Total Rating: 
****
Opened: 
May 6, 2003
Ended: 
August 20, 2003
Country: 
England
City: 
London
Company/Producers: 
National Theater
Theater Type: 
International
Theater: 
National Theater - Olivier
Theater Address: 
South Bank
Phone: 
011-44-207-452-3000
Running Time: 
3 hrs
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
William Shakespeare
Director: 
Nicholas Hytner
Review: 

 For his first personally-directed production in his tenure as the National Theatre's new honcho, Nicholas Hytner chose that most famous of war plays, Henry V, which the institution had never mounted, probably in deference to the celebrated Oscar-winning 1944 film by Hytner's predecessor, Sir Laurence Olivier. This film, superb though it was, used less than a third of Shakespeare's text and turned the title character into a heroic paragon to boost British morale in World War II. Even Kenneth Branagh's grittier 1989 film sanitized the play. Hytner's modern-dress version -- by coincidence rehearsed during the Iraq war -- retains the text's ambivalence about leadership and sour view of battle. In the title role, Hytner cast black actor Adrian Lester, stating, "It is interesting that perhaps the most admired British Shakespearean actor of his generation is black."

Hytner is quite right: Lester, now turning 35, has for some years been the most dazzlingly versatile performer of his age. His portrayal here is absolutely stunning. In Shakespeare's fourth-longest role (after Hamlet, Richard III and Iago) he gives us a highly nuanced character -- by turns inspiring, confident, self-doubting, angry, amusing, appalling, reverent. When he rouses his troops with "Once more unto the breach," his wearied men groan. Sitting on the hood of his jeep, he begins his "St. Crispian" speech low and builds it gradually. His "ceremony" soliloquy is gorgeously spoken. "O God of battles" finds him on his knees with tears in his eyes. Yet when his former drinking buddy Bardolph is caught robbing a church, Henry shocks everyone by pulling out his pistol and killing the culprit at point blank. And when, against the rules of war, he orders that "every soldier kill his prisoners," his men refuse until one soldier mows the Frenchmen down with a machine gun.

In today's media-obsessed world, a number of the speeches are presented on video, by microphone, or by bullhorn (and there is even a flashback home video of Falstaff carousing with Henry, in his youthful Prince Hal days, sporting dreadlocks and playfully crossing his eyes). In battle Henry and the soldiers wear fatigues, backpacks and helmets. Two jeeps drive on stage, and in one scene, a half dozen disabled military vehicles are visible. When the English are victorious at Agincourt, they march off singing the well-known hymn, "Angels, From the Realms of Glory."

Lester has strong support from the 28-person cast, especially from Peter Blythe as his uncle the Duke of Exeter. The narrating Chorus, whose six speeches are here divided into nine, are effectively delivered by Penny Downie as a sort of cardigan-wearing schoolmarm.

Cast: 
Penny Downie (Chorus), Adrian Lester (Henry V), Tom McKay (Gloucester), Tim Treloar (Bedford), Peter Blythe (Exeter), Jude Akuwudike (Pistol), Robert Horwell (Nym), David Kennedy (Bardolph, Michael Williams), Cecilia Noble (Hostess, Isabel), Rupert Wickham (Gower), Robert Blythe (Llewellyn), Ian Hogg (Charles VI), Adam Levy (Dauphin), Felicit du Jeu (Catherine), Rohan Siva (Montjoy), with Faz Singhateh, Tony Devlin, William Gaunt, David Weston, Nick Sampson, Mark Springer, Russell Tovey, Desmond Barrit, Marian McLoughlin, Iain Mitchell, John Normington, Jamie Harding, Helen Anderson-Lee.
Technical: 
Designer: Tim Hatley; Lighting: Mark Henderson; Music: Simon Webb; Sound Design: Paul Groothuis; Military Adviser: Richard Smedley; Fight Director: Terry King; Video Realization: Dick Straker & Sven Ortel; Stage Manager: Courtney Bryant.
Miscellaneous: 
An engrossing and generously illustrated 44-page rehearsal diary by two observers is available from the National Theatre bookshop.
Critic: 
Caldwell Titcomb
Date Reviewed: 
July 2003