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Interview: Nicky Singer

Childhood tragedy made her a writer

March 4, 2010 14:28
Both Nicky Singer’s parents died when she was still young

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

2 min read

‘I’m a bit of a duff musician,’ says Nicky Singer. It is a surprising statement from the award-winning author considering that her novel, Knight Crew, has been adapted as a youth opera and is being performed on Glyndebourne’s main stage. The book is a retelling of the King Arthur legend in a modern setting, with knife crime at the centre of the story. It is Glyndebourne’s first-ever commission of a teen novel. Singer has also written the libretto.

She is talking during a lunchtime break from rehearsals in a large, bright sitting room overlooking the substantial grounds of the world-renowned auditorium. Watching the work take shape is a process she finds “thrilling”, although she admits feeling that opera in general “doesn’t always prioritise story”.

A writer from a young age — at six she won a chocolate bar for a short story about a giraffe — she went on to make-up bedtime stories for her younger siblings. When she was 16 her godfather, an organist, suggested she write a cantata for children and Jonah and the Whale became her first published work.

After university (she studied English) she worked at the Institute of Contemporary Arts and was later co-founder and co-director of Performing Arts Labs, a charity dedicated to training new writers for screen, theatre and opera. Writing has been a constant throughout. “If I’m not actually writing, I die a little… It’s like breathing to me,” the Brighton-based author says.