Synopsis Rose Rage is a new look at the Henry VI plays by William Shakespeare. Rose Rage condenses Shakespeare's trilogy into two parts, which can be seen either individually or as a double event. This cut version, performed by an all-male cast, is extremely exciting and accessible to modern audiences, so if you think Shakespeare isn't your thing...think again. Leaving only an infant son as his heir, the legendary King Henry V is barely cold in his grave before the English nobility are squabbling over power and control. Keen to claim the English crown as his own, Richard of York sets the people's hero Jack Cade to raising a rebellion, and the country is thrown into turmoil. At the battle of St Albans two mighty forces meet and begin a desperate contest for the throne.
This is almost unrecognisable Shakespeare. The Propeller Theatre Company, an all-male ensemble and director, Edward Hall, have given us a Shakespeare for the MTV generation, as three long plays are compacted into two short ones. This, the first half of the Rose Rage double bill, is mainly based on Part II of the Henry VI trilogy. Indeed, there are only a few edited highlights of the original Part I (blink and you'll miss them) while Joan of Arc, most of Talbot's speeches, the sub-plot involving Gloucester's wife and various nobles are all removed.
Hall's version (which he also adapted, with Roger Warren) presents a span of history in episodic form and it works. And because there is much concentration on bloody intrigue, war and murder, there is much blood and gore. He emphasises the slaughterhouse that England has become by accompanying each killing by the cutting up of meat while beheadings are represented by cabbages being hacked in two (this effectively illustrates the brutality of the times though it does leave the stage looking like a greengrocers at closing).
All the time, Hall keeps up the relentless pace: episode quickly leads to new episode, as we sweep past years of history. The Jack Cade rebellion is heralded by Tony Bell's Cade, rapping his proclamation, quickly taken up by the rebels: "reformation, no taxation". When Cade agrees to kill all the lawyers, the soldiers drag the audience looking for likely candidates.
As an ensemble performance, the whole cast works really hard but there are some outstanding individual performances worth noting: Bell as both Cade and a leather-clad, sinister Warwick; Jonathan McGuinness's Henry, at first simpering like a mediaeval Stan Laurel and laying the seeds for his own destruction with his vapid and ineffectual posturing; and Robert Hands' Margaret which is a joy, coquettish until her vicious nature is laid bare.
My only complaint with this first installment would be that York's long discussion about his legitimacy for the throne has been excised. Perhaps Hall is making the point that such people as these nobles needed no excuse for their greed for power, but York places great importance on his claim to the throne and something is missing by not including it. That aside, this is a genuinely thrilling, innovative, bold, pacy production that truly enhances the West End.
seen it, loved it, highly recommend it - both parts! See it all in one day if you can. it sounds like a long haul but it's not really, it's only four hours. There are plenty of single productions that are that long. and quite leisurely. they take about 1.5 hours in between for lunch. very very enjoyable. though all the explosive meat onstage may put your in a vegetarian mood for mealtime. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
01 Jul 02
As if there weren't enough George Crosses on display around town, Edward Hall's adaptation of Henry VI at the Haymarket Theatre is resplendent with them, and to push the comparison one stage further, it certainly is a game of two halves!
A very imaginative production this, using plenty of Francis Bacon imagery: butchery, incense, blood, and giblets galore, to put across the atmosphere of one of England's bloodiest eras.
Shown over two successive evenings, it gives one the chance to go home for a bit of historical coaching, before launching into the second half. The three part story has been stripped to its bare essentials and becomes an exciting and vivid account. The pace is frenetic, pushed along by some fine patriotic and religious hymns to link scenes and the all male cast, most it seems playing at least two characters, keep it moving right up to the witty "to be continued..." ending.
This is a gruelling story, and in it's original form I would expect it to be similar to watching England play France into extra time and on to penalties...but this production has given us all the excitment and exilaration of a Golden Goal......! - USER: Whatsonstage.com
Opened 29 Dec 1720. Closed in 1737 (partly for attacking the government), re-opened 1747. The current theatre opened on 4th July 1821 and was designed by Nash. The last theatre in London to use candles (1837). 888 seats. Society of London Theatre member.
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