This production is recommended for ages 9+.
Performance Dates
25 April - 18th July 2026
Run time: 2hrs 30mins
Includes interval
Based on the international best-selling memoir, this bold and uplifting new musical tells the extraordinary true story of William Kamkwamba.
In drought-stricken Malawi, a 13-year-old boy dreams of saving his village. Nobody believes he can – not his father, his friends, nor his community. As crops fail and hope runs dry, William finds inspiration in scraps of old machinery and a handful of library books. What he lacks in resources, he makes up for in determination, grit and imagination, and a windmill begins to take shape. Can William defy expectations and harness the power of the wind to bring energy, life, and hope to his people?
Chiwetel Ejiofor, who wrote, directed, and starred in the 2019 film joins the West End production as Executive Producer.
Adapted from William Kamkwamba’s memoir and Ejiofor’s film, this West End premiere transfers directly from Stratford-upon-Avon, directed by Lynette Linton (Shifters, Sweat, Intimate Apparel, Blues for an Alabama Sky), formerly Artistic Director of the Bush Theatre, with book and lyrics by Richy Hughes (Superhero) and music and lyrics by Tim Sutton (Restless Natives, RSC’s The Merry Wives of Windsor).
A celebration of human ingenuity and the courage to dream in the face of impossible odds, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is a powerful story where imagination brings hope for tomorrow.
Humanity finds its power @sohoplace Spring 2026.
When director Lynette Linton is watching her production of The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind at @sohoplace the thing she enjoys most is watching the rapt faces of the 10-year-olds and young people in the audience.
Produced by the RSC, whose previous long-running musical hits include Les Misérables and Matilda The Musical, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is a musical written by Tim Sutton and Richy Hughes based on the true story of Malawian teenager William Kamkwamba, who hit upon the idea of building a wind turbine to save his village from famine.
Kamkwamba co-wrote a book about his experience, and Chiwetel Ejiofor directed a film version in 2019. But the musical brings new life as well as African rhythms, puppetry, dancing and real joy to this story of a village on the brink of disaster and the boy whose ingenuity and determination averted catastrophe.
“It’s such an inspiring story,” says Linton, who, when we speak, is about to hop on a plane to New York to remount her staging of Benedict Lombe’s Shifters, which she first staged at the Bush in 2024 and which transferred into the West End. Shifters was just one of a blinding series of new plays premiered at the Bush when Linton was artistic director there.
Now as a freelancer, when she accepts a directing job, she asks herself a series of questions: 'Why am I doing this?' What's it for? How do I relate to it artistically? And why do I want to tell this story?” But with The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind there was no hesitation. “I just knew this was a story which would inspire Black children, so I wanted to do it.”
Linton, best known for redefining the Bush and staging a string of meaty dramas at the National Theatre and in the West End, including Blues for an Alabama Sky, Intimate Apparel and Sweat, is a massive musical nut (‘I love them all from Chicago to Hamilton) and it might surprise some that she would like nothing more than a shot at High School Musical.
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is her first foray into musicals, but she hopes it won’t be her last.
“It was daunting because I’d never done it before, and I’m a very text- and character-led director, so a musical felt like quite a leap. But I wasn’t alone. I had a team of amazing human beings and creatives and a cast who really wanted to collaborate, so I just dove in. Sometimes when you are directing, you just have to jump in the water and start swimming so that’s what I did.” Although in real life Linton can’t actually swim.
Just diving in is what Linton has always done. When Josie Rourke, then artistic director of the Donmar, put Lynn Nottage’s rust belt drama Sweat—the play which was hailed as explaining Trump’s 2016 electoral success—in Linton’s hands, it might have seemed like a high-stakes risk for the exalted boutique theatre and the still largely unknown young director. But Linton’s expansive, confident staging swept the show into the West End and Linton into the rising star firmament.
The young woman who was raised in Leytonstone and loved EastEnders but knew little about theatre until she stumbled into the Theatre Royal Stratford East, initially thinking she might want to be a writer, soon took over the Bush. With associate artistic director Daniel Bailey, she transformed it into a powerhouse of contemporary writing, effortlessly disrupting the canon with brilliant new plays, often written by Black and Asian writers, including High Table, Red Pitch and Shifters. They were heady times, and rumour has it that Linton came close to getting the National Theatre top job.
30 Jun, 2026 | By Lyn Gardner

A new West End musical tells the inspiring true story of William Kamkwamba, a young boy from Malawi who defied impossible odds to bring electricity and hope to his village.
In drought-stricken Malawi, 13-year-old William faces famine and the loss of his family’s crops. Unable to continue school due to fees, he spends his days in the local library. There, he discovers books on science and energy. Using scrap materials and sheer determination, William builds a windmill to generate electricity and pump water for his village. His ingenuity transforms his community and eventually earns him international recognition.
William’s journey is real. Born in 1987 in Wimbe, Malawi, he taught himself engineering through books and hands-on experimentation. The windmill he created powered lights and radios, and later helped irrigate farmland. His story of creativity, persistence, and hope has inspired millions worldwide and became an internationally bestselling memoir
29 Jan, 2026 | By Hay Brunsdon
SUMMER SALE
SAVE UP TO 27%