Miss Trunchbull dance recital costume

Matilda the Musical Character Guide

Miss Trunchbull

Miss Trunchbull is the headmistress of Crunchem Hall and a former Olympic hammer thrower who treats children the way she treats shot puts. She is enormous, terrifying, and utterly convinced that children are maggots who need to be squashed. She picks students up by their pigtails, throws them over fences, and locks them in a torture device called the Chokey. She is also one of the funniest characters in modern musical theater.

Personality for Dance

Trunchbull moves like a tank with a temper. Everything is forceful and oversized. She stomps rather than walks, she bellows rather than speaks, she grabs rather than reaches. Her physicality is pure intimidation. She stands with feet wide apart, hands on hips or behind her back like a drill sergeant. When she moves toward a child, the floor shakes. But the comedy comes from unexpected moments of agility. She can sprint, she can leap, she can swing a child around her head. She is a former athlete and that explosive power should show through the bluster. The best Trunchbulls mix genuine menace with absurd physical comedy.

The Outfit

Top

A dark green or olive military-style tunic or gym teacher's polo shirt, stretched tight across the chest and shoulders. Add padding to create the imposing silhouette if needed. A whistle on a lanyard around the neck is mandatory. Over the top, an academic gown for assembly scenes, black and billowing, which she swishes dramatically.

Bottom

Brown or khaki knee-length shorts or culottes that suggest old-fashioned gym wear. Think 1950s physical education teacher. The shorts need to allow massive, exaggerated movement. Wide legs, sturdy waistband. Thick, dark knee-high socks pulled up tight.

Accessories

The whistle is prop number one. She blows it constantly to silence the children. A riding crop or pointer stick she taps against her palm threateningly. Olympic-style medals pinned to the tunic, the more ridiculous the better. A small hammer throw prop for scenes referencing her athletic past.

Shoes

Heavy, clunky boots or brogues. They need to make noise on the stage. Every step Trunchbull takes should be audible. The children hear her coming before they see her. Lace-up boots in dark brown or black, with thick soles. The performer needs solid ankle support for all the physical comedy, stomping, jumping, and chasing children around the stage.

Hair

Pulled back severely into a tight bun or short, slicked-back style. Not a single strand out of place. The hair says control. If using a wig, make it severe and slightly unflattering. Graying brown or dark hair. Nothing soft, nothing feminine. Trunchbull has not visited a hair salon since 1975.

Special Details

Trunchbull is traditionally played by a male performer in a cross-gender role, which adds to the larger-than-life quality. If casting this way, do not try to make the performer look like a woman. The comedy works because the audience can see through it. If casting a female performer, the padding and physicality still need to create an imposing figure that towers over the children. Body padding under the costume helps. Focus on making her wide and solid rather than tall.

Movement Tips

  • In the School Song, Trunchbull patrols the children like a prison guard during inspection. She weaves between the rows, looming over them, bending down to get in their faces. The children freeze when she is near and only move when her back is turned. Choreograph the children's fear as carefully as Trunchbull's aggression.
  • The Smell of Rebellion is Trunchbull at maximum intensity. She charges across the stage, throws furniture, sends children scattering. The movement should feel genuinely out of control, like a bull in a school. But underneath the chaos, the choreography is precise. Every near-miss, every stumble, every crash is planned.
  • When Matilda uses telekinesis against Trunchbull, the physical comedy shifts. Trunchbull starts stumbling, ducking from invisible forces, spinning around to find who is doing this. Her movements become panicked and small where they were powerful and big. The reversal is the whole point.
  • Trunchbull should have a signature walk that the audience recognizes. A heavy stomp with a slight lean forward, arms swinging like a soldier. When she enters a scene, the choreography stops. Everyone turns, everyone reacts. Her physical presence commands that kind of attention.
  • For the hammer throw moments, use a heavy, exaggerated wind-up. She swings her arm in big circles, the children scatter, and the release sends something flying across the stage. Practice this with a lightweight prop until the timing is safe and the comedy lands.

Age Recommendations

Best for ages 15-18 or an adult dancer. Trunchbull demands a fearless performer with serious physical comedy chops and enough size or presence to tower over the younger cast. This role suits dancers with acro or gymnastics backgrounds who can do controlled, exaggerated movement safely. The performer must be able to interact physically with child dancers without anyone getting hurt, so maturity and body awareness matter more than age. In studios with older teen or adult classes, this is the role everyone fights over.

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