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Here Be Dragons co-curated by Cressida Cowell and Toothless - opens 13 July. Admission included with ticket to the Galleries

1001 Stories Collection

The Tiger Who Came To Tea

1001 thetigerwhocametotea
Added on 14th July 2020

Writer and Illustrator Judith Kerr
First published 1968
Publisher HarperCollins

Animals Family
1001

This humorous picture book for young children features a friendly but very hungry tiger.

Story

A quiet afternoon is transformed by the arrival of a very hungry and thirsty tiger who eats all the food in the cupboards and drinks all the water in the kitchen tap. This is the story of how Sophie and her Mum handle the situation.

Why we chose it

The Tiger Who Came to Tea is a delightfully amusing picture book for the very young. The sweet and simple story stars a magnificent tiger who politely visits a mother and daughter, who politely share their food and drink. The surreal and understated humour and beautiful illustrations combine to make this a classic bedtime favourite.

Where it came from

Judith Kerr describes a trip to the zoo and a lonely afternoon with Tacy, her daughter, inspiring the story that became The Tiger Who Came to Tea. Tacy repeatedly asked her to ‘talk the tiger’, refining the story until it was just as she liked it. Years later, once her children were at school, Kerr began creating the book, drawing tigers in the zoo and using her own kitchen as the backdrop. Her publishers asked for the title to be changed from ‘Tacy and the Tiger’.

Where it went next

The Tiger Who Came to Tea celebrated its 50th Anniversary in 2018 with Judith Kerr winning the Sainsbury’s Children’s Classic Award. David Wood’s stage adaptation of the story has toured the world since 2008 and Seven Stories’ exhibition of Kerr’s archive has toured the UK since 2009. Judith Kerr collaborated with Oxford animator Joanna Harrison to create an animated film of the story screened on Christmas Eve 2019.

Associated stories

Judith Kerr went on to write many children’s books including the much-loved Mog series based on the antics of her cats. In the 1970s she wrote a trilogy about her early life, When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, Bombs on Aunt Dainty and A Small Person Far Away, followed by Creatures about her later life and work. The books she wrote after her husband’s death in 2006 have a more wistful tone – My Henry, One Night at the Zoo and the celebration of Grannies, The Great Granny Gang.




Added on 14th July 2020

Writer and Illustrator Judith Kerr
First published 1968
Publisher HarperCollins

Animals Family
1001