Henry V (play)
Henry
V is a history
play by William Shakespeare,
believed to have been written near 1599. It tells the story of King Henry V of England, focusing on events immediately before and after the Battle of Agincourt
(1415) during the Hundred Years' War.
In the First Quarto
text, it was titled The Cronicle History of Henry the fift, which became
The Life of Henry the Fifth in the First
Folio text.
The
play is the final part of a tetralogy,
preceded by Richard II,
Henry IV, Part 1, and Henry
IV, Part 2. The original audiences would thus
have already been familiar with the title character, who was depicted in the Henry
IV plays as a wild, undisciplined young man. In Henry V, the young
prince has matured. He embarks on an expedition to France and, his army badly
outnumbered, defeats the French at Agincourt.
Characters
The
English
The
traitors
The
French
|
Synopsis
The
Elizabethan stage
lacked scenery. It begins with a Prologue, in which the Chorus (a lone speaker
addressing the audience) apologizes for the limitations of the theatre, wishing
there were "a Muse
of fire", with real princes and a kingdom for a stage, to do justice to
King Henry's story. Then, says the Chorus, King Henry would "[a]ssume the
port [bearing] of Mars".
The Chorus encourages the audience to use their "imaginary forces" to
overcome the limitations of the stage: "Piece out our imperfections with
your thoughts ... turning the accomplishment of many years / Into an
hour-glass".
Shakespeare's
plays are in five acts. In Henry V, the first two deal largely with the
king and his decision to invade France, persuaded that through ancestry, he is
the rightful heir to the French throne. The French Dauphin, son of King Charles VI,
answers Henry's claims with a condescending and insulting gift of tennis balls,
"as matching to his youth and vanity."
The
Chorus reappears at the beginning of each act to advance the story. At the
beginning of Act II, he describes the country's dedication to the war effort:
"Now all the youth of England are on fire... They sell the pasture now to
buy the horse, / Following the mirror of all Christian kings ...." Act II
includes a plot by the Earl of Cambridge and two comrades to assassinate
Henry at Southampton. Henry's clever uncovering of the
plot and his ruthless treatment of the conspirators show that he has changed
from the earlier plays in which he appeared.
In
Act III Henry and his troops cross the English Channel to attack the French
port of Harfleur. The Chorus appears again: "Grapple your minds to
sternage of this navy/And leave your England, as dead midnight still". The
French king, says the Chorus, "doth offer him / Catharine his daughter,
and with her, to dowry, / Some petty and unprofitable dukedoms." Henry is
not satisfied.
At
the siege of Harfleur,
the English are beaten back at first, but Henry urges them on with one of
Shakespeare's best-known speeches. "Once more unto the breach, dear
friends, once more; / Or close the wall up with our English dead...."
After a bloody siege, the English take Harfleur, but Henry's forces are so
depleted that he decides not to go on to Paris. Instead, he decides to move up
the coast to Calais. The French assemble a powerful army and pursue him.
They
surround him near the small town of Agincourt, and in Act IV, the night before
the battle, knowing he is outnumbered, Henry wanders around the English camp in
disguise, trying to comfort his soldiers and determine what they really think
of him. He agonizes about the moral burden of being king, asking God to
"steel my soldiers' hearts". Daylight comes, and Henry rallies his
nobles with the famous St Crispin's Day Speech (Act IV Scene iii 18–67): "We few, we happy few, we
band of brothers".
Armed
mostly with longbows, the English surprise the French, and themselves, with an
overwhelming victory. The French suffered 10,000 casualties; the English, fewer
than 30. "O God, thy arm was here," says Henry.
Act
V comes several years later, as the English and French negotiate the Treaty
of Troyes, and Henry tries to woo the French princess, Catherine of Valois.
Neither speaks the other's language well, but the humour of their mistakes
actually helps achieve his aim. The scene ends with the French king adopting
Henry as heir to the French throne, and the prayer of the French queen
"that English may as French, French Englishmen, receive each other, God
speak this Amen."
Before
the play concludes, however, the Chorus reappears and ruefully notes, of
Henry's own heir's "state, so many had the managing, that they lost
France, and made his England bleed, which oft our stage hath shown" – a
reminder of the tumultuous reign of Henry VI of England,
which Shakespeare had previously brought to the stage in a trilogy of plays: Henry
VI Part 1, Henry
VI Part 2, and Henry
VI Part 3.
As
in many of Shakespeare's history and tragedy plays, a number of minor comic
characters appear, contrasting with and sometimes commenting on the main plot.
In this case, they are mostly common soldiers in Henry's army, and they include
Pistol, Nym, and Bardolph from the Henry IV plays. The army also
includes a Scot, an Irishman, and an Englishman, and Fluellen, a comically stereotyped Welsh soldier whose name is phonetically close to "Llywelyn". The play also deals briefly
with the death of Sir John Falstaff,
Henry's estranged friend from the Henry IV plays, whom Henry had
rejected at the end of Henry IV, Part 2.
Sources
Shakespeare's
primary source for Henry V, as for most of his chronicle histories, was Raphael
Holinshed's Chronicles; the
publication of the second edition in 1587 provides a terminus post quem for the play. Edward
Hall's The Union of the Two
Illustrious Families of Lancaster and York appears also to have been
consulted, and scholars have supposed that Shakespeare was familiar with Samuel
Daniel's poem on the civil
wars. An earlier play, the Famous Victories of
Henry V is also generally believed to have
been a model for the work.
Date and text
On
the basis of an apparent allusion to Essex's mission to quell Tyrone's Rebellion, the play is thought to date from early 1599.The
Chronicle History of Henry the fifth was entered into the Register
of the Stationers
Company on 14 August 1600 by the bookseller
Thomas Pavier;
the first quarto
was published before the end of the year—though by Thomas Millington and John Busby rather than Pavier. Thomas
Creede did the printing.
Q1
of Henry V is a "bad
quarto", a shortened version of the
play that might be an infringing copy or reported text. A second quarto, a
reprint of Q1, was published in 1602 by Pavier; another reprint was
issued as Q3 in 1619, with a false date of 1608—part of William Jaggard's False
Folio. The superior text was first
printed in the First Folio in 1623.
Criticism and analysis
Views on warfare
Readers
and audiences have interpreted the play's attitude to warfare in several
different ways. On the one hand, it seems to celebrate Henry's invasion of
France and military prowess. Alternatively, it can be read as a commentary on
the moral and personal cost of war. Shakespeare presents it in all its
complexity.
The
American critic Norman Rabkin described the play as a picture with two
simultaneous meanings. Rabkin argues that the play never settles on one
viewpoint towards warfare, Henry himself switching his style of speech
constantly, talking of "rape and pillage" during Harfleur, but of
patriotic glory in his St Crispin's Day Speech.
Some
critics connect the glorification of nationalistic pride and conquest with
contemporary English military ventures in Spain and Ireland. The Chorus
directly refers to the looked-for military triumphs of Robert Devereux, 2nd
Earl of Essex, in the fifth act. Henry V himself is sometimes seen as an
ambivalent representation of the stage machiavel, combining apparent sincerity
with a willingness to use deceit and force to attain his ends.
Other
commentators see the play as looking critically at the reason for Henry's
violent cause. The noble words of the Chorus and Henry are consistently
undermined by the actions of Pistol, Bardolph, and Nym. Pistol talks in a bombastic blank verse
that seems to parody Henry's own style of speech. Pistol and his friends, thus,
show up the actions of their rulers. Indeed, the presence of the Eastcheap characters from Henry IV has been said to emphasise
the element of adventurer in Henry's character as monarch.
The
play's ambiguity has led to diverse interpretations in performance. Laurence
Olivier's 1944 film,
made during the Second World War,
emphasises the patriotic side, ignoring the fact that the enemy of the play,
the French, were in fact allies in that conflict, while Kenneth Branagh's 1989 film
stresses the horrors of war. A 2003 Royal National Theatre production featured Henry as a modern war general,
ridiculing the Iraq invasion.
In
recent years, there has been scholarly debate about whether or not Henry V can
be labeled a war criminal.
Some denounce the question as anachronistic, arguing that contemporary legal terminology can't be
applied to historical events or figures like those depicted in the play.
However, other scholars have pushed back on this view. For instance,
Christopher N. Warren looks to Alberico
Gentili’s De armis Romanis, along
with Henry V itself, to show how early modern thinkers (including
Shakespeare) were themselves using juridical approaches to engage with the past.
As a result, Warren argues, the question of whether Henry V was a war criminal
is not only legitimate, but also “historically appropriate.”
On
the other hand, Henry V is portrayed as a great leader, as he keeps his temper
when insulted, "we are glad the Dauphin is so pleasant with us".
Henry V also admits to his past mistakes, "did give ourselves to barbarous
licence" and is shown to have great confidence, "I will rise there
with so full a glory that I will dazzle all the eyes of France".
A
mock trial of Henry V for the crimes associated with the legality of the
invasion and the slaughter of prisoners was held in Washington,
DC in March 2010, drawing from both
historical record and Shakespeare's play. Titled "The Supreme Court of the
Amalgamated Kingdom of England and France", participating judges were Justices Samuel Alito
and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
The outcome was originally to be determined by an audience vote, but due to a
draw, it came down to a judges' decision. The court was divided on Henry's
justification for war, but unanimously found him guilty on the killing of the prisoners after applying “the evolving standards of the maturing
society”. Previously, the fictional "Global War Crimes Tribunal"
ruled that Henry's war was legal, no noncombatant was killed unlawfully, and
Henry bore no criminal responsibility for the death of the POWs. The fictional
"French Civil Liberties Union", who had instigated the tribunal, then
attempted to sue in civil court. The judge concluded that he was bound by the
GWCT's conclusions of law and also ruled in favour of the English. The Court of
Appeals affirmed without opinion, thus leaving the matter for the Supreme
Court's determination.
Performance history
The
Chorus refers to Essex's 1599 campaign in Ireland without any sense that it
would end in disaster. The campaign began in late March and was scuttled by
late June, strongly suggesting that the play was first performed during that
three-month period.
A
tradition, impossible to verify, holds that Henry V was the first play
performed at the new Globe
Theatre in the spring of 1599—the Globe
would have been the "wooden O" mentioned in the Prologue—but Shapiro argues that the Chamberlain's Men
were still at The Curtain
when the work was first performed, and that Shakespeare himself probably acted
the Chorus. In 1600, the first printed text states that the play had been
played "sundry times". The earliest performance for which an exact
date is known, however, occurred on 7 January 1605, at Court at Whitehall
Palace.
Samuel
Pepys saw a Henry V in 1664, but
it was written by Roger Boyle, 1st
Earl of Orrery, not by Shakespeare. Shakespeare's
play returned to the stage in 1723, in an adaptation by Aaron Hill.
The
longest-running production of the play in Broadway history was the staging
starring Richard Mansfield
in 1900 which ran for 54 performances. Other notable stage performances of Henry
V include Charles Kean
(1859), Charles Alexander Calvert (1872), and Walter
Hampden (1928).
Major
revivals in London during the 20th and 21st centuries include:
- 1900 Lyceum Theatre, Lewis Waller as Henry
- 1914 Shaftesbury Theatre, F.R. Benson as Henry
- 1916 His Majesty's Theatre, Martin Harvey as Henry
- 1920 Strand Theatre, Murray Carrington as Henry
- 1926 Old Vic Theatre, Baliol Holloway as Henry
- 1928 Lyric, Hammersmith, Lewis Casson as Henry (Old Vic Company)
- 1931 Old Vic Theatre, Ralph Richardson as Henry
- 1934 Alhambra Theatre, Godfrey Tearle as Henry
- 1936 Ring, Blackfriars, Hubert Gregg as Henry
- 1937 Old Vic Theatre, Laurence Olivier as Henry
- 1938 Drury Lane Theatre, Ivor Novello as Henry
- 1951 Old Vic Theatre, Alec Clunes as Henry
- 1955 Old Vic Theatre, Richard Burton as Henry
- 1960 Mermaid Theatre, William Peacock as Henry
- 1960 Old Vic Theatre, Donald Houston as Henry
- 1965 Aldwych Theatre, Ian Holm as Henry (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 1972 Aldwych Theatre, Timothy Dalton as Henry (Prospect Theatre Company), also in 1974 in Roundhouse Theatre
- 1976 Aldwych Theatre, Alan Howard as Henry (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 1985 Barbican Theatre, Kenneth Branagh as Henry (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 2003 National Theatre, Adrian Lester as Henry
- 2013 Noël Coward Theatre, Jude Law as Henry V (Michael Grandage Company)
- 2015 RSC and The Barbican, Alex Hassell as Henry V
In
the Shakespeare's Globe's
2012 Globe to Globe
festival, Henry V was the UK entry, one of 37 and the only one performed
in spoken English. Jamie Parker
performed the role of Henry.
On
British television, the play has been performed as:
- 1951 Clement McCallin as Henry, Marius Goring as Chorus, Willoughby Gray as Pistol
- 1953 Colin George as Henry, Toby Robertson as Chorus, Frank Windsor as Pistol
- 1957 John Neville as Henry, Bernard Hepton as Chorus, Geoffrey Bayldon as Pistol
- 1960 Robert Hardy as Henry, William Squire as Chorus, George A. Cooper as Pistol
- 1979 David Gwillim as Henry, Alec McCowen as Chorus, Bryan Pringle as Pistol
- 2012 Tom Hiddleston as Henry, John Hurt as Chorus, Paul Ritter as Pistol
In
2017, the Pop-up Globe,
the world's first temporary replica of the second Globe Theatre, based in
Auckland, New Zealand, performed 34 Henry V shows. London-trained
Australian actor Chris Huntly-Turner took on the role of Henry, Irish actor
Michael Mahony as Chorus, and UK–New Zealand actor Edward Newborn as
Pistol/King of France.
Adaptations
Film
Four
major film adaptations have been made. The first, Henry V (1944), directed by and starring Laurence
Olivier, is a colourful and highly stylised
version which begins in the Globe
Theatre and then gradually shifts to a
realistic evocation of the Battle of Agincourt.
Olivier's film was made during the Second
World War and was intended as a patriotic
rallying cry at the time of the invasion of Normandy.
The
second major film, Henry V (1989), directed by and starring Kenneth
Branagh, attempts to give a more realistic
evocation of the period, and lays more emphasis on the horrors of war. It
features a mud-spattered and gruesome Battle of Agincourt.
The
third major film, starring Tom
Hiddleston, was made by the BBC in 2012 as
part of The Hollow Crown TV series.
The
fourth movie, The King
(2019), starring Timothée Chalamet
as Henry V, was adapted from Shakespeare's plays Henry IV Part I, Henry
IV Part II, and Henry V.
Dance
In
2004, post-modern choreographer David Gordon created a dance-theatre version of the play called Dancing Henry Five, which
mixed William Walton's
music written for the Olivier film, recorded speeches from the film itself and
by Christopher Plummer,
and commentary written by Gordon. The piece premiered at Danspace
Project in New York, where it was compared
favorably to a production of Henry IV (parts 1 and 2) at Lincoln
Center. It has been revived three times—in
2005, 2007, and 2011—playing cities across the United States, and received a National Endowment
for the Arts American Masterpieces in Dance
Award.
Music
Suite from Henry V is a 1963 orchestral arrangement of music that composer William
Walton wrote for the 1944 Olivier film.
The arrangement is by Muir
Mathieson, and is in five movements.
Henry
V – A Shakespeare Scenario is a
50-minute work for narrator, SATB chorus, boys' choir (optional), and full
orchestra. The musical content is taken from Walton's score for the Olivier
film, edited by David Lloyd-Jones and arranged by Christopher Palmer.
It was first performed at the Royal Festival Hall in London, in May 1990.
Performers for this premiere were Christopher Plummer
(narrator), the Academy Chorus, Choristers of Westminster Cathedral, and Academy of St
Martin-in-the-Fields. The conductor was Sir Neville
Marriner. A CD of the work with these
performers was released by Chandos in 1990.
O
For a Muse of Fire is a symphonic overture for full
orchestra and vocal soloist, written by Darryl
Kubian. The work is 12 minutes long, and
was premiered by the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra in March 2015. The work is scored for full orchestra, with
vocal soloist. The vocal part incorporates selected lines from the text, and
the vocal range is adaptable to different voice types. The soloist for the
premiere performances with the New Jersey Symphony was former October
Project lead singer (and former Sony
Classical artist) Mary
Fahl.
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