'I wanted to put you bang in the picture. Apprise you of the difficulties. Because, in case you hadn't noticed, he's a human fucking boobytrap. And now, guess what, surprise surprise, boom!'
A world-famous children's author under threat. A battle of wills in the wake of scandal. And a chance to make amends…
It's the summer of 1983, The Witches is about to hit the shelves and Roald Dahl is making last-minute edits. But the outcry at his recent, explicitly antisemitic article won't die down. Across a single afternoon at his family home, and rocked by an unexpectedly explosive confrontation, Dahl is forced to make a public apology or risk his name and reputation.
Inspired by real events, Mark Rosenblatt's debut play Giant offers a nuanced portrait of a fiendishly charismatic icon – and explores with dark humour the difference between considered opinion and dangerous rhetoric.
The play was first performed to great acclaim at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in 2024, directed by Nicholas Hytner with a cast including John Lithgow as Dahl. It transferred to the West End the following year, and won the Olivier and Critics' Circle Awards for Best New Play. Mark Rosenblatt won Best Creative West End Debut at the Stage Debut Awards in 2025.
This was my play of 2024 - an immaculate production of Rosenblatt's play, led with a titanic performance by John Lithgow, all the scarier for how utterly without strain it felt. The play so skilful, moving between Roald Dahl at his most sensitive and his most ferocious, surrounded by people with... varying intentions and motivations as to his best interests. Rosenblatt makes him so human even as he is utterly vile.
A knotty story about a very complicated man, this is an important piece that addresses Dahl's antisemitism as well as showing his support for Palestine. Obviously perhaps this would be impossible considering the basis on real life, but I would have liked there to have been another character within the play who could give legitimacy to his support of Palestine while still opposing his antisemitism, as all of the characters are either 'neutral' or pro-Israel.
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose. Rosenblatt's astonishing debut play could not be more relevant. It imagines a 1983 confrontation between beloved, though decidedly cantankerous, children's author Roald Dahl, and representatives of both his British and US publishers, over the writer's controversial endorsement of a book (God Cried) condemning Israel's actions in the 1982 Lebanon war.
On the one hand, Dahl is absolutely correct in seeing Israel's actions as tantamount to genocide (sound familiar?) - but on the other, he spouts some outrageously inflammatory, sweeping and definitely antisemitic remarks about the Jewish race in general (all of which stem from Roald's actual words on record). It makes for riveting, if uncomfortable drama. Wish I could have seen the recent premiere production at the Royal Court, featuring bravura performances from John Lithgow (who bears an uncanny resemblance to the real Dahl) and Romola Garai.
Good play. Through most of it, Roald walks the line of nuance between criticizing the Israeli government and its actions and actual antisemitism. But by the end, he tilts over the edge into full hatred of Jews. Not surprisingly, it's apparent that the reason is that he's never actually known any Jewish people on a personal, human level.