CRY HAVOC!
Director Tamara Harvey, who gave us that beautiful, thoughtful PERICLES last year (also starring Alfred Enoch), is not one to interpret Henry V in the stormingly militant-heroic mould once so beloved and familiar as successive leading-men urged us once more into the breach. Indeed we meet the young King first, briefly, in a reprise of the last act of Henry IV part 2, as a prince beside his father’s deathbed trying on the crown as the rebellious, carousing young Hal. Moreover, he – not a separate Chorus, is given the prologue calling for a muse of fire to narrate the story better than he can , and also the aside-storytelling interlude describing the warships setting sail , just before Act 3.
This creates, beguilingly, a sense that this young hero is anxiously telling himself his story: making it up as he goes along, hoping it comes true. His court too is hoping, wanting him tougher and more responsible than of yore, as if “the strawberry grows under the nettle”. Making him make war on France is the obvious way to toughen him up, they seem to feel. Alfred Enoch is attractive, nuanced, groping for authority rather than wearing it easily when the bishops unroll screeds explaining why he really owns France and therefore must deploy “blood and sword and fire”. There’s a touch of shrill unease in him even as he sends the traitors Cambridge and Scrope to the gallows (which are visible , dangling with gloomy bruality as the scene goes on). And the production’s very deliberate sense of war as brutish and senseless grows (as it did in Greg Doran’s wonderful Henry IV production) with a line of bent, weary, shuffling soldiers passing across the stage , just as the young King claims that “all the youth of England is afire” with keennness.
This is even more pointed in the several battle scenes, more like yobbish football-crowd brawls than soldiering: the movement and fight-direction are brilliant, indeed stunningly watchable in their wrestling violence. The busyness of embarkation is elegantly evoked with great rushings-round by most of the cast, all hanging cloths from the top of Lucy Osborne’s simple , giant ,revolving scaffolding. Late on, the slo-mo or sudden collapses and agonies of battle are graphic. And shockingly, the language-lesson of the French princess Katharine (Natalie Kimmerling) is conducted entirely on a battlefield , learning body parts by prodding woulded soldiers.
The King’s visit to the dozing soldiery and exchange of moral views with an excellent Jamie Ballard as Williams the soldier, in the “creeping murder and pouring dark” of the night between battles , is sharply done. And if his “once more unto the breach” is given an interestingly panicky tone, the big St Crispin’s day speech is done to great , if unusual, effect by having most of it not orated from a platform but mainly spoken with fatherly persuasiveness to one of the smallest, youngest-looking soldiers (there are many women among them, which oddly does not jar). When at times Henry remembers he is meant to be a merciless conqueror, threatening to have naked infants spitted on pikes, there is always that edge of painful, doubtful growth in him. He’s very young.
And usefully that sense of his immaturity, a kind of laddish innocence confronted with the brutal duty of war, is emphasised by the lowlife characters, comfortably long-steeped in self-preservation and opportunist sin: Paul Hunter’s tufty-haired Pistol is splendidly disgraceful, out robbing the dead and planning his brags in the pub. As the unnamed Boy, Tanvi Virmani has a nice withering moment summing him up by observing his “full voice and empty heart: an empty vessel makes the most noise” . Sion Prichard is also an excellent Fluellen, finally brandishing his leek with proper fury.
So the viewer’s interest is drawn all the time , perhaps even too much, away from any interest in the war and its outcome to contemplation of human weakness, particularly of Henry himself as he slowly grows up to his aweful responsibilities and status. Again , the lasy moment over the glove when he reveals himself to Ballard’s stroppy (and much older and wiser) squaddie is neatly tellling: I had never noticed before the pathos of that generation gap.
So there is a lot of satisfaction in it, and some lovely staging enhanced by the mass movement , collapses and risings and silhouettes. Of course as usual the weird coda of the wooing of French Katharine feels anticlimactic. Maybe it should do. It’s just politics, after all. Striking again, though , and raising us back to reality is the French King’s emotional collapse at his moment of acquiescence: barely able to name English Henry his heir over his own son’s bier. I notice to my surprise from the cast list that this is Jamie Ballard again as the King: wouldn’t have known it. Indeed there are several not at all noticeable doublings and triplings in the vivid, fast moving cast of twenty. Pretty good, because quite often they look more like fifty.
And great, great credit for movement and fighting to Annie-Lunnette Deakin-Foster and Kate Waters, who put the whole cast through what looks, frankly, physically gruelling and riskily bruising. Again, so it should be. We are not living at a time to be comfortably sentimental about war, are we?.
Rsc.org.uk to. 25 April
Rating. 4







