MATT TUTHILL NFCT INTERVIEW - "SIR DINADAN" [CAMELOT]
We had a chance to sit down with
Matt Tuthill who plays "
Sir Dinadan" in
NFCT production of "
Camelot". Matt discussed his role, the obstacles he had to overcome while playing this character and some of the biggest "highs" he had while working in this production. Matt also discussed what is coming up next for him in the acting world and some of the advice he would like to pass on.
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Sir Dinadan is a
Knight of the Round Table in
Arthurian legend. He is the son of Sir
Brunor Senior, the '
Good Knight without
Fear,' and brother of Sirs
Breunor le Noir and
Daniel. A close friend of
Tristan, Dinadan is known for his good humor and joking nature. Unlike most other knights in
Arthurian romance, Dinadan prefers to avoid fights and considers courtly love a waste of time, though he is a brave fighter when he needs to be. In one notable exploit, he writes a slanderous ballad about
King Mark and sends a troubador to play it at
Mark's court. In another, he loses a joust when
Lancelot catches him off guard by wearing a dress over his armor; Lancelot then puts the dress on his unconscious opponent.
He is more sociable than most of the knights, and is often a useful companion because of it. In
Le Morte d'Arthur, he is one of the few knights to be able to recognize his fellows from their faces in addition to their shields; in one instance Tristan does not recognize his own
King until Dinadan tells him who it is.
Like
Palamedes and Lamorak, Dinadan was an invention of the
Prose Tristan, and appeared in later retellings including the
Post-Vulgate Cycle and
Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur.
Dinadan is nearly always portrayed as the wittiest of all of
Arthur's Knights. In Le Morte d'Arthur (
Book 10, chapter 56), he is visiting the court of
Cornwall seeking his friend
Sir Tristan, and has supper with
Queen La Beale Isoud. Here he reveals that he has (by his own desire) no lady-love or paramour in whose name to do great deeds. La Beale Isoud chides him for this, saying that it is a shame for him not to have such a lady. But Dinadan replies; "God defend Me. For the joy of love is too brief; and the sorrow thereof, and what cometh thereof, dureth overlong".
In both the stage version and film
adaptation of the
Lerner and Loewe Musical "Camelot", Dinadan has a memorable line.
Everyone at the
Court except
Arthur takes an immediate dislike to Lancelot when he first arrives at Camelot, and as
Lady Sybil says of him, "He's so poisonously good", Dinadan quips sarcastically, "He probably WALKED across the channel".