Extreme Shakespeare: A play rehearsed the way
Shakespeare’s company would have. Actors arrive with their lines
learned, rehearse on their own, wear what they can find, and open in a
matter of days. No director, no designers. Just great actors, a dynamic
play, and pure adrenaline, spontaneity and creativity.
King John, a history play by William Shakespeare, dramatises the reign of John, King of England (ruled 1199–1216), son of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine and father of Henry III of England. It is believed to have been written in the mid-1590s but was not published until it appeared in the First Folio in 1623.
Synopsis:
King John receives an ambassador from France, who demands, on pain of
war, that he renounce his throne in favour of his nephew, Arthur, whom
the French King, Philip, believes to be the rightful heir to the throne.
John adjudicates an inheritance dispute between Robert Faulconbridge
and his older brother Philip the Bastard, during which it becomes
apparent that Philip is the illegitimate son of King Richard I. Queen
Eleanor, mother to both Richard and John, recognises the family
resemblance and suggests that he renounce his claim to the Falconbridge
land in exchange for a knighthood. John knights the Bastard under the
name Richard.
In France, King Philip and his forces besiege the English-ruled town
of Angiers, threatening attack unless its citizens support Arthur.
Philip is supported by Austria, who is believed to have killed King
Richard. The English contingent arrives; Eleanor trades insults with
Constance, Arthur's mother. Kings Philip and John stake their claims in
front of Angiers' citizens, but to no avail: their representative says
that they will support the rightful king, whoever that turns out to be.
The French and English armies clash, but no clear victor emerges.
Each army dispatches a herald claiming victory, but Angiers' citizens
continue to refuse to recognize either claimant because neither army has
proven victorious.
The Bastard proposes that England and France unite to punish the
rebellious citizens of Angiers, at which point they propose an
alternative: Philip's son, Louis the Dauphin, should marry John's niece
Blanche, a scheme that gives John a stronger claim to the throne, while
Louis gains territory for France. Though a furious Constance accuses
Philip of abandoning Arthur, Louis and Blanche are married.
Cardinal Pandolf arrives from Rome bearing a formal accusation that
John has disobeyed the pope and appointed an archbishop contrary to his
desires. John refuses to recant, whereupon he is excommunicated. Pandolf
pledges his support for Louis, though Philip is hesitant, having just
established family ties with John. Pandolf brings him round by pointing
out that his links to the church are older and firmer.
War breaks out; Austria is beheaded by the Bastard in revenge for his
father's death; and both Angiers and Arthur are captured by the
English. Eleanor is left in charge of English possessions in France,
while the Bastard is sent to collect funds from English monasteries.
John orders Hubert to kill Arthur. Pandolf suggests to Louis that he now
has as strong a claim to the English throne as Arthur (and indeed
John), and Louis agrees to invade England.
Hubert finds himself unable to kill Arthur. John's nobles urge
Arthur's release. John agrees, but is wrong-footed by Hubert's
announcement that Arthur is dead. The nobles, believing he was murdered,
defect to Louis' side. The Bastard reports that the monasteries are
unhappy about John's attempt to seize their gold. Hubert has a furious
argument with John, during which he reveals that Arthur is still alive.
John, delighted, sends him to report the news to the nobles.
Arthur dies jumping from a castle wall. (It is open to interpretation
whether he deliberately kills himself or just makes a risky escape
attempt.) The nobles believe he was murdered by John, and refuse to
believe Hubert's entreaties. John attempts to make a deal with Pandolf,
swearing allegiance to the Pope in exchange for Pandolf's negotiating
with the French on his behalf. John orders the Bastard, one of his few
remaining loyal subjects, to lead the English army against France.
While John's former noblemen swear allegiance to Louis, Pandolf
explains John's scheme, but Louis refuses to be taken in by it. The
Bastard arrives with the English army and threatens Louis, but to no
avail. War breaks out with substantial losses on each side, including
Louis' reinforcements, who are drowned during the sea crossing. Many
English nobles return to John's side after a dying French nobleman,
Melun, warns them that Louis plans to kill them after his victory.
John is poisoned by a disgruntled monk. His nobles gather around him
as he dies. The Bastard plans the final assault on Louis' forces, until
he is told that Pandolf has arrived with a peace treaty. The English
nobles swear allegiance to John's son Prince Henry, and the Bastard
reflects that this episode has taught that internal bickering could be
as perilous to England's fortunes as foreign invasion.
Link to the review by The Morning Call here