More than 3,500 qualified youngsters were seen for the title role in three North American productions of Billy Elliot the Musical. And only 28 ultimately got to play a role that requires proficiency in ballet, tap, singing, acting, acrobatics and dialect — by age 11.
Finding Nemo was easier than finding Billys with the skills that role requires. "It's mind-boggling to think about what Billy has to do in three hours on that stage," said
Billy Elliot the Musical children's casting director
Nora Brennan. When the Broadway production opened in 2008, all three original Billys shared the Tony Award for best actor in a musical.
Director Stephen Daldry firmly believed that Billy could be played by anyone of any look, as long as he was short, had an unchanged voice and could meet the demands of the role. So the four touring Billys ended up being an Australian, a Swiss, a Michigander and Ishimoto. Brennan called her quartet "a United Benetton of Billys."