Repton School 'helped inspire Dahl' to write Charlie

Authored by bbc.com and submitted by fraggle_captain
image for Repton School 'helped inspire Dahl' to write Charlie

Image caption Dahl wrote about Repton in the semi-autobiographical novel Boy

A Derbyshire school attended by Roald Dahl may have provided the inspiration for the author's famous book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

Dahl boarded at Repton School in South Derbyshire from 1930 to 1934.

During this time he and his schoolmates were used by Cadbury to taste and rate new products before they went to market.

The school believes this sparked a lifelong love of chocolate culminating in Dahl's world-famous story.

Now it is holding a day of celebrations to mark what would have been the author's 95th birthday.

The special day includes a quiz, an assembly about the author and a visit to The Priory, the Repton school house where Dahl lived.

Pupils have also been set writing assignments to replicate the writer's style and creativity.

John Golding, house master at The Priory, said Dahl's influence could still be found at the school.

"We're very proud to acknowledge Roald Dahl as one of our great old Reptonians," he said.

"In the earlier years we try to make sure almost all of the pupils here encounter his writing in one form or another.

Image caption The young Dahl was captain of Repton's Fives team

"His autobiography Boy has a whole section devoted to Repton and we like to allow the children to get a feel for what it must have been like here in the 1930s, if perhaps in a slightly exaggerated form."

Mr Golding said the school was happy to have played a small role in helping Dahl create Willie Wonka, whose tale has sold millions of copies around the world and been adapted into two major films.

He said: "In a rather marvellous move Cadbury decided they would have a blind testing facility at Repton - something I am sure the pupils would love to have now.

"We like to think this was what inspired Dahl to write Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and in fact he had a lifelong love of chocolate as a result I think."

More than 100 million copies of Dahl's books, which include James and the Giant Peach, The BFG and Matilda, have been sold globally.

Photographs of the former pupil taken during his four years at Repton are proudly displayed on walls throughout the school.

The young author captained the successful Repton Fives team and recalled fondly days spent riding his new motorbike through countryside surrounding Repton during his final year at the school.

In a letter written later in his life, he said: "It gave me an amazing feeling of winged majesty and of independence."

pendulum_SS on December 23rd, 2018 at 02:01 UTC »

He visited my school when I lived in England. Still remember he could write his name in both directions with two hands simultaneously.

goatywizard on December 23rd, 2018 at 01:21 UTC »

He talked all about this in his book, Boy, about his childhood. I always loved that part of the book!

xiaoming1 on December 22nd, 2018 at 23:22 UTC »

I wish a chocolate factory would send boxes of chocolate to my school