaginative, whimsical and fantastical classics will love The Magic Finger, an adventure about a girl with special powers. When Lucy senses injustice, she gets angry and when she gets angry her Magic Finger heats up and then, well, ANYTHING can happen. When Lucy gets upset with her best friend William and his family for shooting ducks for sport, she points her Magic Finger at them and turns them all into bird-size people while the ducks become the size of humans. Lucy’s indignation turns the world into a place where the powerless are in charge and the powerful are taught a very big lesson. Playwright, David Wood’s adaptions of the works of Roald Dahl have entertained and delighted audiences for years, and with The Magic Finger Wood brings another stellar Dahl story to life on the stage.


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Danny the Champion of the World

Sections: Information | DescriptionCovers


Information

  • Adapted by David Wood
  • Published by:
    • Samuel French, USA.
    • Puffin, UK.

Description

A collection of short plays for schools and drama groups, adapted from Roald Dahl’s brilliant story, Danny the Champion of the World.

Could you be Danny, or his dad, or even red-faced Mr Victor Hazell? Danny thinks his dad is the most marvellous and exciting father a boy could wish for. Now you can join in their daring and devilish plots with these fun-to-perform plays adapted by David Wood.


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Fantastic Mr. Fox

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Information

  • Adapted by David Wood
  • Published by:
    • Samuel French Ltd.

Covers


The Three Little Pigs

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Information

  • Musical work commissioned by The Roald Dahl Foundation in 2003
  • Composed by British composer Paul Patterson
  • Libretto by Donald Sturrock
  • Performances:
    • World premiere at Basel, Switzerland, 21st Mar 2004
      • Conducted by Howard Griffiths
      • Performed by Basel Symphony Orchestra
      • Narrator: Sandra Studer
    • UK premiere at Royal Festival Hall, London, England, 2005
      • Conducted by Alexander Briger
      • Performed by London Philharmonic Orchestra

For more information, see Music Link International. To hire, contact Josef Weinberger Ltd.


Description

The Roald Dahl Foundation’s musical versions of the Revolting Rhymes end as they began with a commission from Paul Patterson, which was premiered in Basel in 2004, by the Basel Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Howard Griffiths. Roald Dahl’s version of The Three Little Pigs is subversive in the extreme and contains a series of dark, gruesome and outrageously comic twists. Its first performances drew rapturous applause from its Swiss audiences and glowing reviews from the press.


CD Cover


Little Red Riding Hood

Sections: Information | Description | CD Cover | Norwegian Cover


Information

  • Musical work commissioned by Roald Dahl Foundation in 1992
  • Composed by British composer Paul Patterson
  • Libretto by Donald Sturrock
  • Performances:
    • World premiere at Royal Festival Hall, London, 1st Nov 1992
      • Conducted by Frans Welser-Möst
      • Performed by London Philharmonic Orchestra
      • Narrators: Julie Walters, Benjamin Luxon and Stephen Powell
    • Roald Dahl Gala Concert, King’s Place, London, December 2008
      • Conducted by Peter Ash
      • Performed by pianists Aleksandar Madzar and Julien Libeer, and Joan Rodgers (soprano)
      • Narrator: Geraldine James
  • Movies:

For more information, see Music Link International. To hire, contact Josef Weinberger Ltd.


Description

From Paul Patterson’s website:

The original suggestion, from the author’s widow, was for a setting of a group of his much-loved Revolting Rhymes. Donald Sturrock, who had made a film about Dahl in 1985 and became a friend of the family, volunteered to adapt the text. Then, by great good fortune, a script Dahl had written for a possible television adaptation, using puppets, of one of the Rhymes was found: his inspired re-telling of the story of Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf. Sturrock realised that this could form the basis of a single longer work, and devised a text in which Dahl’s original verses were augmented by prose dialogue and narration.

This is the text which Paul Patterson has set as a concert piece, lasting a little under half an hour, for three speakers (or one) and orchestra. The words are spoken freely against the orchestral background, without any attempt to notate exact rhythms for the verse – something Dahl disliked in previous settings of his words. The orchestra at the beginning becomes an Enchanted Forest, through which the Narrator makes his way to begin the story. Thereafter it illustrates the narrative, with themes to match the characters and the action, in the popular tradition of Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf and Poulenc’s Babar the Elephant.

The music is straightforward, easy to follow and, the composer says, “very tuneful – amazingly so for me”. But it is certainly not without its incidental delights for listeners of all ages: the little bursts of ‘avant-garde’ free-time notation for the thunderstorm near the beginning and, later on, for a death scene; the musical menu of possibilities for the wolf’s lunch, in the course of which Wagner’s Isolde is scandalously identified as a ‘juicy cow’; Grandma’s doorbell, which has unexpected classical aspirations; the representation of a wolf’s burp by the percussion instrument called a ‘lion’s roar’; and what Patterson calls the ‘cat-walk’ music for Little Red Riding Hood’s final appearance. Above all, in this story which hinges on characters pretending to be other characters, there is a great deal of ingenuity in the way that the themes associated with one character similarly impersonate those of another. But then, as the Narrator says near the beginning, in the Forest, “appearances can be very, very deceptive. Nothing is ever quite what it seems….”


CD Cover


Norwegian Cover – Lille Rødhette


Roald Dahl’s Little Red Riding Hood

Sections: Information | Watch Online | Description | VHS Covers


Information


Watch Online


Description

Derived from one of Roald Dahl’s ‘Revolting Rhymes’, this reworking of the classic fairytale is fun for all the family. It stars Julie Walters and Danny De Vito and is accompanied by a lavish new score and state of the art visual effects. It was produced by the BBC in conjunction with the Roald Dahl Foundation and was the BBC’s ‘Omnibus’ Christmas 1995 special. Features music composed by Paul Patterson, performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra and conducted by Franz Welser-Most.


VHS Covers


So You Think You Know Roald Dahl?

Sections: Information | Description | Covers


Information

  • First edition:
    • Hodder & Stoughton, 2005
  • Written by: Clive Gifford

Description

So you’ve read all Roald Dahl’s books—sometimes twice. Now you can find out what you really know about his stories. Can you remember what a snozzcumber is? Who exactly is Esio Trot? And who has a mouth like a dog’s bottom!? Here are more than 1,000 questions—from Eccentrically Easy to Devilishly Difficult—that will let you enjoy, once again, Dahl’s ingenious creations and his wicked sense of fun!


Covers


Spotty Powder and other Splendiferous Secrets

Sections: Information | Description | Covers | French Covers


Information


Description

Spotty Powder and Other Splendiferous Secrets shares some of the secrets behind your favourite Roald Dahl stories.

Roald Dahl loved secrets, and maybe you do too? If so, this book will help you uncover some of the stories behind the stories. Discover who Miranda Mary Piker was, feast your eyes on an original chapter from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and tuck into some tasty tales from Roald Dahl’s school days to discover more about the world’s number one storyteller.


Covers


French Covers – La poudre à boutons et autres secrets mirobolants


The BFG’s Gloriumptious Journal

Sections: Information | Description | Covers


Information

  • Published by:
    • Grosset & Dunlap, 2016
  • Illustrated by: Quentin Blake

Description

Based on Roald Dahl’s The BFG, this journal is the perfect place for imaginative children to record all their dreams and ideas. The pages of this journal feature Quentin Blake’s art from the original story, and are full of fun writing and drawing prompts to help spark readers’ imaginations. Whether they’re inventing new recipes for snozzcumbers, or describing the contents of the BFG’s bottled dreams, children will have hours of enjoyment with Sophie and the BFG.


Covers