Film & TV / NewsFilm & TV / NewsA My Neighbour Totoro stage adaptation is coming to LondonFeaturing Studio Ghibli composer Joe Hisaishi as an executive producerShareLink copied ✔️April 28, 2022April 28, 2022TextGünseli Yalcinkaya A stage adaptation of Studio Ghibli’s My Neighbour Totoro is coming to London’s Barbican this autumn. The much-loved 1988 anime by Hayao Miyazaki will be brought to the stage by its original composer Joe Hisaishi, with a script by the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Tom Morton-Smith. It will feature puppets by the renowned puppeteer Basil Twist, as well as live music courtesy of Hisaishi. “In Japan, many people are passionate about theatre and musicals, but there are no original Japanese shows or musicals performed in the world. Totoro is a Japanese work famous throughout the world, and so this stage adaptation could have the potential to reach global audiences,” Hisaishi told the Guardian. “If the story is universal – as I believe it is – it will have a global reach even if it is performed by people from different cultural backgrounds speaking different languages,” he added. “This enchanting coming-of-age story explores the magical fantasy world of childhood and the transformative power of imagination, as it follows one extraordinary summer in the lives of sisters Satsuki and Mei,” reads a description of the production. The play will run for a limited 15-week season between October 8, 2021 and January 21, 2022. Find out more on the Royal Shakespeare Company website. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREObsessive, doomed and self-destructive: The most toxic on-screen romancesWuthering Heights left me so cold BurberryTwiggy, Maya Wigram and more front Burberry’s SS26 campaignKristen Stewart: ‘Women often operate from a place of shame’100 Nights of Hero: The story behind Julia Jackman’s lo-fi queer fantasyAkinola Davies Jr on his atmospheric debut, My Father’s ShadowThe 2026 Sundance films we can’t stop thinking aboutTwinless: A tragicomic drama about loneliness, grief and queer friendshipDazed x MUBI Cinema Club returns with a screening of My Father’s ShadowNo Other Choice: Park Chan-wook’s bleak, bloody takedown of capitalismGetting to the bottom of the Heated Rivalry discourseMarty Supreme and the cost of ‘dreaming big’Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy