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Danny, the Champion of the World

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Danny the Champion of the World
Original book cover
AuthorRoald Dahl
Original titleDanny the champion of the world
IllustratorJill Bennett (original)
Quentin Blake
LanguageEnglish
GenreChildren's
Published14 February 1975 Jonathan Cape (original)
Puffin Books (current)
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (Hardback, Paperback)
Pages224
ISBN0-14-032873-4

Danny, the Champion of the World is a 1975 children's novel by British author Roald Dahl. The plot centres on Danny, a young English boy, and his father, William. They live in a Gypsy caravan, fix cars for a living in their mechanic shop and partake in poaching pheasants. It was first published on February 14, 1975, in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. and in the United Kingdom by Jonathan Cape.

It was adapted into a made-for-TV movie in 1989 by Thames Television which starred Jeremy Irons as William and Robbie Coltrane as Mr Victor Hazell. The novel is based on Dahl's adult short story "The Champion of the World" which first appeared in print in The New Yorker magazine,[1] as did some of the other short stories that would later be reprinted as Kiss Kiss (1960).

There have been two unabridged recordings of the book released. The first was in 2007 by actor Timothy West for Puffin Audiobooks.[2] The second was by actor Peter Serafinowicz for Penguin Audio.[3] Time magazine included the novel in its list of the 100 Best Young-Adult Books of All Time.[4] In 2023, the novel was ranked by BBC at no. 92 in their poll of "The 100 greatest children's books of all time".[5]

Summary

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Danny, who was born in the mid 1960s in the South of England, was only four months old when his mother died suddenly. He is an only child, and lives with his father, William, in an old caravan behind the service station they operate together. Danny and his father are very close, and share pastimes like building kites, fire balloons, and go-karts. William is also an excellent teller of bedtime stories, and among other things invents a version of The BFG to tell to Danny. The father and son have generally idyllic times despite not having much.

Living a few miles from them is Mr. Victor Hazell, an unpleasant but influential local nouveau riche gentleman and beer magnate. He had once had been to their filling station and threatened Danny with a hiding if there were fingerprints found on his silver Rolls-Royce. William ordered Hazell to leave, and Hazell has frequently sent government officials to bother William about trivialities ever since.

At nine years old, Danny discovers that William, like his late father Horace, is a passionate pheasant poacher. This revelation comes when Danny notices William's absence in the middle of the night and anxiously waits for his return. He learns that William had been sneaking into into the nearby woods, which belong to Victor Hazell, to poach.

A short time afterwards, William returns to Hazell’s wood for another poaching venture. Danny wakes in the night to find that William has not returned home despite having promised to be back almost four hours earlier. Sensing that William has suffered an accident, Danny sets out to rescue him, driving a veteran Austin 7 he and William had been repairing. On the journey, Danny crosses paths with a police car, but manages to escape through a gap in a roadside hedge. He sneaks through the woods and finds his father incapacitated by a broken ankle, having fallen into in a pit trap Hazell intended for poachers. Danny rescues William and drives him back home.

While William recovers from his injury, he and Danny realise Mr. Hazell's annual pheasant shoot is approaching - an event to which he invites wealthy, powerful and influential aristocrats from across the south of England. Danny and William decide to humiliate Hazell by poaching all the pheasants in the forest just before the event. As the local doctor, Doc Spencer, has prescribed sleeping pills for William, Danny comes up with the idea to soak some raisins until they swell, then sew the contents of the pills into the bait. William names this method "Sleeping Beauty". After having successfully drugged and captured 120 pheasants from Hazell's Wood, Danny and William take a taxi driven by fellow poacher Charlie Kinch to the local vicarage, where they hide the pheasants. Afterwards, they walk home.

The next day, the vicar's wife Mrs. Clipstone delivers the sleeping pheasants to William's garage in a specially built baby carriage; however, the pheasants start drunkenly flying and flopping out of the carriage as the soporific wears off. During the commotion, Mr. Hazell arrives in a sputtering rage, and confronts Danny, William and Doc Spencer, accusing them of stealing his pheasants. With the help of Sergeant Enoch Samways, the village policeman, Danny and William pretend to help guide the stunned pheasants back onto Hazell's land, but Mr. Hazell's Rolls-Royce is in the way with a door left open. The drugged birds create a horrible mess with their droppings, and damage the car's paintwork and upholstery with their claws. As Mr. Hazell drives off in humiliation, many of the pheasants wake up completely and fly away in the opposite direction from Hazell's property. Danny is hailed as "the champion of the world" by his father, Doc Spencer and Sgt. Samways.

Doc Spencer finds six pheasants dead from having taken an overdose, so he distributes two each to Sergeant Samways, Mrs. Clipstone, and William. Danny and William then walk into town, intending to buy a new oven from Mr. Wheeler to roast their pheasants. They also discuss possibly attempting to poach trout from a local stream.

The book ends with a plea to the child who has just finished reading the story, that when they are grown up with children of their own, they be as “sparky” a parent to them as William was to Danny.

Adaptations

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TV movie

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The book was adapted into a made-for-TV movie in 1989 by Thames Television. It was directed by Gavin Millar and starred Jeremy Irons as William Smith, and his son, Samuel Irons, as the titular character, Danny Smith, with Robbie Coltrane as Mr. Hazell.[6] It was released to Region 2 DVD in 2006.

Stage adaptation

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The book was adapted for the stage by actor and writer David Wood in 2004, commissioned by the Sherman Theatre, Cardiff.[7][8]

Relations to other Roald Dahl books

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Danny, The Champion of the World is based on a previous short story by Dahl, entitled The Champion of the World, which was first published in The New Yorker Magazine in 1959 and later re-published in the compilation Kiss Kiss. The original story has a similar premise, but with adults as the main characters.

William tells Danny a bedtime story sequence of a "Big Friendly Giant" who captures good dreams and blows them into children's bedrooms at night. Dahl would later use the same concept in the full-length novel The BFG.

Danny describes being caned by his teacher, Captain Lancaster, for cheating in an exam. This is similar to an experience that Dahl recounted of his own teacher, Captain Hardcastle, in Boy: Tales of Childhood.

Editions

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References

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  1. ^ All works by Roald Dahl. The New Yorker. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  2. ^ "Roald Dahl – 10 Dahl Puffin Classics On 27 CDs". Discogs.com. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Danny the Champion of the World by Roald Dahl read by Peter Serafinowicz". AudioFile.com. December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
  4. ^ "100 Best Young-Adult Books". Time. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  5. ^ "The 100 greatest children's books of all time". bbc.com. 23 May 2023.
  6. ^ "Danny the Champion of the World (1989)". BFI. Archived from the original on 3 October 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
  7. ^ "Danny the Champion of the World". David Wood. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  8. ^ "A Samuel French, Ltd title: Danny the Champion of the World". Concord Theatricals. Retrieved 29 February 2024.