Phil Wickham and ‘David’ face the Goliath of ‘Avatar’
Phil Wickham has released 14 Christian worship albums, has been Platinum certified and nominated for American Music Awards, Dove Awards, Billboard Music Awards and Grammys β but all of his vocal training and performances couldnβt prepare him to step into the shoes of one of his Biblical heroes with the upcoming animated musical film βDavid.β
Directed by Phil Cunningham and Brent Dawes, βDavidβ marks the second animated film this year for Angel Studios. Aprilβs βThe King of Kingsβ made $60 million and is the second-highest-grossing film from the studio following βSound of Freedom,β which made $184 million. The film hits theaters on Friday. If the release date sounds familiar, it could be because the third installment in the multibillion-dollar βAvatarβ franchise, βAvatar: Fire and Ash,β is released on the same day. Presale numbers for βDavidβ are at $15 million on 3,100 screens, but with βAvatarβ tracking to open between $135 million and $165 million, and βThe SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePantsβ also tracking between $13 million and $20 million, it would seem to be a true David vs. Goliaths for ticket sales.
That in itself could be daunting, but for Wickham, the biggest obstacles came long before release dates were decided. Despite playing in arenas with thousands of fans, he had a βsecret dreamβ of voicing a character in an animated film. A character βthat carried courage and faith and had some grand adventure.β But because heβd never chased that dream, he realistically put a limit on that particular goal. Even when the opportunity arose, he was hesitant when going into a casting meeting.
βIβm unoffendable. [I said to producers], if I suck, then just tell me because I donβt want to waste anybodyβs time. And also, I donβt want to be bad in a movie as much as you donβt want to make a bad movie,β says Wickham.
The contemporary Christian artist, who recently finished sold-out concerts at Downey Calvary Chapel and the Wiltern, had never tried his hand at voice acting. Not only did he get the role, but he also had to help bring to (animated) life one of the most well-known stories in the Bible. The tale of David β the boy who was anointed to become the king and along the way felled the giant Philistine warrior Goliath with a rock and a slingshot β has become synonymous as the most famous of underdog representations and tests of faith in the Bible. The character and story is also one of Wickhamβs favorites.
Phil Wickham always wanted to voice an animated character, especially after seeing βThe Lion King.β
(Colton Dall)
βWhen this came across my desk, so to speak, I was just like, man, I could tell you that story, but I didnβt know if I had it in me. I didnβt know if I was a good actor. I didnβt know if I could voice a character, but I knew I wanted a shot,β said Wickham.
A curious revelation for Wickham was discovering that the singing that heβd been doing most of his life would not work on-screen, at least not for this project. He was asked to tone down things, to sometimes βtalk throughβ lyrics and to generally make the music more dramatic for the screen.
βI thought, OK, I got this. This is why they hired me, because Iβm a singer. But that ended up being the hardest part because they didnβt want me to sound like me,β Wickham said.
βSinging became a background to just being the character, which honestly, in some ways, was the hardest thing. Maybe even for my ego as as an artist.β
It was definitely a process that required lots of fine-tuning and looking at David as not just the king and hero that Wickham had grown up reading about at home and in Southern California churches. Sitting in the pews in Downey, the singer reflected on why he got into music and why Christian entertainment is on the rise.
βI found out really quick that I loved being a part of moments where people were encountering the same hope and faith that I encountered in my room alone,β Wickham said of songwriting and performing. He grew up with Christianity all around him, but has seen a spike in popularity for music and movies dealing with faith-based fandom.
βFor this movie βDavidβ to come out at this time … I think that the world is looking for stuff to hope in. I think people are just searching and finding out more and more the truth that if we look around us at the world of man, weβre not going to find real solutions. So that maybe if we look up, we will.β