HENRY VI: REBELLION, 1 April-28 May 2022
Directed by Owen Horsley
Henry VI: Rebellion, a fresh new take on Henry VI: Part Two, hurtles through one of the most turbulent periods in English history, asking the question: can the people ever really decide their own future?
This play has the most characters of any Shakespeare play, and this production will feature, in total, a cast of 118 people. 25 professional actors (who will also appear in Wars of the Roses), including nine recent drama school graduates, will be joined by 93 members of the Royal Shakespeare Community gathered from across England: 74 adults from Blackpool, Bradford, Canterbury, Cornwall, Norwich and Nottingham who are part of the RSC’s Shakespeare Nation community participation programme, and 19 young performers aged 13-17 from the RSC’s Next Generation Act young acting company.
At each performance one of the six regional Shakespeare Nation groups and one of three Next Generation Act groups will perform alongside the professional acting company.
Owen Horsley, director, said: “Out of the 37 plays in the canon Henry VI Part Two – or as we are calling it, Henry VI: Rebellion – has more characters than any other play. There are 85 characters on the cast list, which may explain why these plays are rarely done. One of the reasons for this wide array of characters is a series of scenes that Shakespeare writes concerning the people of England, who in various ways interact with the royal family.
“This gave us an idea! For many years the RSC has built incredible relationships across the UK with partner theatres through Shakespeare Nation and our youth programme, Next Generation Act. After 18 months of developing these links online this production seemed the perfect opportunity to be ambitious. So, for the people of England, we have cast the people of England. This is an extremely exciting project as it allows this history play, written over 400 years ago, to respond directly to the state of the nation – and at points put over 50 people on the RSC stage.
“Another drive that is very close to the heart of the RSC is the training of young actors as they enter the industry. Over the last two years recent graduates have suffered immensely with classes and productions being taken online and/or they have entered an industry on pause. For these productions we met with over 100 graduates from across the country to deliver workshops and fight training, and from this have cast nine graduates into our company of 26 for Henry VI: Rebellion and Wars of the Roses.”
Mark Quartley and Minnie Gale return to the RSC
Following their appearance in the Henry VI Part One Open Rehearsal Project, Mark Quartley and RSC Associate Artist, Minnie Gale will return to play, respectively, Henry VI and Margaret in both Henry VI: Rebellion and Wars of the Roses.
Mark played Ariel in the RSC’s live motion-capture production of The Tempest in 2016, Other RSC credits include Maydays, Measure for Measure and Written on the Heart.
Minnie last appeared at the RSC playing Wendy in the 2015 production of Wendy and Peter Pan. Other RSC credits include Morte D’Arthur, The Comedy of Errors, As You Like It, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Hamlet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Julius Caesar and The Tempest.
The professional cast for Henry VI: Rebellion includes: Oliver Alvin-Wilson (York), Lucy Benjamin (Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester), Richard Cant (Gloucester/Lord Saye), Daniel J Carver (Clifford/Horner), Angelina Chudi (Hume), Paola Dionisotti (Winchester/Humphrey), Felixe Forde (Bevis), Minnie Gale (Margaret), Ashley D Gayle (Smith), Conor Glean (Dick), Ben Hall (Suffolk), Jack Humphrey (Clerk), Nicholas Karimi (Warwick), Al Maxwell (Bolingbroke/ Holland), Georgia-Mae Myers (Margaret Jourdain), Peter Moreton (Salisbury), Sophia Papadopoulos (Suffolk’s Messenger), Mark Quartley (Henry VI), Aaron Sidwell (Jack Cade), Yasmin Taheri (Neighbour), John Tate (Captain/Stafford), Ibraheem Toure (Whitmore), Emma Tracey (Spirit), Daniel Ward (Buckingham) and Benjamin Westerby (Somerset).
Recent drama school graduates make their RSC debut
Henry VI: Rebellion and Wars of the Roses will feature nine actors who graduated from drama school in 2020 or 2021. The RSC is passionate about encouraging new acting talent to engage with classical work and the Company, and often casts graduating actors in its productions. However the RSC recognised that those leaving in 2020 and 2021 were working in a period like no other, with the pandemic creating particular difficulties for them both during their training and by entering a deeply wounded industry.
Consequently the RSC decided to ringfence nine of the 26 roles in these productions for new graduates. Following the RSC’s casting team’s continual engagement with the work of these students throughout the last two years, over 165 graduates were invited to a series of text and fight workshops. A smaller group then attended one to one auditions, and the nine graduates from 2020/2021 who make their RSC debuts are:
Felixe Forde (Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, 2020), Jack Humphrey (National Youth Theatre 2021), Al Maxwell (Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, 2020), Georgia-Mae Myers (Royal Central School of Speech and Drama 2021), Sophia Papadopoulos (LAMDA, 2021), John Tate (Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama 2020), Ibraheem Toure (East 15, 2021), Emma Tracey (Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, 2020) and Benjamin Westerby (RADA, 2021).
Adults and young people join the Rebellion
74 adults from Blackpool, Bradford, Canterbury, Cornwall, Norwich and Nottingham, will appear alongside the professional cast in Henry VI: Rebellion. They are part of Shakespeare Nation, a community participation programme run by the RSC and its partner theatres, aimed at engaging with people who have little or no experience of Shakespeare, either as a theatre-goer or performer.
Through their involvement in Shakespeare Nation and Henry VI: Rebellion, the hope is that they will develop a passion and enthusiasm for theatre and Shakespeare, and build their confidence and self-esteem. Some of the groups also include local Shakespeare Champions, who will work with the other participants to achieve these aims.
They will play the roles of working people who take part in the rebellion led by the character of Jack Cade against Henry VI, and townsfolk in a scene where Henry VI is out hunting.
Initially they will rehearse in their local theatres – The Grand Theatre Blackpool, The Alhambra Theatre Bradford, The Marlowe Theatre Canterbury, Hall for Cornwall Truro, Norwich Theatre and Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall Nottingham – before taking to the Royal Shakespeare Theatre stage from April, with each group appearing in around 4 performances. A list of participants is below.They will be joined by 19 young people, split into three groups, from the RSC’s young acting company, Next Generation Act. Aged between 13-17 they are drawn from the RSC’s nationwide network of 222 Associate Schools, all with a talent for acting but from backgrounds that might restrict their chances of getting into the profession.
These young actors will play tradespeople and apprentices bringing their complaints to the King and court. They will also take part in the previously mentioned rebellion scene, led by Jack Cade.
The young people come from Barrow-in-Furness, Birmingham, Blackpool, Bradford, Canterbury, County Durham, Hull, Launceston (Cornwall), London, Northampton, Nottingham, Stoke-on-Trent and York.
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