A story of heartbreak, reflection, and resilience
GEORGE - A Furry Tale
George is a new original British musical about a man who grows up using an imaginary teddy bear to survive loneliness, trauma, and mental health struggles — and how community, love, and self-acceptance help him finally stand on his own.
It’s a warm, funny, deeply human story about chosen family, masculinity, and finding light when the world feels too loud — told with big heart, modern pop-theatre songs, and a final image audiences will carry with them long after they leave.
© JMS (Jamie Stewart) 2025. George the Musical is an original work.
All rights reserved.
All about George
George is an original British musical about survival, identity, and the quiet strength it takes to keep going.
Mikey grows up feeling different — sensitive in a world that demands toughness, softer in places that reward silence. When his home life begins to fracture, he finds comfort in an imaginary teddy bear named George. What starts as a childhood coping mechanism becomes something far deeper: a lifeline through loneliness, fear, and the growing weight of adulthood.
As Mikey grows older, the world asks more of him. Love becomes complicated. Community feels fragile. Mental health struggles intensify. Relationships test his sense of worth, and the comfort that once kept him safe begins to slip away. The musical follows Mikey through moments of humour, heartbreak, addiction, loss, and recovery — charting the cost of being unseen, and the danger of believing you have to face everything alone.
Running parallel to Mikey’s inner journey is a wider fight for belonging: the battle to save a threatened community space that holds together people who, like Mikey, have nowhere else to go. As voices rise and connections form, Mikey is forced to confront who he has been, what he has lost, and who he might still become.
Told through contemporary pop-theatre songs, raw emotional storytelling, and moments of warmth and joy, George is ultimately a story about chosen family, masculinity redefined, and learning that the strength you’ve been searching for was never imaginary at all.

Childhood
Mikey grows up feeling different — quieter, softer, and more sensitive than the world around him seems to allow. When things at home begin to fracture, he finds safety in an unlikely place: a small teddy bear named George. George becomes his constant — a silent listener, a shield against loneliness, and a symbol of the comfort Mikey struggles to find elsewhere. Through childhood moments of joy, fear, and confusion, George represents the part of Mikey that wants to believe the world can still be kind.
Community
Community — the places and people who hold us up when we can’t stand on our own. From pubs and Clubs, from support groups to community halls under threat, the musical shows how fragile spaces can become lifelines. It explores how new families are built, how voices grow stronger together, and how ordinary people can create extraordinary change when they refuse to be invisible.


Growing
As Mikey grows older, life tests him in deeper, in more complicated ways. Love, loss, identity, and self-worth collide as he navigates a world that often asks him to be less than he is. Across the journey, Mikey learns that strength doesn’t always look loud or fearless — sometimes it’s found in honesty, connection, and the courage to keep going. It follows a man learning, piece by piece, how to shine in his own light. Sometimes you just have to take a good hard look in the mirror, to see who is looking back at you.
How George was Born
From the Creator
I have always loved musical theatre — the buzz, the anticipation, the moment when a show finally comes to life after you’ve lived with its soundtrack for so long.
Growing up, I struggled with mental health, identity, and rejection — experiences shared by many people, but often lived quietly. George began as a way to explore those feelings honestly, and to create a story that could hold both darkness and hope.
The idea started with a spark — a single image — and from that moment, the writing began. George was born.
The script went through many drafts, rewrites, and late nights. Scenes were reshaped, flawed characters and arcs evolved, and songs were written, cut, merged, then rewritten as the story found its true form. Of the many songs originally written, only those that genuinely served the narrative remain in the final draft. (There have been a lot)
As the musical grew, so did the need to refine it. Length was trimmed, scenes combined, and emotional beats sharpened — not to lose depth, but to make the story clearer, stronger, and more honest. Every change was made to give a true story for each of the characters and that journey they take.
It has many complex elements, hidden motifs, sights and sounds that work on a subconscious level that will make audiences see extra things, each time they experience the show. It's not just about what the characters say or sing; it's what the audience sees and feels. Even the music has an identity. It's a strong story written as a tapestry. The dialogue and songs are the main pattern, but the colour, texture, and hidden knots of the motifs are what will make it so rich and emotionally resonant. The audience will feel the story as much as they see it.
While I do not write traditional musical notation, music has always been central to my life. I DJ, I live in music, and I know instinctively what emotional tone a moment needs to carry. To explore this, I used music tools during the early demo stage — as a sketching and exploration tool — allowing me to experiment with genre, tempo, mood, and structure. Many songs went through dozens of iterations before the right emotional shape emerged.
These demos are not finished scores. They are placeholders — working drafts intended to communicate tone and intent. As the show moves into workshop and production stages, the music will be fully scored, orchestrated, and refined in collaboration with musicians, composers, and producers.
What is complete — and entirely original — is the story, script, lyrics, and dramatic structure of George. The heart of the show has always been human, personal, and carefully crafted.
Below are a few glimpses into that process — handwritten script pages and early music drafts — it's not going to be the final polished performance. It's a window on how the musical has been built: slowly, deliberately, and with loving care.
Creating a musical is not something done overnight. It takes time, patience, and belief. My hope is that one day, George gives someone else that same buzz — the feeling of walking into a theatre and recognising a piece of themselves on stage.
Born on paper
Handwritten Script Pages
Two pages from the first draft. Much of this was later cut or rewritten as the story evolved.
Producer Summary
Including Requirements & Status
George — A Furry Tale is a contemporary British musical blending magical realism, queer coming‑of‑age, mental health recovery, and community activism. It follows Mikey, from age seven to adulthood, as he navigates fear, identity, heartbreak, and healing — guided throughout his life by the symbolic presence of his childhood teddy bear, George.
Act I
We meet Mikey as a frightened child who uses George to make sense of a tense home life. A glowing mirror becomes a theatrical representation of his fears, while George becomes his emotional anchor. As Mikey grows into a teenager, he questions his sexuality, enters queer spaces for the first time, and falls into a relationship with Justin — charming at first, but increasingly controlling. When the relationship collapses, Mikey spirals into anxiety, addiction, and a devastating moment on a pier. Act I ends with a symbolic “fall” into darkness.
Act II
Mikey survives. With the unexpected support of his father, he begins recovery and attends a community support group. There he meets Jon, a gentle, grounded man who offers a healthier kind of love. As Mikey rebuilds his life, the community centre that saved him faces closure. Mikey and Jon lead a grassroots campaign to save it, culminating in a triumphant victory. The centre becomes the venue for their wedding — a joyful, handmade celebration of love, identity, and chosen family. The finale erupts into a cathartic anthem as the cast freezes in joy.
Why This Musical Matters
George offers something rare:
- A queer story with a happy ending
- A mental‑health narrative that leads to recovery, not tragedy
- A community‑driven plot with real emotional stakes
- A theatrical world where childhood imagination and adult healing collide
It sits tonally between Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Dear Evan Hansen, and Big Fish, while offering a unique emotional journey not currently represented on the West End or Broadway.
The Heart of the Show
At its core, George is about learning to believe in yourself — not because a teddy bear protects you, but because you finally realise you were the brave one all along.
PRODUCTION REQUIREMENTS
Cast Size
- 10–14 performers
- Flexible ensemble doubling
Band
- 5–7 musicians
- Contemporary pop/folk instrumentation
Staging
- Revolving mirror unit
- Community centre modular set
- Club lighting rig
- Storybook framing device
Technical Highlights
- Mirror illusions
- Split‑stage scenes
- Transformation sequences
- Confetti finale
DEVELOPMENT STATUS
- Full script completed
- Full Act I & II structure locked
- Songs drafted
- Strong thematic identity
- Clear commercial positioning
- Ready for:
- Table read
- Workshop
- Demo recording
- Regional try‑out
WHY INVEST
- A fresh, original British musical
- A queer story with a joyful ending
- A mental‑health narrative handled responsibly
- A community‑driven story with broad appeal
- A finale that sends audiences out buzzing
- Strong potential for:
- West End
- Regional theatres
- Fringe festivals
- International licensing
- School & youth productions
This is a musical with heart, relevance, and longevity
Feedback
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