The Sunday Post (Dundee)

He knew children love going to dark places

Writer on Roald Dahl as story is adapted for stage

- By Paul English news@sundaypost.com

Writer Rob Drummond is asking the sort of question he thinks Roald Dahl might have asked if he had been working in our turbulent, perplexing, digital times.

“I don’t understand how a teenager can have 20 million followers on social media and for it not to poison them,” he said. “And I don’t understand how an 18-year-old footballer can earn £100,000 a week and for it not to poison him.”

Drummond has taken on the formidable task of adapting a new version of a lesser-known story from the canon of the much-loved children’s author. The Wonderful Story Of Henry Sugar was published by Dahl in 1977 as part of a compendium of short stories, aimed at a slightly older audience than most of his children’s novels were.

It told of an idle gambler who tries to master the magic art of “seeing through cards”, inspired by the real-life Pakistani mystic Kudu Bux, who claimed to be able to see without using his eyes.

The story is a tale of moral redemption, and using gifts for the greater good. Next week the curtain will rise in Perth Theatre on the first theatrical adaptation of the story, put together in conjunctio­n with The Roald Dahl Story Company.

And Drummond hopes the themes he’s exploring through his vision of Dahl’s tale will resonate with a present-day audience in the age of Instagram influencer­s and Youtube followers.

He said: “It’s a story within a story and that’s what I found really interestin­g. We’ve added another character called Miranda Mary Parker, which is a name Dahl had actually abandoned from Charlie And The Chocolate factory.

“It’s a story about magic, real magic, and realising that with great power comes great responsibi­lity, like Spider-man. You can either achieve greatness or you can fall off a cliff, achieve something great or curse those around you.”

Many of Dahl’s novels explored issues of morality. His most popular, Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, had characters whose fatal flaws proved their undoing, while the impoverish­ed humble hero of the novel, Charlie Bucket, proved to have the greatest virtue and won the day.

The new character of Miranda Mary Parker enabled Drummond to introduce a contempora­ry issue affecting modern society.

He said: “By adding this character we’ve contempori­sed the story with a layer of social media power. What it does to you to have one million followers, and whether you can use that for good or bad. It’s not an anti-social media tale, it’s a cautionary tale.

“When he was writing he was already saying society had its problems – no matter what time frame you tap into, the human compulsion for narcissism is always prevalent. The internet hasn’t made us narcissist­ic, it’s just the worst tool to give to a narcissist. Narcissism has always been there, this story just looks at it through different time periods.”

Drummond’s past theatre successes include his awardwinni­ng production Bullet Catch, based on the historic magic trick in which a participan­t appears to catch a bullet fired from a gun. Drummond’s show caused a bit of rumpus among the magicians fraternity.

The production of Henry Sugar will include live magic on stage. He said: “I won’t say too much about it because I revealed a magic trick in the middle of Bullet Catch and was castigated by the Magic Circle. But there’s a moment in the book where one of the characters meditates and rises off the ground. So we’re doing some big stage illusions as well as some cerebral tricks.

He added: “Roald Dahl knew that children loved going to dark places. Their brains are really fertile and they’re discoverin­g good and evil. There’s real darkness to this piece, real high stakes coming from those powers and the message that your talents can be poisonous to yourself if you don’t use them properly.”

 ?? ?? The Wonderful World Of Henry Sugar, based on the novel by Roald Dahl, below, features magical illusions
The Wonderful World Of Henry Sugar, based on the novel by Roald Dahl, below, features magical illusions
 ?? ?? Roald Dahl’s The Wonderful Story Of Henry Sugar, Perth Theatre, from Thursday to April 2
Roald Dahl’s The Wonderful Story Of Henry Sugar, Perth Theatre, from Thursday to April 2
 ?? ?? Actor David Rankine
Actor David Rankine

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom