ArtView September 2015 | Page 10

Gorgi Coghlan is a Co-host of The Project on Network Ten 6:30 pm weekdays. It was printed clearly on the ticket. Not suitable for children under 6 years. What was I doing? Was I being a bad parent? Will my daughter have nightmares after seeing this? It was too late. We were here and I had to trust my intuition. This is the right decision. The theatre was packed and full of young children, parents and grandparents filing down the aisles. We took our seats. Looking around I couldn’t see any other children as young as my daughter. What have I done? Over the low hum of excited voices the orchestra warmed up. One of my favourite sounds. As the lights dimmed and the chatter ceased, I looked at my almost 4 year-old daughter’s face and knew I’d made the right decision. Matilda the Musical burst onto the stage, and for the next two and a half hours she sat captivated and utterly mesmerized by the song and dance spectacular unfolding in front of her. Her eyes didn’t leave the stage once. Not even during the not so spectacular numbers (come on, every musical has one). She left the theatre asking me when we could see ‘Matilda’ being naughty again? Something changed in my daughter that day. Musical theatre had unlocked a door into a land she felt comfortable in. A land where she felt she belonged. A land where singing and dancing were encouraged and celebrated. She very quickly became obsessed with all things Matilda the Musical. And I’m talking fullblown obsession; learning all the lyrics to EVERY song, reading books just like Matilda (another bonus for me!) and deciding she wanted to learn tap dance to one day be on stage ‘just like Matilda’. We’re talking about a little girl who insists on Matilda at the London West End in 2014 watching any YouTube performance of the Matilda cast to get her fix. We’re talking about a little girl who says to me, ‘Mummy can I be Matilda on stage one day?’ Whether she wants to go on the stage in future is up to her. My husband and I want our daughter to simply be happy and decide for herself where her future dreams lie. But watching our daughter appreciate the joy of what a musical has to offer and the confidence she has gained has given me such enormous happiness as a parent. I can still remember my first musical. It was Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat. I was in love. I’d never seen anything like it. The huge patchwork multi-colored coat billowed on the stage as Joseph (who I remember was wearing Woody Allen type glasses) sang the score with