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Stage set for The Boy In The Dress musical

David Walliams (Ian West/PA)
David Walliams (Ian West/PA)

The Royal Shakespeare Company is bringing David Walliams’s book The Boy In The Dress to the stage after more than six years in the making.

The musical will feature music and lyrics by Robbie Williams and his collaborator Guy Chambers.

RSC artistic director Gregory Doran, who will direct the show, announced the musical as part of its winter season.

The Boy In The Dress
The Boy In The Dress (RSC)

The book, about a 12-year-old boy who loves football and dresses, was Walliams’s debut children’s novel, published in 2008.

The bestselling author and Britain’s Got Talent judge said the show was a “dream collaboration”.

“It’s now 10 years since The Boy In The Dress was first published and we’ve come a long way in that time,” he said.

Robbie Williams
Robbie Williams (Nick Ansell/PA)

“Ultimately, I wanted to write a story that encouraged people to recognise that difference can be celebrated, that it’s OK to be yourself.

“I’ve always loved musicals and, somehow, I’d always imagined this book to be made into a musical.”

Williams and Chambers said: “We’re beyond excited to be working with the RSC on our first musical theatre collaboration.

“We are both big fans of David’s books, so when he approached us about writing the soundtrack to a new musical version of The Boy In The Dress for the RSC, we were genuinely delighted.

“There’s a real freshness, cheekiness and heart to David’s writing which we’ve worked really hard to capture in the music.”

Mark Ravenhill, who is adapting the novel, said the book was a “gripping, entertaining and life-affirming story with all the ingredients of a great stage show”.

Other productions will include Shakespeare’s King John, at the Swan Theatre, “exploring contemporary issues of nationhood”, A Museum In Baghdad by Hannah Khalil, and The Whip by Juliet Gilkes Romero.

“Like Shakespeare’s King John, A Museum In Baghdad and The Whip are plays which aren’t afraid to confront big issues and ideas,” deputy artistic director Erica Whyman said.

“What does it mean to be a post-imperial nation? Black-British? Middle Eastern-British? Fundamentally, this is a season about what it means to be ‘British’ and what responsibility must we take for our past as we embark on an uncertain future.”

The Boy In The Dress will play for 18 weeks at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon from November 2019 to March 2020.