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Wolf Hall & Bring Up the Bodies: RSC Stage Adaptation - Revised Edition. Hilary MantelЧитать онлайн книгу.

Wolf Hall & Bring Up the Bodies: RSC Stage Adaptation - Revised Edition - Hilary  Mantel


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      WOLF HALL

      and BRING UP THE BODIES

       Adapted for the stage by

      Mike Poulton

       From the novels by

      Hilary Mantel

       With an introduction by Mike Poultonand character notes by Hilary Mantel

      NICK HERN BOOKS

      HarperCollinsPublishers

       www.nickhernbooks.co.uk www.4thestate.co.uk

       Contents

       Title Page

       Original Production

       Introduction by Mike Poulton

       Notes on Characters by Hilary Mantel

       Characters

       Dedication

       Wolf Hall

       Bring Up the Bodies

       About the Authors

       Copyright and Performing Rights Information

      These adaptations of Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies were originally commissioned by Playful Productions and were first produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, on 11 December 2013. The productions transferred to the Aldwych Theatre, London, on 1 May 2014, presented by Matthew Byam Shaw, Nia Janis and Nick Salmon for Playful Productions and the Royal Shakespeare Company, Bartner/Tulchin Productions and Georgia Gatti for Playful Productions. The cast was as follows:

MARK SMEATONJoey Batey
CHARLES BRANDON, DUKE OF SUFFOLKNicholas Boulton
KATHERINE OF ARAGON/JANE BOLEYN, LADY ROCHFORDLucy Briers
JANE SEYMOUR/PRINCESS MARY/LADY WORCESTERLeah Brotherhead
MARY BOLEYN/LIZZIE WYKYS/MARY SHELTONOlivia Darnley
THOMAS HOWARD, DUKE OF NORFOLKNicholas Day
ENSEMBLEMathew Foster
GREGORY CROMWELLDaniel Fraser
BARGE MASTER/WOLSEY’S SERVANTBenedict Hastings
LADY IN WAITING/MAID/MARJORIE SEYMOURMadeleine Hyland
CARDINAL WOLSEY/SIR JOHN SEYMOUR/SIR WILLIAM KINGSTON/ARCHBISHOP WARHAMPaul Jesson
ANNE BOLEYNLydia Leonard
ENSEMBLERobert MacPherson
THOMAS CROMWELLBen Miles
CHRISTOPHE/FRANCIS WESTONPierro Niél Mee
KING HENRY VIIINathaniel Parker
GEORGE BOLEYN, LORD ROCHFORD/EDWARD SEYMOUROscar Pearce
STEPHEN GARDINER/EUSTACHE CHAPUYSMatthew Pidgeon
THOMAS MORE/HENRY NORRISJohn Ramm
HARRY PERCY/WILLIAM BRERETONNicholas Shaw
RAFE SADLERJoshua Silver
THOMAS CRANMER/THOMAS BOLEYN/PACKINGTON/FRENCH AMBASSADORGiles Taylor
THOMAS WYATT/HEADSMANJay Taylor
MUSICIANSRob Millett,Greg Knowles,Adam CrossDario Rossetti-BonellCatherine Groom
All other parts played by members of the company.
DirectorJeremy Herrin
DesignerChristopher Oram
Season Lighting DesignerPaule Constable
Wolf Hall Lighting DesignerPaule Constable
Bring Up the Bodies Lighting DesignerDavid Plater
MusicStephen Warbeck
Sound DesignerNick Powell
Movement DirectorSiân Williams
Fight DirectorBret Yount

       Adapting Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies

       Mike Poulton

      Over three years ago I was asked if it might be possible to adapt Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall for the stage. At the time of asking, Bring Up the Bodies did not exist. I’d read Wolf Hall and been gripped by it – from the first page to the last – page 653. It’s an extraordinary read. To call it a historical novel diminishes it – for me it’s a deeply serious piece of literature that happens to be set in and around the Court of Henry VIII. I can think of no other contemporary work of period fiction that comes near it. It’s that rare thing – a novel that richly deserved its fame and the accolades and prizes heaped upon it. I knew that Hilary was at work on a sequel and I was counting the days. I read Wolf Hall again. I said that I thought it could be made into a play if the right adapter could be found. ‘Might you be the right adapter?’ I was asked.

      I had never worked with a living author. Earlier collaborators, Schiller, Chekhov, Turgenev, Chaucer, Malory, were all long dead. Hilary is very much alive, and I knew that for the project to work she and I would have to get on together, and agree about how best to engineer the transformation. I imagined it would be like taking apart a Rolls-Royce and reassembling the parts as a light aircraft. After three years together I can say that our collaboration has proved to be, for me at any rate, the most rewarding part of the experience. I have learned so much. Hilary has been generous and committed in every way with advice, with time, with invention, with challenges – all coming out of a deep knowledge of her subject, and easy familiarity with the complex minds of the characters she has created. Fortunately, she also has a love and instinctive understanding of the workings of theatre. Above all it’s been fun – a lot of fun. Her attitude from the first was that she had brought Cromwell and company to life, and I was free, within the limits of the story and the requirements of historical accuracy, to move them about on the stage as I saw fit. Though on many occasions she has had to pull me out of holes into which I’ve dug myself. I’ve never had that sort of help from Friedrich von Schiller.

      So what were the problems we faced at the outset? I felt that, in terms of staging – in order to create a workable dramatic framework – we had to get to the death of Anne Boleyn. If we could do that, we’d have a strong tragic arc – the ascendancy of Anne followed by her rapid decline. If Thomas Cromwell’s rise from obscurity was to be the story of the play, the Court of Henry VIII must be the stage upon which he acts, and the rise and fall of Anne Boleyn the engine that drives the action. I knew Hilary was working on a sequel to Wolf Hall, to be called The Mirror and the Light. Could she take me as far as Anne’s execution? Yes, of course she could. But by the time she reached the summer of 1536 we had another book, Bring Up the Bodies, and so much tempting new material that the original play was rapidly becoming two plays. Since that time the only heartbreak in the process has been deciding what to set aside.

      Structurally, the new material was exactly what was needed. Wolf Hall would take us to Anne’s coronation, and Bring Up the Bodies to her execution. But the growing scale of the project and size of the cast meant that we needed a new partner and a new home. The Royal Shakespeare Company, under its brightly shining, new-minted Artistic Director, Gregory Doran, welcomed


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