The Henry IV plays are not really about the eponymous King. They explore the making of a monarch by following Prince Hal, the future King Henry V, from his wild youth under Falstaff’s wing through redemption, relapse, coronation and final repudiation of his old friends at the end of Part Two. The high points in both plays are those scenes in which Hal and Falstaff share the stage and, so charismatic are Jamie Parker and Roger Allam in their different ways, that some of the rest of the action seems lost in anticipation of their return.
Oliver Cotton imbues the fading Henry IV with a bristling, querulous strength made of palpable guilt over his usurpation of the crown and steely determination to pass it on to his wayward son. Sam Crane is not the manliest Hotspur in history but he does embody the bewilderment of the man of action caught up in a web of politics too subtle for him, and his reappearance (as Pistol in Part 2) is as much a treat for him as the audience.
Part Two never quite scales the same heights as Part One but don’t let that put you off seeing both: perhaps on different evenings if you want to avoid the crowds of bemused foreign school parties making up the bulk of the groundlings at the matinee performances. Standing through six showery hours of 16th century historical drama in another language: that’s a marathon.
Henry IV Part 1
by William Shakespeare
Until 2 October
Directed by Dominic Dromgoole
Designed by Jonathan Fensom
Composed by Claire van Kampen
Cast
Roger Allam: Falstaff
Jason Baughan: Westmoreland/Peto
Patrick Brennan: Lord Chief Justice/Blunt/Sherriff
Daon Broni: Mortimer/Hastings
Phil Cheadle: Douglas/Davy/Lord Bardolph
Oliver Coopersmith: Falstaff’s Page/Clarence
Oliver Cotton: King Henry IV
Sam Crane: Hotspur/Pistol
William Gaunt: Worcester
Christopher Godwin: Northumberland/Silence
Sean Kearns: Glendower/Bullcalf/Warwick
James Lailey: Mowbray/Gadshill/Mouldy
Danny Lee Wynter: Poins
Kevork Malikyan: Vernon/Morton
Barbara Marten: Mistress Quickly
Jamie Parker: Prince Hal
Paul Rider: Bardolf/Scroop
Lorna Stuart: Lady Percy
Joseph Timms: John of Lancaster
Jade Williams: Lady Mortimer
Musicians: Adrian Woodward, George Bartle, Hilary Belsey, Arngeir Hauksson, Catherine Motuz
Running Time: 3 hours including an interval