Richy Hughes


Richy Hughes is an English Olivier Award nominated Musical Theatre lyricist and Theatre Maker from Thurrock, England.

Early life

Richy Hughes was born in 1974, and attended Coopers' Company and Coborn School in Upminster, Essex. He regularly wrote and performed end of year revues, and won the school's Prize for Art in 1992. He went on to study Illustration at the Kent Institute of Art and Design.
From an early age Richy was an active member of the amateur dramatics scene in his home town of Thurrock, starring in numerous roles including Sidney Carton in a musical premiere of A Tale of Two Cities, Riff in West Side Story, and Billy Bigelow in Carousel.
In 1999, Richy founded a youth theatre company known as Arts Factory.

Career

Early career

Richy’s break into professional theatre came in 2012, when he entered a song into an open submission for A Song Cycle For Soho at the Soho Theatre. The comic song, entitled 'It’s What He Would’ve Wanted', written with composer Scott Dean, tells the story of ‘Jimmy The Fox’ whose corpse is ‘borrowed’ from the undertakers on the eve of his funeral for one last bender in Soho.
In 2012, he joined the Book, Music, Lyrics professional writers’ workshop. Here he honed his lyric-writing craft under the tutelage of such esteemed theatre practitioners as Jeremy Sams, Charles Hart, Tim Sutton, David Firman, Mark Warman, George Stiles and Anthony Drewe.

2015 - Mr Popper's Penguins

Richy's first professional commissions came after producer Kenny Wax attended a showcase of Book, Music, Lyrics alumni. Kenny was impressed with Richy's lyric-writing ability and invited him to collaborate on a new family musical adaptation of children's book, Mr Popper's Penguins. The production premiered at The Lowry in Manchester in 2015, and has enjoyed runs at the Criterion Theatre in London's West End, the New Victory Theater in New York City, and the Seattle Children's Theatre, as well as extensive US and UK tours. The show was co-produced by Pins & Needles Productions, Kenny Wax Family Entertainment, and TC Beech, with songs written in collaboration with composer Luke Bateman.

2017 - Superhero

It was at the Book, Music, Lyrics Workshop that Richy met composer Joseph Finlay and bookwriter Michael Conley, his collaborators on Superhero, which premiered at Southwark Playhouse in June 2017. The song 'Don't Look Down', taken from the show won The Stiles and Drew Best New Song Prize in 2015, at an event at the Wyndham's Theatre, produced by Mercury Musical Developments and hosted by Elaine Paige. The show went on to win the Off West End Theatre Award for best new musical in 2018. Micheal Rouse also won the Offie for Best Actor in a Musical for his portrayal of Colin Bradley in the same year.

2019 - Oi Frog and Friends

In 2019, Richy teamed up with Pins & Needles Productions to adapt Kes Gray and Jim Field's best-selling children's book series Oi Frog and Friends for the stage. This time, Richy played a key role in the development and writing of the script with his co-collaborators Emma Earle, Zoe Squire and Luke Bateman, as well as writing lyrics. The production premiered at Frensham Heights in October 2019 before going on to a critically acclaimed run at the Lyric Theatre in the West End. In 2020, the show was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Family Show. The ceremony, scheduled for 5 April 2020 at The Royal Albert Hall, was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Results are expected to be announced at a ceremony rescheduled for Autumn 2020.

Personal life

Richy currently lives in Orsett, Essex with his wife, Nikki, and his children Jessie and Harry.

Musical theatre credits