Tabling: King Henry IV Part I Act III

Matt Ball, Patrick Harvey, Samantha Blinn, Chasen Schneider and Ariana Karp work our way through the Third Act of King Henry IV Part I:

  • Hotspur switching between verse and prose in Act III, scene i-what is the significance? Does Glendower’s presence throw him off?
  • The fact that Glendower doesn’t snap at Hotspur demonstrates Hotspur's power as a rallying point for the rebellion
  • Glendower as the Welsh Renaissance man, a fierce Druid with a penchant for poetry and music
  • Shakespeare's satirical demonstration of the chivalric love between Lady Mortimer and Mortimer versus the more down-to-earth, playful relationship between Lady Percy and Hotspur
  • Worcester as the most shrewd politician in the rebel camp 
  • The directorial challenge of demonstrating the power and threat of the rebels while simultaneously showing the disorder and squabbling within the rebellion
  • Shakespeare and the dangers of dividing a kingdom
  • The majority of the scene between Henry IV and Hal as an explanation of the play Richard II “previously on…”
  • Henry's mistake is that he equates celebrity that Richard II cultivated with the populism that Hal cultivates
  • The final straw for Hal is when Henry IV predicts that Hal will join rebel forces as a traitor
  • Hal going between disbelief at the power of rumor to anger and grief at the effect it has upon his father
  • Hal’s vow and the disturbing violence of his promise, perhaps our first glimpse of the power of the future Henry V
  • The second tavern scene has a much more melancholic tone than the first one, Falstaff is listless and bored until Hal comes back to the tavern
  • The wonderful confusion and sassiness of Mistress Quickly and her perpetual defensiveness
Matthew MacFadyen as Prince Hal and Michael Gambon as Falstaff in National Theatre’s production in 2005.

Matthew MacFadyen as Prince Hal and Michael Gambon as Falstaff in National Theatre’s production in 2005.