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[[File:The Hobbit, the Musical Programme.jpg|thumb|right|The programme from ''The Hobbit'' production]]
[[File:The Hobbit, the Musical Programme.jpg|thumb|right|The programme from ''The Hobbit'' production]]
'''''The Hobbit''''' was a [[Wikipedia:New College School|New College School]] ([[Oxford]]) musical adaptation of [[J.R.R. Tolkien]]'s ''[[The Hobbit]]''.<ref name="HobbitRadio">''The Hobbit, the Musical'', radio programme (London: [[BBC]], [[2012]])</ref> It was written by [[Humphrey Carpenter]] and [[Paul Drayton]]. Through his family connections, Carpenter was able to visit Tolkien in order to seek his permission. Indeed it is this visit and encounter that Carpenter described in his biography of Tolkien.<ref>{{HM|Bio}}, "A Visit"</ref> Tolkien gave his permission and went to see the musical performed along with his wife [[Edith Tolkien|Edith]].<ref name="HobbitRadio"/>
'''''The Hobbit''''' was a [[Wikipedia:New College School|New College School]] ([[Oxford]]) musical adaptation of [[J.R.R. Tolkien]]'s ''[[The Hobbit]]''.<ref name="HobbitRadio">''The Hobbit, the Musical'', radio programme (London: [[BBC]], [[2012]])</ref> It was written by [[Humphrey Carpenter]] and [[Paul Drayton]].  
 
Through his family connections, Carpenter was able to visit Tolkien in order to seek his permission. Indeed it is this visit and encounter that Carpenter described in his biography of Tolkien.<ref>{{HM|Bio}}, "A Visit"</ref> Tolkien gave his permission and went to see the musical performed along with his wife [[Edith Tolkien|Edith]].<ref name="HobbitRadio"/>
 
Carpenter wrote: ''"I remember vividly when he came to see the show, held in the tiny school hall. He sat near the front, and since I was playing the double bass in the orchestra, I was able to watch his reactions. These were very simple: he had a broad smile on his face whenever the narration and dialogue stuck to his own words, which was replaced by a frown the moment there was the slightest departure from the book."'' <ref name=> “Our Brief Encounter”, The Sunday Times Magazine, 25 November, 2001, by [[Humphrey Carpenter]]</ref>


It has been purported to be the first adaptation of ''[[The Hobbit]]'';<ref name="HobbitRadio"/> this is not true, however, if one considers [[Gene Deitch]]'s [[The Hobbit (1966 film)|film adaptation]] from [[1966]].
It has been purported to be the first adaptation of ''[[The Hobbit]]'';<ref name="HobbitRadio"/> this is not true, however, if one considers [[Gene Deitch]]'s [[The Hobbit (1966 film)|film adaptation]] from [[1966]].
==Cast and audience==
Among the cast were  George Halliday (as Bilbo Baggins), Martin Pickard (as Gandalf), [[Wikipedia:Simon Halsey|Simon Halsey]], Ashley Goodall and Stephen Lumsden. Alan Butterworth, the headmaster of the school, as Smaug the Dragon, speaking through a megaphone.
The audience included [[Wikipedia:Howard Goodall|Howard Goodall]] (who watched his older brother Ashley Goodall), and  Tolkien himself on the last night ([[17 December]]).


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Letter to Humphrey Carpenter]]  
*[[Letter to Humphrey Carpenter]]  
*[[Letter to Ken Jackson (4 January 1968)]] (letter)
*[[Letter to Ken Jackson (4 January 1968)]] (letter)
*[[Letter to Ken Jackson (29 January 1968)]] (letter)
*[[Music Drama in Schools]]
 
===External Link===
==External links==
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01ld15z BBC The Hobbit the musical]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01ld15z BBC Radio 4 - The Hobbit, the Musical]


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[[Category:Stage adaptations]]
[[Category:Stage adaptations]]

Revision as of 16:37, 17 February 2020

The programme from The Hobbit production

The Hobbit was a New College School (Oxford) musical adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.[1] It was written by Humphrey Carpenter and Paul Drayton.

Through his family connections, Carpenter was able to visit Tolkien in order to seek his permission. Indeed it is this visit and encounter that Carpenter described in his biography of Tolkien.[2] Tolkien gave his permission and went to see the musical performed along with his wife Edith.[1]

Carpenter wrote: "I remember vividly when he came to see the show, held in the tiny school hall. He sat near the front, and since I was playing the double bass in the orchestra, I was able to watch his reactions. These were very simple: he had a broad smile on his face whenever the narration and dialogue stuck to his own words, which was replaced by a frown the moment there was the slightest departure from the book." [3]

It has been purported to be the first adaptation of The Hobbit;[1] this is not true, however, if one considers Gene Deitch's film adaptation from 1966.

Cast and audience

Among the cast were George Halliday (as Bilbo Baggins), Martin Pickard (as Gandalf), Simon Halsey, Ashley Goodall and Stephen Lumsden. Alan Butterworth, the headmaster of the school, as Smaug the Dragon, speaking through a megaphone.

The audience included Howard Goodall (who watched his older brother Ashley Goodall), and Tolkien himself on the last night (17 December).

See also

External Link

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 The Hobbit, the Musical, radio programme (London: BBC, 2012)
  2. Humphrey Carpenter, J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography, "A Visit"
  3. “Our Brief Encounter”, The Sunday Times Magazine, 25 November, 2001, by Humphrey Carpenter