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No
Hal, no Hotspur, no fat-bellied Falstaff - this is a very
different Henry IV.
Forget the Battle of Shrewsbury of 1403 and think 11th century
Germany re-enacted in the present day.
The contrast is made clear almost immediately; under the instruction
'lose those bells!', a costumed courtier produces a remote
control from beneath his tunic to silence the recorded chiming.
'Henry' (we never learn his true name) is a man who can't
let go of the past - quite literally. A fall from his horse
at an historical pageant two decades previously plunges 'Henry'
into madness where he assumes the character of a monarch whose
bones have not stirred for the best part of a millennium.
Heartstopping
Stoppard
This
is not a play from the quill of our beloved Bard but from
the early-20th century pen of Italian playwright Luigi Pirandello,
recently rejigged by Tom Stoppard of 'Rosencrantz & Guildenstern
Are Dead' fame.
The brisk, witty dialogue bears the Stoppard hallmark but,
however removed from Shakespeare this Henry IV might be, Macbeth
would identify with this unhinged kings and such lines as
'words, empty words, weigh less than a fly' may well have
been uttered by the lips of Hamlet.
The recurrent themes of lost youth, madness and illusion lead
to a procession of philosophically-charged phrases, delicately
juxtaposed with the gloriously comic.
Contemplations on the definition of madness and the existence
of truth counterbalance Belcredi's (David Yelland) sardonic
asides - memorably, 'he's as sane as a hatter!'
Henry
the Fourth, I am, I am
Belcredi
is one member of the party that arrives at the house-cum-11th-century-palace
hoping to cure 'Henry's' madness.
The subtle lighting upon the simple set of stone walls and
classical pillars is background enough for a drama that needs
little elaboration.
The audience is kept on tenterhooks for most of the first
act waiting for 'Himself' to appear.
When Henry (Ian McDiarmid) did emerge, disheveled in repentant
sackcloth and ashes, a reverent hush fell upon the Old Vic.
From that moment on McDiarmid captivated and enthralled with
a superlative performance. His ability to be a stately ruler,
a frail old man and a gibbering lunatic in the same breath
was nothing short of mesmeric.
The second act must remain a secret as it is bristles with
a fusillade of surprise Stoppard twists but, needless to say,
'Henry' is always at the helm.
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