While Steven Spielberg's film adaptation of WarHorse seems to be disappearing from theatres, the play continues to captivate audiences, especially those in Toronto, Canada where it just opened last week. Steve Vineberg wrote about its Lincoln Centre run in Critics at Large last fall which left him spellbound.
The Horse and His Boy: WarHorse
WarHorse is a piece of high-voltage populist theatricality, like The Lion King – the kind of show that underlines the uniqueness of the live theatre experience and can make lifelong theatergoers out of young audiences. It’s an adaptation by Nick Stafford of a children’s novel by Michael Morpurgo that opened five years ago at the National Theatre of Great Britain and is still playing to full houses in London’s West End, where it transferred after its NT run. The production, co-directed by Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris, opened in the spring at Lincoln Center with a fresh cast (considerably fresher than the one I saw in London in June).
The script is shrewdly laid out so that characters and incidents in the second act echo earlier ones; this rhyming tendency is partly what makes the story feel like a legend. Yet Stafford resists the temptation to divide the characters into heroes and villains. Ted Narracott is foolish and he makes rash judgments, qualities that are exacerbated by his drinking, but he doesn’t mean his son any harm; in his hobbled way he tries to make amends after Rose shows him how unfair it was to go back on his bargain that Albert could keep the horse he’d tamed. Arthur’s son Billy (Matt Doyle) enjoys ragging on his cousin – an outgrowth of the way he sees his father treat his uncle. But your heart breaks when his father sends him to war with his grandfather’s knife as a memento, insisting despite the boy’s frightened reluctance that he remain faithful to two generations of warriors, and the boy is shot down trying to retrieve the knife. Our attitude toward Arthur shifts too, when his son is reported lost in battle. The only villain, in Stafford’s view, is the damnable war itself.
The style of the production is theatricalism, which always keeps us aware that we’re watching a play. (Brechtian theatre does as well, but unlike in Brecht the theatrical devices Elliott and Morris employ don’t interrupt our emotional engagement with the action.) A narrator figure called Song Man (Liam Robinson) enhances the narrative, often in league with the ensemble, with stirring folk melodies by Adrian Sutton, the two most memorable of which are “Only Remembered,” a sort of anthem for the play, and “The Year Turns Round Again,” which links the boy’s and the horse’s tribulations to the cycle of life (and thus provides the hopeful note that a storybook tale like this one demands). Sutton also provides instrumental music that operates as a soundtrack, markedly during battle scenes. A scrap of cyclorama hung over the stage, a visual echo of the drawings of Joey in Nicholls’ sketchbook, becomes the medium for projections of all kinds: images of farmlands and battlefields, information about setting, abstract representations of the fighting. (Rae Smith designed the drawings as well as the sets and costumes.) And the animals, especially the horses (Joey joins a gray-black stallion called Topthorn when he’s sold to the army) but also a goose and some birds, are represented by life-size puppets supplied by the Handspring Puppet Company. The magnificent horses may be the most intricately designed puppets every seen on a mainstream stage, though the authenticity of the detail with which these wire, wood and canvas creations have been furnished is no less impressive than the work of the puppeteers – three to a horse – who manipulate them, under the masterly direction of Toby Sedgwick. The collaboration of all these artists is seamless: you hardly know whom to praise for the thrilling image of the foal Joey metamorphosing, through a kind of theatrical time-lapse effect, into a fully grown hunter, or the deeply unsettling one of a pair of vultures preying on dead soldiers downstage.
Scene from The Black Stallion (1979) |
- originally published on September 19, 2011 in Critics at Large.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review, The Boston Phoenix and The Christian Century and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review, The Boston Phoenix and The Christian Century and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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